Exxon Mobil Corporation (ticker: XOM, exchange: New York Stock Exchange (.N))
News Release -
4-Jun-2008
ExxonMobil Receives 2008 Malaria Award from Global Business Coalition Nine Businesses to be Honored for Fighting Diseases
IRVING, Texas--(BUSINESS WIRE)--June 4, 2008--Exxon Mobil
Corporation (NYSE:XOM) has been awarded the 2008 Malaria Award by the
Global Business Coalition on HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria in
recognition of the corporation's Africa Health Initiative and its role
in the battle against malaria.
"The prospects for winning the fight against global epidemics are
stronger now than ever before," said Ambassador Richard Holbrooke,
president and chief executive officer of Global Business Coalition on
HIV/AIDS, TB and Malaria, a group of more than 220 companies that
leverage the private sector's reach and skills to keep epidemics on
the global agenda.
"Business action is making a critical difference, and ExxonMobil
is showing the world what strategic private sector interventions
against malaria can achieve. We need many, many more to make their own
contribution."
ExxonMobil is one of nine companies to be honored at an event in
New York on June 10 that will feature UN Secretary General Ban
Ki-moon; Dr. Peter Piot, executive director of UNAIDS; President Jorge
Sampaio, UN Special Envoy for Tuberculosis; Ray Chambers, UN special
envoy for malaria; Michel Kazatchkine, executive director of the
Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria, and many others.
Rex Tillerson, chairman and chief executive officer of Exxon Mobil
Corporation, said he was proud of the recognition by the Global
Business Coalition, but equally proud of the difference the
corporation's efforts are making in the fight against malaria.
"In the eight years since we launched our African Health
Initiative, the way the world thinks about malaria has changed," said
Tillerson. "We understand through our employees in Africa what an
impact malaria has on peoples' lives and the community's economic
development. We are committed to winning the battle against malaria."
The 2008 Malaria Award will be accepted on behalf of ExxonMobil by
Dr. Steven Phillips, ExxonMobil's medical director of global issues
and projects. Dr. Phillips serves on the board of Malaria No More, a
non-profit organization with the mission to end deaths due to malaria,
and Roll Back Malaria, a partnership launched in 1998 by the World
Health Organization, the United Nations Children's Fund, the United
Nations Development Programme and the World Bank.
ExxonMobil is the largest non-pharmaceutical corporate donor to
malaria research and development efforts and has committed more than
$130 million to organizations engaged in important community and
social development projects in Africa, which includes $50 million to
the fight against malaria through the company's Africa Health
Initiative.
The Initiative was established in 2000 in support of the Abuja
Declaration on Roll Back Malaria in Africa and its goal to halve
malaria deaths by 2010. Since then, ExxonMobil has developed
on-the-ground public-private partnerships to fight malaria at the
community level, progress treatment and vaccine research and raise
awareness and international support.
According to Roll Back Malaria, malaria is a life-threatening
disease caused by a parasite and transmitted to humans by mosquito
bite. With between 1 million and 3 million deaths annually and 3,000
children deaths daily, it remains one of the globe's leading
infectious killers. The majority of its victims are children under the
age of five and pregnant women.
About Exxon Mobil Corporation
Exxon Mobil Corporation and ExxonMobil Foundation, the primary
philanthropic arm of Exxon Mobil Corporation in the United States,
engage in a range of philanthropic activities that advance education,
health and public policy in the communities where ExxonMobil has
significant operations. In the United States, ExxonMobil supports
initiatives to improve math and science education at the K-12 and
higher education levels. Globally, ExxonMobil provides funding to
improve basic education and combat malaria and other infectious
diseases in developing countries. In 2007, together with its employees
and retirees, Exxon Mobil Corporation, its divisions and affiliates,
and ExxonMobil Foundation provided $207 million in contributions
worldwide. Additional information on ExxonMobil's community
partnerships and contributions programs is available at
www.exxonmobil.com/community.
CONTACT: ExxonMobil
Alan Jeffers, 972-444-1107
or
Global Business Coalition on HIV/AIDS TB and Malaria
David Stearns, 212-584-1633
SOURCE: Exxon Mobil Corporation
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