A Dutch journalist has uncovered a pile of Royal Dutch Shell documents going back as far as 1988 that showed the company understood the gravity of climate change, the company's large contribution to it and how hard it would be to stop it.
The oil giant commissioned a 1988 report titled The Greenhouse Effect that calculated that the Shell group alone was contributing 4 per cent of global carbon dioxide emissions through its oil, natural gas and coal products. And the report warned that "by the time global warming becomes detectable it could be too late to take effective countermeasures to reduce the effects or even to stabilise the situation".
The 1988 report said that scientists believed that the effects would become detectable late in the 20th or early 21st century. The report was written by members of Shell's Greenhouse Effect Working Group and was based on a 1986 study, though the document reveals that Shell had commissioned "greenhouse effect" reports as early as 1981.
The documents were found by Jelmer Mommers, a reporter with De Correspondent. They were posted on the Climate Files website, which is sponsored by the Climate Investigations Centre, an environmental activist group. Shell's working group knew three decades ago that the change was real and formidable, warning that it would affect living standards and food supplies and have social, economic and political consequences. It also warned that rising sea levels could impair offshore installations, coastal facilities, harbours, refineries and depots.
The documents contrast with Shell's former public stance on climate change, at least for a period of time in the 1990s.