Cities in New Jersey and Puerto Rico say oil companies are behind a conspiracy to deceive the public.
Climate court cases are about to get a lot more interesting.
A professor who earns hundreds of thousands of dollars from ConocoPhillips used her connections to facilitate a meeting with the SEC.
The oil major posted record profits Tuesday and said it was dialing back its emissions reduction goals.
Dozens of cities and states sued oil giants for deceiving the public. The Supreme Court could soon break these cases out of limbo.
The oil companies recently wrapped up their most profitable year in history, amid high fuel prices, global conflict, and worsening climate change. Yippee.
Exxon and Chevron released their budgets for 2023 after a year of monster profits.
@BPDeezNutzz expertly trolled oil and gas giant BP before Twitter suspended the account amid Blue Check chaos.
Semafor, the much-anticipated new journalism site, launched its climate newsletter this week—and Chevron is one of its first sponsors.
Who wants to work for the brands that brought you climate change?
BP, ExxonMobil, Shell, Chevron, and TotalEnergies are pouring billions into unfounded, positive climate spin, a new report finds.
An analysis of job numbers shows that the industry still hasn't rehired everyone it laid off during the pandemic, despite huge profits.
Chevron and Exxon reported massive earnings gains in the first quarter of 2022. How interesting.
Steven Donziger represented Ecuadorians in a pollution lawsuit against Chevron. Then he ended up in the oil giant's crosshairs.
The NPR member station has partnered with the oil giant for a series riddled with industry talking points.
A new analysis lays out just how much money companies like BP, Shell and Exxon have paid to Russia.
"Doesn’t Russian oil smell [of] Ukrainian blood for you?" Ukraine’s minister of foreign affairs tweeted at Shell.
In the span of 24 hours, BP, Equinor, and Shell have all announced they'll pull out of the region.
The company announced it plans to reach net zero carbon emissions by 2050. There are just a few teeny, tiny problems.
Regulators had noted the pipeline was seriously corroded more than a year before the spill.
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