Monday, 25 Aug 2025

Big Oil breaks with Trump on potential second withdrawal from Paris climate agreement

The CEO of ExxonMobil said President-elect Trump should keep the U.S. in the Paris climate agreement during his second term in the White House.


Big Oil breaks with Trump on potential second withdrawal from Paris climate agreement

Trump officially withdrew from the treaty in 2020, but the U.S. was reinstated to the climate agreement in 2021 after President Biden took office.

After winning a second term in the 2024 election, Trump is expected to consider a second withdrawal from the agreement. However, some oil companies have expressed opposition to the idea.

When Trump first announced plans to withdraw from the climate agreement in 2017, then-CEO of Shell, Ben van Beurden, was opposed to the idea.

"We believe climate change is real," van Beurden told NPR. "We believe that the world needs to go through an energy transition to prevent a very significant rise in global temperatures. And we need to be part of that solution in making it happen."

Ahead of his upcoming second term, Trump is facing renewed calls to consider remaining in the international climate agreement.

"I don't think the stops and starts are the right thing for businesses," Darren Woods, CEO of oil giant ExxonMobil, recently told the Wall Street Journal. "It is extremely inefficient. It creates a lot of uncertainty."

Woods also suggested that it's not good for business "to have the pendulum swing back and forth as administrations change." 

Asked about whether Trump should consider staying in the agreement, the American Petroleum Institute told Fox News Digital they support the treaty's ambitions.

"We have long supported the ambitions of the Paris Agreement, including global action to reduce greenhouse emissions and alleviate poverty around the world," an API spokesperson told Fox. "The U.S. leads the world in producing energy and reducing emissions, and our industry remains focused on accelerating that progress." 

Fox News Digital reached out to Chevron, TotalEnergies and BP for comment but did not hear back by press time.

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