By the Climate Investigationsย Center
Newly unearthed internal documents from Shell Oil Company provide new insights into what they knew about climate change and when they knewย it.
Documents unearthed by Jelmer Mommers of De Correspondent are being published today on Climate Files, a project of the Climate Investigations Center. ย These documents date back to 1988 and show intense interest in climate change internally atย Shell.
A โCONFIDENTIALโ 1988 document titled, โThe Greenhouse Effectโ, details Shellโs extensive knowledge of climate change impacts and implications. It also reveals an internal Shell climate science program dating back to 1981, well before the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change wasย founded.
The document includes this concise note ofย precaution,
โHowever, by the time the global warming becomes detectable it could be too late to take effective countermeasures to reduce the effects or even to stabilize the situation.โย (Link)
In another document from 1998, Shell scenario planners predicted that catastrophic weather events and growing public concern would trigger lawsuits against the government and fossil fuelย companies.
A section of this scenario titled, โ2010- Environment Back on the Front Pagesโ describes theย scene:
While climate change is not a high priority for most people early in the century, NGOs continue to lobby against inaction on the Kyoto protocolโฆ. In 2010, a series of violent storms causes extensive damage to the eastern coast of the US. Although it is not clear whether the storms are caused by climate change, people are not willing to take further chances. The insurance industry refuses to accept liability, setting off a fierce debate over who is liable: the insurance industry, or the government. After all, two successive IPCC reports since 1995 have reinforced the human connection to climate change. (Link)
The scenario goes on to predict class action lawsuits will be based on โwhat they knewย whenโ:
Following the storms, a coalition of environmental NGOs brings a class-action suit against the US government and fossil-fuel companies on the grounds of neglecting what scientists (including their own) have been saying for years: that something must be done. A social. reaction to the use of fossil fuels grows, and individuals become โvigilante environmentalistsโ in the same way, a generation earlier, they had become fiercely anti-tobacco. Direct-action campaigns against companies escalate. Young consumers, especially, demand action.
โฆThe power, auto, and oil industries see billions wiped off their market value overnight. (Link)
These are just two examples of new revelations unearthed in this trove of information from De Correspondent. We believe these documents will be of significant value to journalists, researchers, lawyers, investors and shareholderย activists.
Below are some of the most illuminating documents of the trove, revealing new insights into Shellโs perspective on climate science, climate policy, and corporate responsibility over the past threeย decades.
If you have documents you would like to share with Climate Investigations Center, please visit our page for instructions on how to get information to usย securely.
The full collection of documents can be found on Climate Files and in the timeline below.
ย
Shell Climate Change Files Topย Documents
1988 Shell Confidential Report โThe Greenhouseย Effectโ
Confidential report, โThe Greenhouse Effect,โ authored by members of Shellโs Greenhouse Effect Working Group and based on a 1986 study. The document reveals Shell was commissioning โgreenhouse effectโ reports as early asย 1981.
1990 Shell Selected Papers โThe environmental challenge and the oil industry’sย responseโ
1992 Shell Speech โThree Cornered Challenge – energy, environment and populationโ (Sept. 14,ย 1992)
Lecture by Lodewijk van Wachen, Chairman of Shell Supervisoryย Board.
1994 Shell Report โThe Enhanced Greenhouse Effect – A review of scientific aspectsโ (Decemberย 1994)
Report by Shell environmental advisor, Peter Langcake. Distributionย unclear.
1995 Shell Management Brief โClimate Changeโ (Februaryย 1995)
Management briefing titled โClimate Changeโ detailed โThe Shell Positionโ on climate science and policy. Circulatedย internally.
1996 Shell Management Brief The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (Aprilย 1996)
1995 Shell Internal Report โIs Climate Change Occurring Already?โ (Octoberย 1995)
Internal report authored by Shellโs Peter Langcake. Distributionย unclear.
1998 Shell Internal TINA Group Scenarios 1998-2020ย Report
Internal report on future scenarios begun in 1995. TINA stands for โThere is No Alternative to adapting to and making uses of the forces of Globalization, Liberalization and Technology. Circulatedย internally.
1998 Report โClimate Change: What does Shell think and do about it?โ (February 2,ย 1998)
1998 Speech โReflections on Kyotoโ presented at Davos World Economicย Forum
Remarks by Cor Herkstrรถter, Shell Chairman of the Committee of Managing Directors, at World Economic Forum, Davos,ย Switzerland.
