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˜Grassroots Opposition to Clean Energy Reform Bankrolled by Foreign Oil, Petro-Governments

This is a Think Progress repost.

Saudi Arabian oil fieldClean energy legislation passed by the House, now pending in the Senate, faces fierce opposition from the proprietors of fossil fuel companies, and much has been reported on how domestic oil and coal companies have flooded the debate with money, lobbying, and misinformation. These opponents of clean energy reform claim to be “standing up” for American jobs and security. However, according to an investigation by ThinkProgress, many of the lobbyists and right-wing operatives engineering the attacks on clean energy reform either work directly for petro-governments, or work for companies in the business of importing foreign oil:

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Alyssa

Smashed

I don’t have words for, or the right to speak about, Haiti.  So read Belleisa on her Haiti over at PostBourgie.  This is not a political blog, so I can’t, and won’t, tell you what to do or think.  But I gave money to Partners in Health, which has functioning health infrastructure through its Zanmi Lasante clinics, and whose founder is as passionate about Haiti, and about adequate medical care for the country as it’s possible to be.

Climate Progress

Lisa Says, Let Alaska Melt

Our guest bloggers are Daniel J. Weiss, a Senior Fellow and the Director of Climate Strategy at the Center for American Progress Action Fund, and Jaren Love.

340xmurkAlaska Senator Lisa Murkowski (R) plans to offer an amendment that would block enforcement of the Clean Air Act. Her “Dirty Air Act” amendment would delay progress in reducing pollution. Meanwhile, global warming continues to plague Alaska, threatening its people, economy and even the oil industry. So why would Lisa Murkowski promote a Dirty Air Act that ignores her state? Big oil and other special interests have loaded her campaign coffers with cash and even helped with an earlier version of her proposal.

Her amendment would block action required by the Clean Air Act and mandated by the US Supreme Court three years ago. Her spokesperson “acknowledged that the chances of actually stopping EPA global warming rules are minimal,” which suggests that her efforts are brazenly political, and designed to curry favor with big oil rather than address our energy needs.

Murkowski’s efforts to block pollution reductions conflicts with Alaska’s interests. Her state is on the front lines of global warming impacts in the United States. Over the past 100 years, some parts of Alaska have experienced temperature increases of up to 4°F, which is more than twice the rate of the rest of the United States. The U.S. Global Change Research Program determined that “climate change impacts are much more pronounced [in Alaska] than in other regions of the United States.”

Alaska’s warming threatens its people. A 2009 Government Accountability Office report determined that global warming has “imminently threatened” 31 Alaska villages because of coastal erosion, flooding and climate change. Twelve of these villages are already beginning a relocation process. In 2006, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers estimated that relocating Shishmaref (a barrier island town of 600 residents on the state’s west coast) would cost $200 million. The cost for relocating other villages would be similar, so it could cost up to $2.4 billion to move all of these villages.

Climate change in Alaska could also harm the oil industry. Oil exploration and production are threatened by warmer temperatures that have shortened the winter season necessary for construction of ice roads essential for exploratory and drilling activities. The Alaska Department of Natural Resources found the ice road season has dropped from 200 days per year to 100 days per year over the last 30 years. The Global Change Research report found that “this results in a 50 percent reduction in days that oil and gas exploration and extraction equipment can be used.” Oil production has also decreased in the summer due to warmer temperatures, reducing compressor efficiency.

Global warming could further harm Alaska’s economy by damaging its infrastructure. Evidence shows that roads, buildings, pipelines and power lines built on top of permafrost may shift, warp or collapse from the thawing. These damages could add $3.6 to $6.1 billion (10-20%) to future costs of public infrastructure between now and 2030.

Despite the global warming threat to Alaska, Senator Murkowski launched efforts to weaken the Clean Air Act last September. She consulted big oil and other special interest lobbyists to advise her on this legislative assault. Jeffrey R. Holmstead and Roger R. Martella Jr have clients who would gain from a weaker Clean Air Act and status quo energy policies. The Anchorage Daily News reported that “Holmstead’s clients include the CSX railroad, Arch Coal, Duke Energy and Progress Energy…Martella’s clients include the National Alliance of Forest Owners and the Alliance of Food Associations.”

Senator Murkowski attempted to diminish the assistance provided by these lobbyists. The Washington Post, however, reports that both Holmstead and Martella briefed a number of staffers from other Senate offices on the draft Murkowski amendment.

“Holmstead and Martella dominated the opening of the meeting by describing how the revised amendment had answered the attacks lodged by some Democrats and environmental groups.”

Senator Murkowski’s staff did not contradict this report that big oil and coal lobbyists briefed other staffers on her amendment at a meeting convened by her office.

Why would Lisa Murkowski neglect threats to her state, and instead offer the Dirty Air Act favored by big polluters? It may be that big oil has been kind to her. Beginning with her first Senate race in 2004, she received $365,813 from oil and gas interests. This election cycle, Murkowski is the third largest recipient of big oil campaign cash in the Senate. Now that big oil has denounced pollution reductions, Murkowski is listening.

