New York City lawsuit against Exxon, bp, Shell over climate change dismissed
- New York City says its 8.3 MM residents were misled
- Claims the companies engaged in 'greenwashing' rejected
- City reviewing its legal options, seeks accountability
A judge has dismissed New York City's lawsuit seeking to hold ExxonMobil, bp and Shell liable for misleading the public about their products, and their commitment to renewable energy and fighting climate change.
In a decision on Tuesday, state Supreme Court Justice Anar Patel said the city could not claim its climate-conscious residents were sensitive to how fossil fuels cause climate change, only to then be duped by the oil companies' failure to disclose how their fossil fuel products contributed to it.
"The city cannot have it both ways," Patel wrote.
Patel found no proof the oil companies and the defendant American Petroleum Institute (API) conducted "greenwashing" campaigns, including statements about clean energy and alternative energy, to boost sales of fossil fuel products in the city.
She also said general statements such as Exxon's claim that its fuel helps people drive "cleaner, smarter and longer" were too vague to suggest the defendants' products had nothing to do with climate change.
With about 8.3 MM people, New York City said the companies falsely portrayed themselves in ads and social media as climate change leaders despite minimal investments in clean energy such as wind and solar.
It sought civil fines and an end to alleged deceptions.
Nicholas Paolucci, a spokesman for the city's law department, on Wednesday said the city is reviewing its options.
"Our complaint alleged that these defendants spent millions to mislead consumers to think that they, and their products, contribute to a clean energy future," he said. "They do not. Companies that violate the city’s consumer protection laws should be held fully accountable. New Yorkers deserve no less."
The oil companies did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The American Petroleum Institute's general counsel Ryan Meyers said the trade group was pleased with the dismissal. "Climate policy is for Congress to debate and decide, not a patchwork of courts," he said.
Many U.S. state and local governments have sued oil companies over climate change, including the emission of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases.
Patel ruled one day after the U.S. Supreme Court refused to halt the city of Honolulu's own lawsuit against Exxon, bp, Shell and several other oil companies.
New York City's lawsuit began in April 2021, three weeks after a federal appeals court rejected its lawsuit seeking to hold Exxon, bp, Shell, Chevron and ConocoPhillips liable to pay its costs from global warming.
The case is City of New York v. ExxonMobil Corp et al, New York State Supreme Court, New York County, No. 451071/2021.
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