The world's largest oil company brought the case in Paris last month. Greenpeace will now be forced to stop using the Esso name in its publicity material, which replaces the two SS's with dollar signs.
ExxonMobil had argued that the manipulation of its logo made it resemble Germany's WWII Nazi SS.
The campaigning group had been targeting Esso, a subsidiary of ExxonMobil, for its key role in lobbying for the US to abandon the Kyoto Protocol, which is the only international agreement to address global warming.
Esso's suit demanded 拢51,678 a day in compensation for as long as the campaign continued, and asked for the website of the campaign taken down.
A spokesman for Esso said: "We uphold the right of Greenpeace to have freedom of expression but we were not willing to put up with the misuse of the company logo."
The court case move was seen as a victory by the Stop E$$o 北京赛车pk10 and a sign that the grassroots campaign was having some effect.
Stop E$$o says it has targeted Esso because the company has run a 10-year campaign of dirty tricks against international action to combat climate change.
A spokesman for Greenpeace said: "We find it ironic that the richest corporation in the world can't recognise the dollar sign and confuses it with a Nazi symbol. In the meantime, we're delighted Esso has finally admitted that our campaign is having an effect."
The campaign argues that ExxonMobil gave $1.3bn (拢866m) to the Republicans in the 2000 US election and as soon as George Bush became president, he pulled the US out of the Kyoto Protocol.
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