1999 Report โListening and Responding- The Profits and Principles Advertisingย Campaignโ
Public ad campaign builds on an April 1998 Shell special report, entitled โProfits & Principles – does there have to be a choice?โ Copies of print ads are included. Distributionย unclear
1997 Shell Presentation โSustainable Development – the challenge for energyโ (April 17,ย 1997)
Presented at the โBusiness and the Environment Programmeโ Cambridge, England by John Jennings, a Shell Managing Director and Chairman of Shell Transport and Tradingย Company.
Climateย Science
What did Shell know and when? These documents highlight Shellโs knowledge of climate science, the dominant role of fossil fuels in carbon pollution (including the quantification of Shellโs contribution), and the implications to society and theย industry.
1988 Shell Confidential Report โThe Greenhouseย Effectโ
- Commissioned a โgreenhouse effectโ report as early asย 1981.
- โAlthough CO2 is emitted to the atmosphere through several natural processesโฆ the main cause of increasing CO2 concentrations is considered to be fossil fuel burning.โ (Link)
- Quantified its own products (oil, gas, and coal) were responsible for 4% of total global carbon emissions in 1984. This is one of the earliest examples of carbon accounting by an oilย major
- Detailed an analysis of potential climate impacts, including rising sea levels, ocean acidification, and humanย migration.
1994 Shell Report โThe Enhanced Greenhouse Effect – A review of scientificย aspectsโ
- Outlined the companyโs โmajor developments in scientific understanding and the implications for policy formulation.โ Recognizing โ[t]he threat of climate change [as] the environmental concern with โฆ the greatest significance for the fossil fuel industry,โ (Link)
- Expressed skepticism of IPCC science by emphasizing the opinions of skeptics who believed โthe concerns over global warming to be exaggerated and misguided.โ (Link)
1995 Shell Management Brief โClimateย Changeโ
- Recognized the potentially severe consequences for the environment due to โclimate change brought about by global warming via man-made increases in gases such as carbon dioxide.โ (Link)
- Acknowledged fossil fuels as the source of anthropogenic CO2 emissions which could โgive rise to an enhanced greenhouse effect resulting in global warmingโ and recognized this โcould have major business implications for the fossil fuel industry.โ (Link)
- Listed agreed upon โscientific fundamentalsโ including:
- the rapid increase of greenhouse gases since the Industrial Revolution leading to โan increase in radiative forcingโ (i.e. higherย temperatures),
- the importance of radiative forcing on living organisms which โcan tolerate only a relatively small range ofย temperature,
- and the current unprecedented rate of increase of atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations than ever before โexperienced during the history ofย civilisation.โ
- Challenged IPCC science by emphasizing the opinions of skeptics who believed โthe concerns over global warming to be exaggerated and misguided.โ Some of their arguments include: โthere is no statistically significant evidence that climate has been affected in the way predictedโ and that the effect of greenhouse gases on warming โcould be negligibleโ when other factors are considered. (Link)
1995 Shell Internal Report โIs Climate Change Occurringย Already?โ
- Contrasted the companyโs research with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (โIPCCโ) Second Assessment, new scientific studies, and media reports, drawing stronger conclusions that global warming is linked to fossil fuelย use
1997 Shell Presentation โSustainable Development – the challenge forย energyโ
- Challenged climate science: โMan-made carbon dioxide is only a small fraction of the flux in natural systems. I believe that we are still not in a position to know whether any effect will be good, bad, or indifferent, whether it will be lasting, or whether the earthโs natural processes will restoreย stability.โ
Climateย Policy
These documents illustrate Shellโs engagement in climate policy. Starting with an early emphasis on precautionary action in the late 1980s, the company begins to resists emerging government mandates in the early and mid 1990s, favoring instead free market solutions. In the late 1990s, it shifts again, breaking from other oil companies by supporting the urgency and need of policyย action.
1988 Shell Confidential Report โThe Greenhouseย Effectโ
- Discussed the potential impacts to the fossil fuel sector itself, including legislation, changing public sentiment, and infrastructure vulnerabilities. Shell concludes that active engagement from the energy sector isย desirable.
- A warning to take policy action early, even before major changes are observed to theย climate.
