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From: Douglas Grandt answerthecall@me.

com
Subject:Atmospheric and oceanic impacts of CO2
Date:July 26, 2017 at 5:33 PM
To:Darren W. Woods Darren.W.Woods@ExxonMobil.com, William (Bill) M. Colton William.M.Colton@ExxonMobil.com,
Susan K. Avery, PhD savery@whoi.edu
Cc: Jeffrey J. Woodbury jeff.j.woodburv@exxonmobil.com, Suzanne M. McCarron Suzanne.M.McCarron@ExxonMobil.com,
Max Schulz max.schulz@exxonmobil.com

Dear Darren, Bill and Susan,


.
Over the past 650,000 years, Milankovich Cycles of Earth in its solar orbit, and the
tilt and wobbles on its axis have caused predictable fluctuations of CO2 as high as
300ppm in the relatively thin atmospherehumans' habitat. Burning your products
is what has caused the atmospheric CO2 level to skyrocket since the mid-1900s.
.
A significant portion of anthropogenic emissions attributed to burning your fuels is
absorbed by the oceans, which causes acidification. It is causing plankton collapse
by disabling them from forming fragile exoskeletons. Not only does that destroy the
food chain, it has a direct effect on warming the oceans. (Bit.ly/Russ10Jun16)
.
These deleterious effects are happening on your watch. Please create and
announce a retirement plan for all you refineries and production facilities.
.

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