Report Dec. 15, 2022
Share
Report Dec. 15, 2022
Share
Report Dec. 15, 2022
For more information, visit ExxonMobil’s annual Worldwide Giving Report
$163 million in community social investments in 20211
As a major employer and investor in many malaria-endemic countries, ExxonMobil has been part of a longstanding international effort to prevent, treat and cure the disease. Through a coordinated, comprehensive effort, significant progress has been made over the past two decades in reducing the impacts of malaria on families and communities.
Since 2000, ExxonMobil has provided more than $170 million in funding for antimalarial programs that have reached more than 175 million people. Our support has resulted in the distribution of more than 15.1 million bed nets, 5.6 million doses of antimalarial treatments and 4 million rapid diagnostic kits, as well as training for over 1 million health workers. Thanks to the work of the many collaborations with governments, businesses, and civil society, malarial deaths have been reduced by more than half since 2000 and infection rates have drastically declined. The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that 1.5 billion cases of malaria have been prevented since 2000.2
In October 2021, the WHO authorized use of a malaria vaccine for children, a potential breakthrough in the fight against malaria. ExxonMobil was one of several organizations that helped support the development of this first-ever malaria vaccine.For the past several years, ExxonMobil has invested approximately $500 million annually in women-owned businesses. ExxonMobil is also a founding member of the 3꧃, a private-sector consortium that fosters economic change for women.
💟Our partners in building women's economic opportunities
💮Promoting and measuring women's economic empowerment
🐎Empowering women business owners through financial literacy
ღShe Counts: a global platform to put savings and financial tools in the hands of women
Since 2000, we have contributed $1.57 billion to education programs and workforce development around the world, including about $28 million in 2021.4
In Angola, for example, educational challenges include the shortage of educational facilities. A collaboration among , and the ExxonMobil Foundation led to the construction of 26 primary schools in Angola for nearly 30,000 out-of-school children in the provinces of Luanda, Benguela, and Bié. The final project was completed in 2021. In the U.S., we continue to support the (NMSI) in its efforts to bring college education training programs to students and teachers across the country. ExxonMobil helped launch NMSI in 2007 to improve math and science education by providing a comprehensive program designed to increase student participation and performance in Advanced Placement coursework. The organization also provides educators with hands-on training, strategies and resources to raise academic rigor and prepare students for advanced critical and creative thinking.Since 2007, NMSI has partnered with more than 1,300 U.S. school systems, training more than 6,500 teachers and touching the lives of more than 2 million students.5⛄ NMSI recently expanded its programming into several Texas and New Mexico high schools in the Permian Basin.
United States education initiatives
FOOTNOTES
1 Total contributions do not include environmental capital and operating expenditures.
2 World Health Organization’s World Malaria Report 2020
3 Global Business Coalition for Women’s Economic Empowerment: Private Sector Engagement with Women’s Economic Empowerment, Linda Scott, Said Business School, University of Oxford:
4 2021 Worldwide Giving Report | ExxonMobil
5
Related content
Sustainability Topic
Social Report𒁏 • Dec. 15, 2022
Social Reportꦉ • Dec. 15, 2022