DC sues oil majors for ‘misleading’ consumers on climate change
The lawsuit brought by District of Columbias attorney general comes a day after Minnesota filed a similar lawsuit. The attorney general for the District of Columbia on Thursday filed a lawsuit against Exxon Mobil Corp, BP Plc, Chevron Corp, and Royal Dutch Shell Plc for systematically and intentionally misleading consumers about the role their products play in causing climate change, the latest action by a US attorney general against the oil and gas industry. The lawsuit brought by Attorney General Karl Racine comes a day after Minnesota AG Keith Ellison filed a lawsuit against the American Petroleum Institute, Exxon Mobil and Koch Industries for violating state laws barring consumer fraud, deceptive trade practices and false advertising. The defendants violated the Districts consumer protection law by concealing the fact that using fossil fuels threatens the health of District residents and the environment, Racine said in a statement. The intent of the legal action is to end these disinformation campaigns and to hold these companies accountable for their deceptive practices, he said. Casey Norton, a spokesman for Exxon, said the lawsuit is part of a coordinated, politically motivated campaign against energy companies. The claims are baseless and without merit. We look forward to defending the company in court, he said. The other companies were not immediately available for comment. Racine told reporters on Thursday that his office only learned of Minnesotas lawsuit when it was filed on Wednesday and had been preparing this long before. Minnesota and DCs lawsuits are the latest in a string of legal challenges by states, cities, and citizen groups targeting fossil fuel companies over their role in global warming. Counterparts in California, New York and Massachusetts also filed lawsuits against oil majors but the Minnesota and DC lawsuits focus on consumer protection. Racine said the named companies sought to create a false picture about the environmental harm that fossil fuels cause, even as they pivot their marketing efforts to portray their products as clean.