A Republican-led congressional committee sought on June 17 to assert oversight over inquiries that about 20 states are making into ExxonMobil Corp. (NYSE: XOM) and climate change, reiterating demands to know more about state attorneys general's consultations with environmental groups.
In a letter, some 17 members of Congress and ranking members of the House Science, Space, and Technology Committee said they have broad jurisdiction that allows them to review investigations carried out by states. The committee was pushing back against state officials who have said they are not subject to federal oversight.
The standoff is the latest in a high-stakes battle between the world's largest publicly traded oil company and a coalition of state attorneys general who have said they would go after ExxonMobil in a bid to force congressional action to tackle climate change.
About 20 state officials jointly said in March they would participate in inquiries into whether ExxonMobil executives misled the public by contradicting research from company scientists that spelled out the threats of climate change.
Prior to that March announcement, some state officials met with a range of prominent environmental and investment groups that oppose fossil fuels.
The House committee has complained the inquiries risk stifling free speech and scientific inquiry, and that state officials were coordinating with special interest groups.
The House committee demanded for the second time since May that state officials hand over all records of communications between their offices and outside groups.
"Congress has a responsibility to investigate whether such investigations are having a chilling effect on the free flow of scientific inquiry and debate regarding climate change," the letter said.
"People should be troubled by any attempt by members of Congress to silence or undercut basic investigatory authority by a state attorney general's office," said Cyndi Roy Gonzalez, a spokeswoman for Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey. "Our office will not be intimidated by oil industry-backed members of the U.S. House of Representatives."
ExxonMobil, for its part, has said it has acknowledged the reality of climate change for years and communicated this to investors.
On June 15, ExxonMobil asked a federal court to throw out a subpoena that would force it to hand over decades of documents on climate change to Healey's office.
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