By FRANK CARINI/ecoRI
News staff
The fact that the planet
has a fever isn’t debatable. The millions of dollars lackeys for the
fossil-fuel industry spend to discredit climate science doesn’t change reality.
Nearly 100 percent of
climate scientists agree that human activity, most notably the burning of
fossil fuels, is changing life on Earth — and not for the better, especially
for humans.
It’s been more than five
decades since scientists first expressed concern
to a U.S. president about the dangers of a changing climate. Last year’s Fourth National Climate Assessment — the work
of 13 federal agencies and 350 scientists — is crystal clear: The planet is
warming faster than at any time in human history, and humans are causing it.
Seventeen of the 18
warmest years in the 136-year climate record have occurred since 2001,
according to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
At least 18 scientific
societies in the United States, including the Union of Concerned Scientists, have
issued official statements about manmade climate change.
Despite this scientific
consensus, climate-change deniers are still given airtime by the same media
outlets that nightly report on floods, tornadoes, wildfires, and other extreme
weather. Many of the same people being left homeless by a feverish Mother
Nature vote for politicians who deride climate solutions.
Deniers ignore a public that is increasingly concerned about the impacts of climate change. A recent survey conducted by Yale University’s Program on Climate Change Communications found that 53 percent of Americans believe global warming is harming their local community and 57 percent believe fossil-fuel companies have either “a great deal” or “a moderate amount” of responsibility for the damages caused by climate change.
Deniers also ignore the
fact that internal research by fossil-fuel companies supports the scientific
consensus on climate change. But they plow ahead anyway with their campaign of
misinformation, even as lawsuits are filed to hold the industry accountable for
the climate impacts it knew would occur.
Like the tobacco industry, the fossil-fuel industry minimized the negative health impacts of its products so it could operate unchecked. Some of the same shills, such as Steve Milloy, who protected tobacco profits at the expense of public health are using the same playbook to protect hydrocarbons.
Like the tobacco industry, the fossil-fuel industry minimized the negative health impacts of its products so it could operate unchecked. Some of the same shills, such as Steve Milloy, who protected tobacco profits at the expense of public health are using the same playbook to protect hydrocarbons.
“Scientific
misinformation undermines public understanding of science, erodes basic trust
in research findings and stalls evidenced-based policymaking,” according to a paper published in March
in the science journal Nature.
The paper’s three
authors noted that in April 2018 then-Environmental Protection Agency
administrator Scott Pruitt signed a rule that would sharply reduce the number
of scientific studies the federal agency can take into account, “effectively
limiting the agency’s ability to regulate toxic chemicals, air pollution,
carbon emissions and industries that science has already shown to have lethal
impacts on human and environmental health.”
Milloy, a member of
President Trump’s EPA transition team, said the rule to end “secret science” by
“taxpayer-funded university researchers” is “one of my proudest achievements.”
In an interview with The New Yorker, Milloy
defended his achievement by saying, “I do have a bias. I’m all for the coal
industry, the fossil-fuel industry. Wealth is what makes people happy, not
pristine air, which you’ll never get.”
A dark place
Six years ago, Drexel University environmental sociologist Robert Brulle, now a
visiting professor of environment and society at Brown University, published an
analysis that found conservative foundations, such as the Howard Charitable
Foundation, the John William Pope Foundation, the Sarah Scaife Foundation, and
Searle Freedom Trust, provided the largest and most-consistent money stream to
the denial movement. Much of that secret funding is now commonly referred to as
“dark money.”
Here in Rhode Island,
denial propaganda is spread by the Rhode Island Center for Freedom and
Prosperity, with such headlines as “LAWSUIT: Center calls on RI
Attorney General to release ‘secrecy pact’ documents re. cabal’s climate change
inquisition” and “Center Plays Role in Lawsuit Against RI Attorney General for
Climate Change Conspiracy Documents.”
The organization’s
efforts are likely supported, at least in part, with money from special
interests, but finding information on its website about how the center is
funded is no easy task.
SourceWatch outlines the
Center for Freedom and Prosperity’s strong ties to Koch-funded organizations
such as the State Policy Network — a
group that touts the free market as the panacea to all ills and rails against
government regulation — and the American Legislative Exchange
Council (ALEC), a corporate bill mill.
The Center for Freedom
and Prosperity, the foundations mentioned above, and other front groups all
have one thing in common: they discredit science and attack knowledge to
undermine government intervention and muddy the warming waters when it comes to
climate change.
The are paid to
consistently lie and misrepresent facts — all in the name of protecting
polluting billionaires. They routinely claim, without evidence, that climate
initiatives will hurt the economy, increase cost for ratepayers, and slow job
creation. They argue that climate mitigation is a hidden tax, some violation of
the free market, or unconstitutional overreach.
All of this fossil-fuel-powered
propaganda is, to borrow a favorite denial-group phrase, fake news, but this
dark-money campaign does corrupt politics, both locally and nationally, by
pressuring politicians and policymakers to protect private wealth interests at
the expensive of, well, everything.
This clandestine operation makes having honest and open discussions about how to mitigate the very-real impacts of climate change nearly impossible. And that’s the point.
