Current:Home > ContactCalifornia Attorney General Investigates the Oil and Gas Industry’s Role in Plastic Pollution, Subpoenas Exxon -FundGuru
California Attorney General Investigates the Oil and Gas Industry’s Role in Plastic Pollution, Subpoenas Exxon
View
Date:2025-04-14 18:58:06
The oil and gas industry has a new battle to fight with California Attorney General Rob Bonta’s first-of-its-kind investigation into their role in the global plastics crisis—and it looks a lot like one they’ve been fighting over climate change.
Bonta on Thursday announced his investigation and said that his office had issued a subpoena to ExxonMobil over its role in the plastics crisis. By Friday, environmental advocates from California to New York were applauding, and environmental lawyers were pondering the similarities between Bonta’s investigation and ongoing efforts by states and cities to hold the oil and gas industry accountable in the courts for climate change.
Judith Enck, president of the environmental group Beyond Plastics and a former EPA regional administrator, called the investigation “very significant” because it has “the potential to finally hold plastic producers accountable for the immense environmental damage caused by plastics.” It will also “address the ongoing deception of claiming that plastics are recyclable when, in fact, less than 10 percent are actually recycled,” she said.
Pat Parenteau, an environmental law professor at Vermont Law School and the former director of the school’s Environmental Law Center, said that if Bonta’s investigation seems familiar, it should.
“We have seen this movie before,” Parenteau said. “This is a page from the same book that attorneys general have taken with climate investigations … related to carbon pollution.”
None of the lawsuits by cities or states against oil companies have yet to return verdicts or court decisions that hold fossil fuel companies accountable for climate change, he said. But the oil and gas companies have not been able to stop the lawsuits, many of which continue to work their way through the courts.
“Now, the California attorney general is moving into a similar kind of investigation in terms of plastic pollution, and there are some obvious connections—what the oil companies are doing to the climate, and what the oil companies are doing to the oceans,” Parenteau said.
In 2019, a New York judge cleared Exxon of investor fraud allegations, but wrote: “nothing in this opinion is intended to absolve Exxon from responsibility for contributing to climate change.”
ExxonMobil responded to Bonta’s announcement with a denial.
“We reject the allegations made by the Attorney General’s office in its press release,” the company said in a written statement. “We share society’s concerns and are collaborating with governments, including the State of California, communities, and other industries to support projects around the world to improve waste management and circularity.”
The industry uses the term circularity to describe its vision of recycling and reusing plastics.
The American Chemistry Council, a leading pro-plastics lobby, also fought back.
“We strongly disagree with the portrayal of our industry by Attorney General Bonta,” said Joshua Baca, vice president of plastics for the council, in a written statement. “As we’ve repeatedly emphasized, plastics belong in our economy, not our environment.
“Rather than losing time and resources responding to misleading portrayals of our industry and misguided initiatives that delay real progress, we want to remain focused on ongoing efforts to improve plastics recycling and provide meaningful results.”
Plastic pollution has found its way to the highest mountains and deepest parts of the ocean; into the bellies of marine mammals, the placenta of new mothers and human blood.
In March, the United Nations described plastics as a “triple planetary crisis of climate change, nature loss and pollution,” at a meeting where the U.N. Environmental Assembly put the world on track to forge, for the first time, a legally binding global agreement to curb plastic pollution.
Bonta made his announcement with the Pacific Ocean in the background along a southern California beach, which he said needs daily cleaning of plastic litter.
Much like what Inside Climate News and later the Los Angeles Times reported in 2015, based on a trove of internal Exxon documents showing that the oil company understood the science of global warming, predicted its catastrophic consequences, and then spent millions to promote misinformation denying those facts, Bonta is saying the industry has misled the public about plastics.
The industry has made false claims that have minimized the public’s understanding of the harmful consequences of plastic products and even whether plastics can be recycled, he said.
In the 1980s, Bonta said, the plastics industry, including major fossil fuel and petrochemical companies, began “an aggressive and deceptive campaign that we could recycle our way out of the plastics waste problem that was emerging at that time. The fact is, it was all a big ruse.
“The truth is,” he said, “the vast majority of plastics cannot be recycled.”
He said the investigation would “focus on this half-century campaign of deception, and the ongoing harm to the state, our residents and natural resources. “We are going to target companies that have caused and exacerbated the global plastics crisis,” he said. “We will not hesitate to hold these companies accountable if the law was violated.”
Parenteau said it’s too soon to say whether the investigation will result in legal action in the form of a civil or criminal case. But it could result in either, he said.
“We know from past experience the AG is likely to find evidence” of misleading statements in advertising and annual reports, he said.
It will also likely help the public and consumers better understand the nature of the plastics problem, and their own role in it, he said.
As an educational tool, the investigation could help rally Californians around legislation to fight plastics pollution and support a November ballot measure environmental organizations are backing to reduce single-use plastic packaging and foodware across the state, called the California Recycling and Plastic Pollution Reduction Voter Act, said Anja Brandon, U.S. plastics policy analyst at the Ocean Conservancy, an environmental group.
Bonta’s investigation could also inspire other states or the federal government to take similar action, Brandon said.
“The attorney general’s announcement is an unmistakable signal to the fossil fuel and petrochemical industries that there will be no turning back on this issue,” she said. “They will be held accountable.”
veryGood! (767)
Related
- Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
- Gigi Hadid Gives Her Honest Review of Blake Lively’s Movie It Ends With Us
- US opens investigation into Delta after global tech meltdown leads to massive cancellations
- US Sen. Bob Menendez of New Jersey is resigning from office following his corruption conviction
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Video shows aftermath from train derailing, crashing into New York garage
- Darren Walker, president of Ford Foundation, will step down by the end of 2025
- Watchdog who criticized NYPD’s handling of officer discipline resigns
- 'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
- Eminem brings Taylor Swift’s historic reign at No. 1 to an end, Stevie Wonder’s record stays intact
Ranking
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- Google reneges on plan to remove third-party cookies in Chrome
- Bryson DeChambeau to host Donald Trump on podcast, says it's 'about golf' and 'not politics'
- Oscar Mayer Wienermobile flips onto its side after crash along suburban Chicago highway
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- US home sales fell in June to slowest pace since December amid rising mortgage rates, home prices
- Conservatives use shooting at Trump rally to attack DEI efforts at Secret Service
- Netflix plans documentary on Michigan Wolverines football sign-stealer
Recommendation
Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
Army searching for missing soldier who did not report to Southern California base
Lainey Wilson accidentally splits pants during tour
Blake Lively and Gigi Hadid Are Simply the Perfect Match With Deadpool & Wolverine After-Party Looks
As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
Who can challenge U.S. men's basketball at Paris Olympics? Power rankings for all 12 teams
Israel shoots down missile fired from Yemen after deadly Israeli strike on Houthi rebels
Google reneges on plan to remove third-party cookies in Chrome