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8/1/2016 Exxon Believed Deep Dive Into Climate Research Would Protect Its Business | InsideClimate News<br />

former science advisor to President Richard Nixon,<br />

and James F. Black, who worked on hydrogen<br />

bomb research at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in<br />

the 1950s.<br />

Black, who died in 1988, was among the first Exxon<br />

scientists to become acquainted with the<br />

greenhouse effect. Esso, as Exxon was known when<br />

he started, allowed him to pursue personal scientific<br />

interests. Black was fascinated by the idea of<br />

intentionally modifying weather to improve<br />

agriculture in arid countries, said his daughter,<br />

Claudia Black-Kalinsky.<br />

Exxon's Legacy of 'No":<br />

25 Years of Rejecting Shareholders'<br />

Climate Concerns

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