This clandestine operation makes having honest and open discussions about how to mitigate the very-real impacts of climate change nearly impossible. And that’s the point.
Brulle’s 2013 study was
among the first academic efforts to probe the web of funding supporting the
denial movement. It found that the amount of money flowing through third-party
foundations, whose funding can’t easily be traced, had risen dramatically since
2008.
Brulle found that from
2003 to 2010, for example, 140 foundations funneled $558 million to nearly 100
climate-denial organizations. He also found that the traceable cash flow from
more traditional sources, such as Koch Industries and ExxonMobil, had dried up.
From 2003 to 2007, Koch
Affiliated Foundations and the ExxonMobil Foundation were “heavily involved” in
funding denial efforts, according to Brulle’s research. He found, however, that
ExxonMobil hadn’t made a publicly traceable contribution since 2008, and that
the Koch brothers’ public contributions had been dramatically reduced.
There is evidence of a
trend toward concealing the sources of climate-denial funding through the use
of donor-directed philanthropies, according to the study.
The study concluded
public records identify only a fraction of the hundreds of millions of dollars
supporting climate-denial efforts. An examination of various metrics, including
Internal Revenue Service data, Brulle’s research found that 91 “climate change
counter-movement” organizations have an annual income of some $900 million,
with an annual average of $64 million in identifiable foundation support.
“The climate change countermovement
has had a real political and ecological impact on the failure of the world to
act on global warming,” Brulle wrote in a statement when his study was
released. “Like a play on Broadway, the countermovement has stars in the
spotlight — often prominent contrarian scientists or conservative politicians —
but behind the stars is an organizational structure of directors, script
writers and producers.
“If you want to
understand what's driving this movement, you have to look at what’s going on
behind the scenes. Without a free flow of accurate information, democratic
politics and government accountability become impossible. Money amplifies
certain voices above others and, in effect, gives them a megaphone in the
public square.”
Front-group follies
It’s difficult to comprehend what climate change is delivering, and those who do understand are disparaged, threatened, and called greedy — apparently, federal grants are making them rich.
It’s difficult to comprehend what climate change is delivering, and those who do understand are disparaged, threatened, and called greedy — apparently, federal grants are making them rich.
Much of this noise is mass-produced by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the National Association of Manufacturers, the American Petroleum Institute, and other front groups for the fossil-fuel industry. They all have well-funded lobbying arms and links to dark-money sources. They use both to block climate-mitigation efforts at every level.
In 2009, for instance,
the U.S. Chamber of Commerce submitted written comment
to the EPA after the agency said greenhouse-gas emissions are a threat to
public health. The business organization, which two years later would urge lawmakers to focus
on expanding fossil-fuel energy production and not “high-cost energy sources”
such as wind and solar, was appalled by reality.
The chamber’s written
response read, in part: “The Administrator has thus ignored analyses that show
that a warming of even 3 [degrees] C[elsius] in the next 100 years would, on
balance, be beneficial to humans because the reduction of wintertime
mortality/morbidity would be several times larger than the increase in summertime
heat stress-related mortality/morbidity.”
A year later, the
chamber sued the EPA, seeking to overturn its finding that climate emissions
endanger public health and welfare.
That’s the kind of
stupidity front groups are using to assail science, endanger public health, and
put future generations at risk. The fact we’re still being governed and
represented by people who spew such nonsense — last year Rep. Mo Brooks,
R-Ala., a member of the House Committee on Science, Space and Technology, blamed sea-level rise on erosion
and rocks falling into the ocean, saying, “Every time you have that
soil or rock or whatever it is that is deposited into the seas, that forces the
sea levels to rise, because now you have less space in those oceans, because
the bottom is moving up.” — speaks to the power special interests wield.
The U.S. Chamber of
Commerce has gone to great lengths to protect the unrelenting burning of fossil
fuels. In both 2005 and ’07, the chamber opposed bipartisan cap-and
trade-legislation.
In 2009, the chamber was
one of the leading front groups lobbying against the Waxman-Markey cap-and-trade bill.
Since the failure of that bill, the chamber’s allies in Congress have refused
to hold hearings, debate, or vote on any legislation proposing reductions in
carbon pollution.
The chamber has convened
fossil-fuel lobbyists, lawyers, and political strategists to plot legal
strategies for opposing future regulatory actions to limit carbon pollution.
It led a coalition of trade groups suing to block an EPA plan to reduce carbon emissions in the electric power sector. It funded a study critical of the Paris Agreement. It spearheaded a lobbying campaign in support of a Congressional Review Act resolution to repeal a Department of Interior rule limiting methane emissions from oil and gas facilities on public lands.
It led a coalition of trade groups suing to block an EPA plan to reduce carbon emissions in the electric power sector. It funded a study critical of the Paris Agreement. It spearheaded a lobbying campaign in support of a Congressional Review Act resolution to repeal a Department of Interior rule limiting methane emissions from oil and gas facilities on public lands.
The U.S. Chamber of
Commerce and the National Association of Manufacturers have softened their
stance on climate change somewhat in the past year or so, mainly because of
increasing corporate pressure. However, the leadership of these trade/front
groups is still dominated by fossil-fuel money and is loyal to a political
party that has branded coal as clean.
