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Home / Environment / Exxon Funded Global Network to Undermine UN Climate Treaty

Exxon Funded Global Network to Undermine UN Climate Treaty

3 Nov

•

Summary

  • Exxon financed climate denial efforts across Latin America
  • Funded translations of books denying human-caused climate change
  • Organized events to sway politicians and media against climate treaties
Exxon Funded Global Network to Undermine UN Climate Treaty

In the late 1990s and early 2000s, the Texas-based fossil fuel company Exxon financed a coordinated global campaign to derail the UN-led climate treaty process. According to previously unpublished documents, Exxon provided funding to the Atlas Network, a US-based coalition of over 500 free-market think tanks, to spread climate change denial across Latin America.

The money from Exxon helped finance Spanish and Chinese translations of books denying human-caused climate change, as well as flights for American climate deniers to speak at events in Latin American cities. The goal was to convince developing nations of "the adverse effects of global climate change treaties" and make them "less inclined" to support the UN climate process.

This effort exacerbated geopolitical tensions and economic fears that still persist today, according to experts. The consequences of this decades-long campaign are now impossible to ignore, as the world faces irreversible damage to the planet's coral reefs and the potential collapse of the Amazon rainforest.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
Exxon financed a global network of think tanks, including the Atlas Network, to spread climate change denial and convince developing nations to oppose the UN climate treaty.
Exxon's funding helped translate climate denial books into Spanish and Chinese, and brought American climate deniers to speak at events in Latin American cities, with the goal of making the region "less inclined" to support the UN climate process.
Exxon's decades-long campaign to sow doubt about climate change has exacerbated geopolitical tensions and economic fears, which still persist today. The world is now facing irreversible damage to coral reefs and the potential collapse of the Amazon rainforest.

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