Green Gilded Oil: How Faux Sustainability by US Oil Companies is Undermining Neo-Sustainability

Greenwashing has been a common practice among companies since the 1980s. There are some companies that take that practice to an extraordinary level. These companies create a sustainability report, dedicate pages on their website touting their environmental stewardship, spend money on projects that m...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Adrah Parafiniuk, Zachary A. Smith
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-07-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/11/14/3760
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spelling doaj-3a36eeb3c47c4e339dd21eae654194572020-11-24T21:31:46ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502019-07-011114376010.3390/su11143760su11143760Green Gilded Oil: How Faux Sustainability by US Oil Companies is Undermining Neo-SustainabilityAdrah Parafiniuk0Zachary A. Smith1Politics and International Affairs, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZ 86001, USAPolitics and International Affairs, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZ 86001, USAGreenwashing has been a common practice among companies since the 1980s. There are some companies that take that practice to an extraordinary level. These companies create a sustainability report, dedicate pages on their website touting their environmental stewardship, spend money on projects that make them appear “green” and at the same time spend millions of dollars lobbying the government to decrease environmental regulations and stop any plan to curtail carbon emissions. We will call these companies green gilded as they are coated in a thin layer of environmentalism as a means to deceive the public. This paper analyzes some of the largest US oil producers with an in-depth analysis of ExxonMobil and Chevron Corp. It examines the money they spend on lobbying efforts to undermine actual sustainable policy. It looks into their sustainability reports, money spent to limit their carbon footprint, and money spent on environmental stewardship. It also compares the carbon footprint of each company. It analyzes the dangers of green gilding and bilking the public. It defines and describes what a neo-sustainable approach in the oil business would look like.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/11/14/3760Neo-sustainabilityfaux sustainabilitygreenwashinggreen gildedclimate change
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Adrah Parafiniuk
Zachary A. Smith
spellingShingle Adrah Parafiniuk
Zachary A. Smith
Green Gilded Oil: How Faux Sustainability by US Oil Companies is Undermining Neo-Sustainability
Sustainability
Neo-sustainability
faux sustainability
greenwashing
green gilded
climate change
author_facet Adrah Parafiniuk
Zachary A. Smith
author_sort Adrah Parafiniuk
title Green Gilded Oil: How Faux Sustainability by US Oil Companies is Undermining Neo-Sustainability
title_short Green Gilded Oil: How Faux Sustainability by US Oil Companies is Undermining Neo-Sustainability
title_full Green Gilded Oil: How Faux Sustainability by US Oil Companies is Undermining Neo-Sustainability
title_fullStr Green Gilded Oil: How Faux Sustainability by US Oil Companies is Undermining Neo-Sustainability
title_full_unstemmed Green Gilded Oil: How Faux Sustainability by US Oil Companies is Undermining Neo-Sustainability
title_sort green gilded oil: how faux sustainability by us oil companies is undermining neo-sustainability
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Greenwashing has been a common practice among companies since the 1980s. There are some companies that take that practice to an extraordinary level. These companies create a sustainability report, dedicate pages on their website touting their environmental stewardship, spend money on projects that make them appear “green” and at the same time spend millions of dollars lobbying the government to decrease environmental regulations and stop any plan to curtail carbon emissions. We will call these companies green gilded as they are coated in a thin layer of environmentalism as a means to deceive the public. This paper analyzes some of the largest US oil producers with an in-depth analysis of ExxonMobil and Chevron Corp. It examines the money they spend on lobbying efforts to undermine actual sustainable policy. It looks into their sustainability reports, money spent to limit their carbon footprint, and money spent on environmental stewardship. It also compares the carbon footprint of each company. It analyzes the dangers of green gilding and bilking the public. It defines and describes what a neo-sustainable approach in the oil business would look like.
topic Neo-sustainability
faux sustainability
greenwashing
green gilded
climate change
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/11/14/3760
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