NEW YORK - Members of the Rockefeller family, descended from the founder of what became Exxon Mobil Corp., challenged the oil giant Wednesday to focus more on renewable sources of energy.
They also seek to establish a task force study of the consequences of global warming on poor economies, and called on Exxon to reduce greenhouse gas emission at its own operations.
Exxon is "profiting in the short term from investments and decisions made many years ago by focusing on the narrow path that ignores the rapidly shifting energy landscape around the world, including developing nations," said Neva Rockefeller Goodwin, a great granddaughter of John D. Rockefeller.
The family members, who describe themselves as the company's longest continuous shareholders, said they are concerned that the Irving, Texas-based company is too focused on short-term gains from soaring oil prices and should do more to invest in cleaner technology for the future.
"They are fighting the last war and they're not seeing they're facing a new war," said Peter O'Neill, who heads the Rockefeller Family committee dealing with Exxon Mobil and is the great-great-grandson of John D. Rockefeller.
He said he had the support of more than 80 percent of family members over the age of 21. Family representatives said it was a significant holding for the Rockefellers but that they were not sure how much of the company they actually own collectively.
Exxon Mobil was formed by the combination of two offspring of John D. Rockefeller's Standard Oil Trust. It is now the world's largest publicly traded oil company.
Members of the family said they have sponsored four proxy resolutions this year that raised concerns about the company's leadership under Chairman and Chief Executive Rex Tillerson. They also said they have spent years behind the scenes prodding the company to change its approach to the oil business.
'Trying to keep a giant ... from falling'
The family and its allies decided to take their case public, they said, because they believe future energy will come from sources other than oil and natural gas, and say the company needs to move more quickly into sustainable technology to secure its long-term viability.
"We all know the saying: The bigger they are, the harder they fall," said Connecticut State Treasurer Denise Nappier, who oversees a pension fund that holds $300 million in Exxon Mobil stock - its largest single equity investment. She spoke at a press conference alongside the Rockefellers.
"We are trying to keep a giant - and it truly is a giant in the oil and gas industry - from falling," Nappier said.
Goodwin called on Exxon to reconnect with the forward-looking vision of her great grandfather.
"Kerosene was the alternative energy of its day when he realized it could replace whale oil," she said. "Part of John D. Rockefeller's genius was in recognizing early the need and opportunity for a transition to a better, cheaper and cleaner fuel."
Huge profit expected
The calls for reform came one day before Exxon Mobil was expected to report first-quarter earnings of more than $11 billion, according to according to a survey by Thomson Financial. Thanks to rapidly rising oil prices, that is considerably more than the company earned a year earlier, and could even top Exxon Mobil's own record for the biggest quarterly profit in U.S. history.
The company's board is recommending shareholders vote against a proposal to split the role of chairman and CEO. In a recent proxy statement filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, the board said "that the most effective leadership structure for Exxon Mobil Corporation at the present time is for Mr. Tillerson to serve as both Chairman and CEO."
Exxon Mobil spokesman Gantt Walton said the company has met with members of the Rockefeller family on multiple occasions and "respects the rights of all shareholders to make their views known," but that it does not comment on details of meetings with shareholders.
The stock is up more than 63 percent since Tillerson became CEO on Jan. 1, 2006, compared with a gain of 11.4 percent for the broad S&P 500 index over the same period.
The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.
© 2008 MSNBC
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9 Comments so far
Show AllLook for nothing 'good' from ANY Rockefeller (they are simply the Eugenics-Obsessed American-branch of the 'Ashkenazic'-Rothschild's, who initially funded JDR (and his Pal's, like JPMorgan) into a 'monopoly-position' by buying-him and StandardOil all of the Refineries for Production [and, all of the transportation/distribution-Means] 'way back when'). Exxon has so-much 'unreported-Profit', today, that they are currently buying-back all of their Stock (and, soon will not even have to 'pretend' they only profit-hugely, since they will be a "non-Publicly-Held Criminal-Corporation").
JDR saw to it that clean, easy-to-refine, efficient LPG was NOT used by Ford and others for our light-truck/car Fleets, and when Mr. Diesel was 'mysteriously murdered', JDR perpetuated the Fraud of bringing-out 'petrol-diesel', instead of the Trust-busting/cleaner Bio-Diesel (from waste/grease/bio-mass/surplus that Diesel had envisioned and was 'intent to produce').
JDR also was 'puppet' to plans for World-Wars, leading to a famous 'theft in the ME', that would lead to a 'GWoT', that would rage-as-required -- thanks to a fanned-Mythos of both Religious-nonsense AND 'environmentalist over-reaction' to some deliberately-caused (and 'mild') "Warming".
Slick, these uranium/banking/currency-Owning Rothschild's/Bauer's...they will now simply 'buy' their way out of _any_ 'Resistance' to their Plans for a One World Government [with them pulling-all-Strings], or otherwise destroy any 'impediment' placed in their way -- as they often have, since the 1700's...
It looks like their reputations have been hurt by David, the Bilderberg group, Rothschilds and the new World order Bush Gang.
I see David Rockefeller is missing in action on this one.
Shalom
So good to see the aristocracy gather for what is best for all of us. Vomit.
This particulat MSNBC version of this story has...
"Family representatives said it [Exxon-Mobil shares] was a significant holding for the Rockefellers, but that they were not sure how much of the company they actually own collectively."
Whereas the Reuters version has...
"It is unclear how many shares the Rockefeller family controls. Exxon was able to identify 12 of the 15 Rockefellers associated with the shareholder resolution, and said they collectively own around 332,000 of the company's 5.4 billion shares -- or about 0.006 percent of outstanding shares."
Which means the entire Rockefeller family collectively owns less of Exxon-Mobil, than is contained in the trust fund of the least significant of the many arrogant teenaged boys in the saudi "royal" family.
As predicted, the rich are now consuming the rich. Too little too late.
Here's what all the Big Boys and the gov't tax men know about the alternative energy sources.....they are cheaper, more abundant and impossible to tax.
If solar PV become even more economical (see nanosolar and ovonics.com solar as they already are) then sunlight will be able to power more homes and businesses and YES even cars (to a degree).
"peak whale" gave me a real good laugh.
Aid - Umm, ah, Mr. Rockefeller sir. You know that thing called "peak oil" they we talking about? They were right, so if you don't change directions your gonna loose power.
Rockefeller - Yes, I see. Maybe we should start looking for a new source of "alternative" energy we can exploit.
Aid - Solar energy?
Rockefeller - Can we charge people for sunlight?
Aid - Not now, but from a little help from congress I think we can swing it.
“Part of John D. Rockefeller’s genius was in recognizing early the need and opportunity for a transition to a better, cheaper and cleaner fuel.â€
In other words, 'Peak whale' was reached.