The foundation upon
which these organizations rest — the businesses they supposedly represent — is
beginning to crack, as some corporations, most notably Apple, have left the
U.S. Chamber of Commerce over its climate-change position, and others are
following them out the denial door.
The public’s growing
concern about climate change has exposed a rift between the U.S. Chamber of
Commerce’s corporate members and the organization itself, according to Sen.
Sheldon Whitehouse.
Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse,
D-R.I., and some other D.C. lawmakers are applying pressure to this mounting
relationship tension by making sure the corporate world and the public
understand the negative impact fossil-fuel front groups are having on delaying
solutions to a serious problem.
ecoRI News recently
spoke with Whitehouse in a downtown Providence cafe. He said now that the
climate-change issue has reached a level of public priority it has forced
corporate America to get serious about the problem. This corporate seriousness,
he added, has exposed a rift between the chamber’s members and the organization
itself.
Whitehouse believes
widening this rift and exposing the front groups that are laundering denial
money are the keys to addressing climate change. “All of this nonsense is
funded by fossil-fuel money,” he said.
Now that House
committees have subpoena power, Whitehouse said they will start digging into
the “dark-money stuff.”
“There’s nothing about
dark money that enjoys a legal privilege,” Rhode Island’s former attorney
general said. “You just don’t have to disclose it, so they don’t. But it’s not
like you can take a subpoena and say, ‘No, I don’t have to respond to that
subpoena.’ All we have to do is start digging and we’ll find some very
interesting stuff.”
Follow the money
Brulle and Brown University professor Timmons Roberts are continuing the work
Brulle started nearly a decade ago.
The Climate and Development Lab at Brown
University is working to shine a light on the individuals and organizations
behind the climate-denial movement. The lab’s research aims to make known the
vast sums spent on public-relations firms by ExxonMobil and other energy
corporations to obscure what they have known for decades: that fossil-fuel
emissions are destructive.
“This really is a
failure to warn us that (fossil-fuel companies) know their products are going
to cause all of these problems but they are not warning the public about it,”
Brulle told ecoRI News earlier this
year. “They are selling us the idea of oil, prosperity, and fossil fuels are
all the same thing … a very, very subtle manipulation that runs into the
billions of dollars over decades.”
The project has already
untangled a web of denial money from oil and gas companies such as Chevron,
ExxonMobil, Shell, and Texaco, and from automakers such as Ford and General
Motors.
These corporations fund groups such as the National Mining Association and the American Petroleum Institute, and denial groups with ambiguous names such as the Global Climate Coalition and the Cooler Heads Coalition.
These corporations fund groups such as the National Mining Association and the American Petroleum Institute, and denial groups with ambiguous names such as the Global Climate Coalition and the Cooler Heads Coalition.
The initiative profiles
these groups and explains how they create the appearance of public support for
deregulation, while also reminding politicians that they may lose
election/re-election by opposing corporate priorities — i.e., the burning of
fossil fuels.
In Rhode Island,
National Grid has been one of the top opponents to legislation that would
address climate emissions. The British multinational opposed seven bills that
supported renewable energy and action on climate change in the General Assembly
between 2012 and 2017, according to the Climate and Development Lab.
Rhode Island’s primary
electric and gas utility has also donated to the front group Edison Electric Institute (EEI). The
organization has opposed, or funded groups that oppose, net metering, one of
the core renewable-energy policies that allow homes and businesses to sell
excess solar energy to the power grid.
A 2017 report by the
Energy and Policy Institute explores how regulated investor-owned utility
companies are including their EEI annual membership dues in their general
operating expenses. This widespread practice results in ratepayers subsidizing
the political activities of EEI, which works closely with ALEC.
The Energy
Council of Rhode Island also opposed seven climate and
renewable-energy bills proposed at the Statehouse between 2012 and 2017,
according to the Climate and Development Lab.
For 20 years, from
1997-2017, the network of players spreading misinformation about climate change
has been increasingly integrated into political philanthropy, according to a study published in March
by a Yale University professor.
“The study introduces a
new and broader pathway through which climate change misinformation travels,
beyond the tendency of research to narrowly focus on the activities of
think-tanks and fossil-fuel interests, often in isolation from mainstream
American institutions like philanthropy,” Justin Farrell wrote.
“Yet, as this study also shows, the impact of funding from fossil-fuel sources still plays an important role, revealing that the strength of the relationship between the misinformation network and philanthropy is strongest for people and organizations directly tied to such funding.”
“Yet, as this study also shows, the impact of funding from fossil-fuel sources still plays an important role, revealing that the strength of the relationship between the misinformation network and philanthropy is strongest for people and organizations directly tied to such funding.”
Farrell’s research
revealed new knowledge about large-scale efforts to distort public understanding
of science and sow polarization. This influence has grown in recent years with
the rapid expansion of untraceable donor-directed philanthropy that enables
anonymous funding to pass-through organizations such as DonorsTrust and Donors Capital Fund, according to the study
titled “The growth of climate change misinformation in US philanthropy.”