Document


UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549


FORM SD


SPECIALIZED DISCLOSURE REPORT





Exxon Mobil Corporation
(Exact name of the registrant as specified in its charter)



New Jersey1-225613-5409005
(State or other jurisdiction of(Commission(IRS Employer
incorporation or organization)File Number)Identification No.)



5959 Las Colinas Boulevard, Irving, Texas 75039-2298
(Address of principal executive offices) (Zip Code)


Joe Horne (972) 940-6000
(Name and telephone number, including area code, of the person to contact in connection with this report)





Check the appropriate box to indicate the rule pursuant to which this form is being filed, and provide the period to which the information in this form applies:


[X] Rule 13p-1 under the Securities Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.13p-1) for the reporting period from January 1 to December 31, 2020.




Section 1 – Conflict Minerals Disclosure


Item 1.01 Conflict Minerals Disclosure and Report

Section 13(p) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 13p-1 thereunder (collectively, the “conflict mineral rules”) require certain disclosures concerning supply sources for conflict minerals –consisting of gold, tin, tungsten, or tantalum – that may be necessary to the manufacture or functionality of a company’s products. Terms and phrases used but not defined in this disclosure have the meanings given under the conflict mineral rules.

No conflict mineral is intentionally added to, or serves as a functional component of, products sold by ExxonMobil. However, the manufacturing process for certain of ExxonMobil’s refined petroleum and petrochemical products utilizes catalysts which include tin or tungsten compounds as active ingredients. Depending on the type of catalysis process used, trace amounts of such minerals may exist in some of our finished products.

We understand staff of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) has previously issued oral guidance that conflict mineral compounds are not subject to reporting under the conflict mineral rules. However, in the absence of affirmative written SEC guidance on this point ExxonMobil has conducted in good faith a reasonable country of origin inquiry regarding the conflict minerals described above for 2020. Such inquiry is reasonably designed to determine whether any of these minerals originated in the Democratic Republic of the Congo or an adjoining country (the “covered countries”), or are from recycled or scrap sources.

The tin and tungsten catalysts used by ExxonMobil are purchased from third party suppliers. ExxonMobil’s country of origin inquiry includes obtaining from each of our suppliers for catalysts containing tin or tungsten compounds an annual written declaration in the form of the Conflict Minerals Reporting Template (“CMRT”) promulgated by the Responsible Minerals Initiative (“RMI”). Our contracts with each of these catalyst suppliers also require the suppliers to have and maintain procedures reasonably designed to ensure that all conflict minerals necessary to the functionality of products manufactured by the supplier or contracted by the supplier to be manufactured that are sold to ExxonMobil will be conflict free.

With respect to products we manufactured or contracted to manufacture in 2020, we have obtained completed CMRT declarations from each of our suppliers of catalysts containing tin or tungsten compounds. All suppliers except the three described in more detail below certified that the tin or tungsten used in their catalysts did not originate in the covered countries. Based on these inquiries, we conclude that, with respect to catalysts containing tin or tungsten compounds purchased from these suppliers and used in the manufacture of products by ExxonMobil in 2020, the tin or tungsten did not originate in the covered countries.













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The three suppliers indicated in their CMRT declarations that some of the smelters in their respective supply chains source tin and/or tungsten from the covered countries (the “covered country declarations”). Two of the covered country declarations were provided on a company basis rather than a product basis so it is not known with certainty that minerals from the covered countries were actually used to produce catalysts sold to ExxonMobil. All three covered country declarations represented that any covered country smelters or refiners used in the supplier’s supply chains in 2020 were “conformant” within the meaning of the RMI standards. Under RMI definitions, “conformant” means smelters and refiners that have successfully completed an assessment against the applicable Responsible Minerals Assurance Process (“RMAP”) or an equivalent cross-recognized assessment. We confirmed that, based on information currently available through RMI’s public website, each tin or tungsten smelter identified in the covered country declarations that remains in operation as shown in the RMI database is listed either as (i) having been determined to be conformant with the RMAP Supply Chain Transparency Audit Protocol for tin or tungsten, as applicable, by completing a RMAP conformance audit conducted by an independent third party, or (ii) participating in the RMAP by agreeing to complete a RMAP conformance audit conducted by an independent third party auditor. According to the RMI website, the operational impacts of COVID-19 have led to postponement of some RMAP assessments, in which case assessments will be scheduled at the earliest possible date with consideration given to maintaining public safety.

Based on the representations made in the covered country declarations regarding the supply chains upstream of ExxonMobil’s direct catalyst suppliers, together with information provided in further discussions with certain of these suppliers and the information available on the RMI website, we do not believe further diligence regarding these supply chains is necessary on ExxonMobil’s part.

This Conflict Minerals Disclosure and accompanying Conflict Minerals Report are available on ExxonMobil’s website at: https://corporate.exxonmobil.com/About-us/Policy/Conflict-minerals


Item 1.02 Exhibit

The Conflict Minerals Report required by Item 1.01 is filed as Exhibit 1.01 to this Form SD.


Section 2 – Exhibits


Item 2.01 Exhibits

Exhibit 1.01 – Conflict Minerals Report


















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SIGNATURE




Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the duly authorized undersigned.



EXXON MOBIL CORPORATION
/s/ ANDREW P. SWIGERMay 26, 2021
ByAndrew P. Swiger(Date)
Senior Vice President and
Principal Financial Officer
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Exhibit 1.01
Conflict Minerals Report

The information contained in ExxonMobil’s Conflict Minerals Disclosure filed under Item 1.01 of the corporation’s Form SD Report for the year ended December 31, 2020, including the description of ExxonMobil’s reasonable country of origin inquiries and additional diligence, is incorporated in its entirety into this Conflict Minerals Report. Terms used in such Conflict Minerals Disclosure have the same meanings in this Conflict Minerals Report.

The catalysts purchased from suppliers who provided covered country declarations under the RMI as described in more detail in ExxonMobil’s 2020 Conflict Minerals Disclosure incorporated herein were used in two of the Corporation’s refineries in connection with the production of ExxonMobil products as listed below:

Antwerp refinery:
Diesel fuels
Heating oils
Marine gasoil

Rotterdam refinery:
Jet fuel
Diesel fuels
Lubricant base stocks
Mineral oil