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Exxon urges state company not to reveal agreement terms for Texas CO2 project

U.S. energy giant Exxon Mobil has actually asked for the Texas General Land Office (GLO) to not publicly disclose the terms of its overseas lease arrangement for a. carbon sequestration project with the state.

In a letter on Jan. 13 to the Chief Law Officer of Texas, the business asked to instruct the. GLO not to disclose products under the Texas Public Information Act, as they contained. private and exclusive commercial and monetary details.

Exxon, in October, secured state leases with the GLO for over 271,000 acres in Texas state. waters for an overseas carbon dioxide capture operation.

The letter from Jan. 13 states that the job is the biggest offshore carbon-dioxide. storage lease in the United States, and contained not just business terms that were. exclusive and confidential, however also details that is distinct to this groundbreaking offer.

If rivals knew dollar amounts, term lengths, and other similar specific commercial. regards to this Lease, they might potentially determine parts of ExxonMobil's rate structures. and methods concerning its more comprehensive carbon-dioxide transportation and storage organization, it. added.

Exxon's October lease followed its 2021 bid for federal land off the Texas coast for CO2. capture, and its emergence as a high bidder on 69 blocks in the shallow waters of the U.S. Gulf. of Mexico in 2023 to additional broaden its prospective carbon storage location.

Carbon capture, a procedure where CO2 generated from industrial activity is kept. underground, has been accepted by oil companies-- consisting of Chevron, Occidental. Petroleum and TotalEnergies-- to decrease emissions in the environment and. address climate change.

(source: Reuters)