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Global warming pollution is on the rise, gasoline prices are skyrocketing, and our elected officials are eying pristine wilderness areas for oil drilling. These are all symptoms of a failed energy strategy, one that has profound consequences for America’s national security, consumers, and the environment. ExxonMobil is a chief architect and supporter of this failed energy policy.

Watch the Flash movie "Toast the Earth," a sad but humorous satire on Exxon and it's science-bending, profiteering ways.

ExxonMobil is making record-breaking profits because of high-gasoline prices but refuses to invest that windfall in renewable energy to ease America's oil dependence.


Despite its record profits, ExxonMobil refuses to pay $4 billion in punitive damages to fishermen, natives, and others harmed by the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill. In February, the Sierra Club's new television series Sierra Club Chronicles will be airing an episode about the Exxon Valdez oil spill and its effect on the Prince William Sound. "The Day The Water Died" tells the story of one of the worst environmental disasters of our time. 16 years later, and local communities are still waiting for their lives to become "whole" again. More...

ExxonMobil is the only oil company remaining in Arctic Power, the single issue lobbying group dedicated to drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

ExxonMobil actively opposes efforts to cut global warming pollution and funds junk science to cloud the facts about this urgent problem.

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Despite enormous profits in 2005 -- $32 billion expected -- ExxonMobil refuses to invest in developing cleaner, safer energy solutions or to pay the money it owes to fishermen hurt by the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill.



Between 1882 and 2002, ExxonMobil's operations and the burning of its products released an estimated 20.3 billion tons of carbon or about five percent of global carbon dioxide emissions.