Company: OXY-WT
Filing Date: 2025-02-18
Form Type: 10-K
Source: 0000797468-25-000029
Chunk: 143

Company: OCCIDENTAL PETROLEUM CORP /DE/
Filing Date: 2025-02-18
Form: 10-K
Item: Item 1A
Chunk 143
---
 the disclosure of GHG emissions, climate-related risks, certain environmental claims and the use or sale of voluntary carbon offsets.

Additionally, the SEC in March 2024 adopted climate disclosure rules that would require public companies to significantly increase disclosure of GHG emissions and strategies, targets, costs and risks associated with climate change and the energy transition, which the SEC voluntarily stayed in April 2024 due to litigation with multiple parties. In 2023, the European Union (EU) enacted the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive, which will require sustainability reporting across a broad range of ESG topics for both EU and certain non-EU companies and initially focuses on GHG emissions and climate. Certain jurisdictions have proposed climate-related frameworks aligned with the standards of the International Sustainability Standards Board and the Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures.

Global efforts have been made and continue to be made in the international community toward the adoption of international treaties or protocols that would address global climate change issues and impose reductions of hydrocarbon-based fuels, including plans developed in connection with the Paris Agreement in 2015 and subsequent UN-sponsored climate change conferences. 

In January 2025, President Trump announced numerous executive orders regarding climate, energy and environmental matters that, among other things, withdraw the U.S. once again from the Paris Agreement; declare a national energy emergency to facilitate permitting of domestic oil and gas and critical minerals exploration and production and associated infrastructure; pause issuance and implementation of pending regulations; require a review of recent final regulations, grants, loans and other federal financial assurance to governments, businesses and NGOs, potentially including programs that have provided policy support for direct air capture, sequestration and other low-carbon ventures; and rescind dozens of Biden Administration executive orders on these topics. Actions by the Trump Administration or Congress to amend the IRA, IIJA or other statutes or regulations that provide policy support for direct air capture, sequestration and other low-carbon ventures could materially impact OLCV’s current or future operations and strategy.

Collectively, the final regulations and other recent international, federal, state and local government actions relating to GHG and other air emissions are expected, subject to further action by the Trump Administration, Congress or courts, to require Occidental to incur increased operating and maintenance costs, including higher rates charged by service providers and costs to purchase, operate and maintain emissions control systems, acquire emission allowances, pay taxes or fees for methane or carbon emissions and comply with new regulatory or reporting requirements. They could also affect permitting and other regulatory approvals and prevent Occidental from conducting oil