1994 Shell Report โThe Enhanced Greenhouse Effect – A review of scientificย aspectsโ
- Included graphic symbolized how man-made climate change could lead to socio-economic consequences. It also highlighted the power of policy responses to shape those consequences. (Link)
- Conceded the โconsequences of global warming could be dramaticโ but noted the โmajor business implicationsโ of climate change, countering that โill-advised policy measuresโ would also be โdramatic.โ (Link)
1992 Shell Lecture โThree Cornered Challenge – energy, environment andย populationโ
- Specified that โgovernment intervention in the process of change, either nationally or internationally, should not distort competitive forces,โ stressing that industryโs ability to โfinance programmes to reduce its environmental impact depends on its continuing to make aย profit.โ
1995 Shell Management Brief โClimateย Changeโ
- Resisted climate policies beyond โno regretsโ measures. Anything more, it deemed, โcould be premature, divert economic resources from more pressing needs and further distortย markets.โ
- Conceded that it is โnot possible to dismiss the enhanced global warming hypothesis as scientifically unsoundโ and that there is โenough indication of the potential risk for governments to address the issue.โ However, it cautioned that โany policy measures should take into account explicitly the uncertainties in theย science.โ
1998 Speech โReflections on Kyotoโ presented at Davos World Economicย Forum
- โโฆsince the balance of scientific evidence suggests a link between climate change and human activity, we have a responsibility to take prudent precautionaryย action.โ
- โโฆprecautionary measures such as the emission limits for greenhouse gases set in train by the Kyoto agreement areย necessary.โ
1998 Shell Internal TINA Group Scenarios 1998-2020ย Report
- Predicted different policy scenarios and applied the logic of a carbon budget to its analysis of remaining oil, gas, and coal reserves. The company concluded that existing known reserves of oil and gas can be consumed while staying within carbon limits. Note, Shellโs budget located an acceptable carbon threshold at 650ppm; the chart reveals that use of existing gas or oil reserves would be enough to push us pastย 400ppm.
1998 Report โClimate Change: What does Shell think and do aboutย it?โ
- Stated, โwe believe that prudent precautionary measures are now necessaryโ despite their principal solutions to CO2 emission reductions involve consuming and extracting more oil andย gas.
Corporateย Responsibility
These documents detail Shellโs struggle with its public brand, social license, and responsibility for climate change. It questions how it should move forward in the face of the growing climate crisis. Shell balanced what it deemed โProfits and Principlesโ, focusing on natural gas and launching an international renewable energyย business.
1988 Shell Confidential Report โThe Greenhouseย Effectโ
- Accepted Shellโs role in creating the conditions for a warmingย world.
- โWith very long time scales involved, it would be tempting for society to wait until then to begin doing anything. The potential implications for the world are, however, so large, that policy options need to be considered much earlier. And the energy industry needs to consider how it should play itsย part.โ
1992 Shell Lecture โThree Cornered Challenge – energy, environment andย populationโ
- โThe duty of industry in the interests of society at large is to ensure that these decisions are based on a correct understanding of the relevant factsโ (Link)
- โIndustry’s ability to finance programmes to reduce its environmental impact depends on its continuing to make a profit. Companies should take the lead when they can; butโฆ they should not be expected to gamble reputation or assetsโฆโ (Link)
1998 Speech โReflections on Kyotoโ presented at Davos World Economicย Forum
- Detailed Shellโs complex relationship with climate change by acknowledging the need for action while emphasizing fossil fuels as a large part of theย solution.
- Highlighted the production of gas and innovation in renewables as Shellโs pathย forward.
1998 Shell Internal TINA Group Scenarios 1998-2020ย Report
- Predicted the potential for a lawsuit, โagainst the US government and fossil-fuel companies on the grounds of neglecting what scientists (including their own) have been saying for years: that something must be done. A social reaction to the use of fossil fuels grows, and individuals become โvigilante environmentalistsโ in the same way, a generation earlier, they had become fiercely anti-tobacco. Direct-action campaigns against companies escalate. Young consumers, especially, demand actionย โฆโ
1999 Report โListening and Responding- The Profits and Principles Advertisingย Campaignโ
- Created a public facing campaign by Shell to improve theirย image
- โShell believes that action needs to be taken now, both by companies and their customers. So last year, we renewed our commitment not only to meet the agreed Kyoto targets to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, but to exceedย them.โ
Highlighted Shellโs โmajor part in the move from oil to gas โฆ planting the seeds of renewable energy โฆ committed to making renewable energy commercially viable.โ
See also:ย
1991 Video โClimate of Concernโ produced by Shell, first reported by Jelmer Mommers in De Correspondent in February 2017:ย
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