Exxon Mobil Corp. has vowed to do a better job in it faces from climate change starting 鈥渋n the near future鈥 after bucking pressure to do that for years.

Until now, shareholders and bondholders had no choice but to rely on informed guesswork by outsiders to divine how the nation鈥檚 was retooling for the future 鈥 a time when taxes, regulations and competition from renewable energy and other new technology alternatives are likely to thin consumers鈥 demand for its products.

Exxon says it’s ready to talk about climate change risks. Mike Mozart/Flickr

In other words, investors and the rest of the public had little way of knowing how much these changes will affect Exxon Mobil鈥檚 bottom line.

Why did the company make this move now and who stands to benefit?

Shareholder Pressure

Scores of have sought to force Exxon 鈥 along with the entire global industry 鈥 to change its ways for nearly three decades. the news regarding Exxon Mobil鈥檚 upcoming climate change risk report.

But this change of course did not surprise all of them because it occurred three days before the deadline for shareholders to submit resolutions to be voted on at its 2018 .

Exxon Mobil鈥檚 latest move may prevent another episode like what happened in May, when of the company鈥檚 shareholders 鈥 including the massive 鈥 voted in favor of a resolution demanding that it publicly state how climate change is affecting its operations and bottom line.

Exxon Mobil itself indicated that prompted its reversal, specifically from the New York State Common Retirement Fund, which manages roughly US$200 billion in assets on behalf of 1 million state and local government employees and retirees and their beneficiaries.Getting accurate information

New York Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman has also targeted the company. A lawsuit he filed in June 2017 accuses Exxon Mobil of committing fraud and inflating its stock price by .

Schneiderman alleges that one set of books, made public, is predicated on there being little risk that climate policies would interfere with the company鈥檚 future ability to profit from its investments in oil and gas projects. The other alleged set of books, kept hidden, accounts for those policies leading it to , according to court filings.

Based on my research on how climate change affects corporate accounting, I also suspect that Exxon determined that disclosing its climate-related risks would help all of its shareholders and other stakeholders such as lenders, suppliers and consumers.

Ample research, including my own on the , indicates that stock prices rise when outside investors have 鈥 or anticipate getting 鈥 more accurate information about plans and strategies to manage climate change risk.

Behind The Curve

On top of bowing to demands from investors, Exxon Mobil needed to catch up with its competitors.

, , , and already assess and report on their climate risks, along the lines of how Exxon Mobil plans to undertake this task.

In short, Exxon Mobil鈥檚 executives may have realized that not disclosing risks that its peers already acknowledge would potentially hurt its stock price more than airing the information.

Had it not bowed to pressure to start disclosing its climate risks, investors could have construed that Exxon Mobil has something to hide, whether true or not.

Mounting Legal Woes

Exxon Mobil also faces multiple lawsuits tied to its climate-related business practices, some of which also target other oil and gas majors.

At least , a class-action suit is underway and the state attorney general of , like her counterpart in , is suing the oil and gas company.

It is possible that the information Exxon Mobil now plans to make public for the first time will bolster the of it faces by plaintiffs who allege that it has harmed them as investors by withholding information, disclosing misleading climate data or revealing those details too late.

But it is also possible that the disclosure will help resolve some of the company鈥檚 legal problems.

An SEC Investigation

Meanwhile, the Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating how Exxon Mobil calculates its vast in light of how climate risks are changing the industry鈥檚 outlook.

The SEC apparently wants to know how the company calculates the cost of complying with climate change regulations when it evaluates the potential revenue streams from its planned and ongoing projects around the globe.

These climate-related costs could also hurt its balance sheet due to the abandonment of oil and gas projects after investing billions of dollars that in profits. This is already happening: Exxon Mobil wrote off a $16 billion investment in Canadian tar sands in early 2017 due to the project鈥檚 high cost per barrel of oil.

An offshore oil rig. Cathy Whitfield/Flickr

However, shareholders could lose money if the company ends up revealing proprietary information that aids its competitors when it discloses its climate-related risks.

I believe Exxon Mobil has resolved to disclose more of these risks because it judges that it has more to gain by reporting on its climate plans than it stands to lose by not becoming more open.

Voluntary Yet Consistent

In an earlier article I wrote for with energy and sustainability expert , we urged the SEC to establish a voluntary disclosure program for major oil and gas corporations. We proposed that the SEC establish a common framework for reporting on climate change risks and that it use its moral authority and enforcement powers to encourage full compliance.

This approach would bring about a steady and predictable flow of consistent and comparable information on climate change policies and outcomes. Currently, all companies are essentially on their own to disclose whatever they please whenever they feel ready to do it.

This is not always helpful for markets. When companies disclose information that investors and analysts cannot easily compare it is costly and unwieldy for them to cross-reference it.

In a recent paper, presented at the Journal of Corporate Finance conference on sustainability, at Boston University, at the University of Akron and I show that when the cost of processing environmental information increases, analysts lose interest in dealing with it.

This means analysts issue fewer and less timely reports, to the detriment of outside investors and others, who are deprived of market prices reflecting the most up-to-date data and information.

In short, the public cannot rely only on the private sector to provide consistent and comparable information regarding the effects of businesses on climate change.

Even with Exxon Mobil鈥檚 about-face, I still believe the SEC needs to create a voluntary disclosure program to correct the private sector鈥檚 failure to establish a common standard for comparing climate change data as soon as possible.

This story was originally published in 听

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