Exxon leader: 'Climate getting warmer'
By DAN PILLER
Star-Telegram Staff Writer
http://www.dfw.com/mld/dfw/16689019.htm

HOUSTON — Exxon Mobil Chairman Rex Tillerson told a world energy
conference today that "there is no question that the world's climate
is getting warmer," and said that technological advances and a global
strategy will be needed to combat the rise in carbon emissions.

"It is foolish for individual countries to engage in their own actions
because it won't do much more than make them feel good," Tillerson
said. "It is particularly important for the emerging economies of the
Pacific Rim, where the biggest increases in carbon emissions will
occur, to take part in the discussions."

Tillerson's remarks, to the annual Cambridge Energy Research
Associates conference, marked a continuation of Exxon Mobil's growing
strategy to make itself part of the global climate debate rather than
denying that the problem exists. More than 2,000 people from 44
countries are attending the CERA conference.

Tillerson also said Exxon doesn't feel threatened by the rising
interest in alternative or renewable energy.

"We don't feel threatened by alternative or renewable energy," he
said. "We welcome it. But we have to remember that in the huge scale
of energy demand, fossil fuels will account for at least two-thirds of
energy consumption for at least the next 25 years."

Tillerson said the Irving-based multinational oil giant has devoted
relatively little money to alternative and renewable energy, aside
from a research project at Stanford University, "because we are a
petroleum company. That's what we do, and we do it well."

"We want to be able to add value to new energy, besides just money,"
Tillerson said at a news conference following his speech. "Money isn't
the problem in renewable energy."

Tillerson didn't offer specific actions that nations should adopt to
combat climate change but said technology can provide the bulk of the
answers.

"The public and policymakers are largely unaware of the improved
technologies that make our industry so much more efficient and reduce
our environmental footprint," said Tillerson, a native of Wichita
Falls who succeeded Lee Raymond as Exxon Mobil chairman 14 months ago.

Tillerson spoke of what he called a disconnect between the oil
industry and the media and policymakers over energy and environmental
issues. He noted that while politicians think in terms of two or
four-year election cycles, "the energy industry thinks in terms of a
two- or four-decade cycle for project development."

He added that additional taxes on the energy industry would impede
investment in expanded energy production.

"It is important to share our understandings of the industry with the
public and policymakers," Tillerson said. He noted, for example, that
Exxon Mobil's huge oil project that has just begun off Sakhalin Island
on the Pacific side of Russia is tapping reserves first discovered in
the 1970s and only developed in the last decade.

For all the talk of alternative and renewable energies, Tillerson
said, it must be acknowledged that fossil fuels are likely to provide
the bulk of the worldwide demand for oil, expected to rise by 40
percent through the year 2030.


_______________________________________________
Post Messages to: [email protected]
Subscription Maintenance: http://leafe.com/mailman/listinfo/profox
OT-free version of this list: http://leafe.com/mailman/listinfo/profoxtech
** All postings, unless explicitly stated otherwise, are the opinions of the 
author, and do not constitute legal or medical advice. This statement is added 
to the messages for those lawyers who are too stupid to see the obvious.

Reply via email to