Senator Murkowski claims that her Dirty Air Act is designed “to allow the legislative process to proceed. I’m hopeful that we’ll be able to have a vote that will allow for that discussion.” Yet she has done nothing in the 111th Congress to support pollution reductions. She voted against the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act that invests $90 billion in clean energy jobs and research. Previously, she voted against bipartisan global warming legislation authored by Senators John McCain (R-AZ) and Joe Lieberman (D-CT), and skipped the vote on a bill1 by Senators Barbara Boxer (D-CA), John Warner (R-VA), and Lieberman (I-CT).

Clean energy reform and global warming pollution reductions would spur new investments, create jobs, increase American energy independence and cut global warming pollution. It could help the Alaska oil and gas industry, and protect Alaska villages from erosion and floods linked to warmer temperature. Rather than attempt to weaken the Clean Air Act, Senator Murkowski should join Senators John Kerry (D-MA), Lindsey Graham (R-SC), and Joe Lieberman (I-CT) in their efforts to develop and pass comprehensive legislation that would achieve these goals.

Politics

Fox News: Guantanamo Bay may open its doors to Haitian refugees.

gitmoFox News is reporting that Defense Department officials have indicated that part of the U.S. relief effort in response to yesterday’s earthquake in Haiti may involve temporarily relocating Haitian refugees and housing some of them at Camp Justice in Guantanamo Bay in Cuba. Fox News cited remarks made by Gen. Douglas Fraser at an afternoon press briefing:

Asked at an afternoon press briefing whether Guantanamo Bay is under consideration to house Haitian refugees or detain Haitian criminals, a top military official told reporters the naval base is a possibility.

“It’s a resource that’s available if we need to take advantage of it for various reasons,” said Gen. Douglas Fraser, commander of U.S. Southern Command. “So we’re looking across the region to just understand what the possibilites are there.”

In recent months, military officials at the base have said that – after the detention facilities are closed as President Obama has promised – Camp Justice might still remain so that refugees from the Caribbean could be housed there if necessary.

However, as Shepard Smith of Fox News pointed out during his afternoon segment, Camp Justice would not be large enough to accommodate the massive needs of the large number of refugees that such a devastating disaster will inevitably entail. A Department of Homeland Security spokesman announced earlier today that the agency is halting all deportations of undocumented Haitian immigrants as of today. However, Haitians scheduled for deportation will remain in U.S. detention centers. The Wonk Room has suggested granting undocumented Haitian immigrants already in the U.S. Temporary Protected Status which would allow them to legally work and send money back to their relatives at home and help their families get back on their feet.

Update

“Four members of the American embassy staff in Haiti have been evacuated to the US naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, officials said.”

Economy

Bair Slams Regulators Who Won’t Address Wall Street Pay: ‘I Just Cannot Understand That’

AP091112173769Yesterday, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.’s (FDIC) board voted 3-2 to move forward with a proposal to charge banks higher fees for deposit insurance, in accordance with the riskiness of their pay packages. As the Wall Street Journal put it, the FDIC wants to use deposit insurance fees “as an incentive to encourage compensation practices that favor less-risky behavior.”

In order to draw favorable ratings from the FDIC, pay packages would need to have a healthy portion of restricted company stock, with extra bonus points for having compensation decided by independent members of boards of directors. “This isn’t about levels. It’s about structures,” said FDIC Chair Sheila Bair, who sided with two other board members in approving the proposal.

Meanwhile, the heads of both the Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS) and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) — bank regulators who also have seats on the FDIC board — voted against it. Bair was reportedly very displeased with the no votes, and took her fellow regulators to task, saying she can’t understand why they keep waiting to address Wall Street pay:

I must say, to take a position that we should not even be asking these questions is not one that I can understand. I also cannot understand why we need to keep waiting. We need to keep waiting for this or that, and in the interim, nothing changes. We just maintain the status quo, and the longer we try to [implement] meaningful reforms, the more momentum for that dissipates…To suggest this agency shouldn’t do anything, when there is such an overwhelming amount of evidence that this is clearly a contributor to the crisis and to the losses that we are suffering, I just cannot understand that.

Earlier this week, a former Wall Street banker slammed those bankers who “just don’t get it” on compensation, and now we have a regulator doing the same to her colleagues. I hope this is a sign that more people will begin to get serious on the real structural issues with banks’ executive compensation, especially with some of the bonuses that we are likely to see in the next few days.

As for the merits of the FDIC plan, I think it makes a lot of sense to have banks with compensation structures that encourage higher risk pay more for federal deposit insurance. Not only is it sensible in principle, but in the long-term, it’s a much better way of addressing Wall Street pay structures than coming up with a tax on bonuses (though that still leaves open the question regarding 2009 bonuses, which were largely earned on the backs of taxpayers).

The FDIC’s proposal, along with a fee on “too big to fail” banks that will be dedicated to funding a robust resolution authority, will help to address some of Wall Street’s perverse incentives that contributed to the economic crisis. Bair is right to want to get these efforts underway right now.

Economy

‘Grassroots’ Opposition To Clean Energy Reform Bankrolled By Foreign Oil, Petro-Governments (Updated)

Saudi Arabian oil field

Saudi Arabian oil field

Clean energy legislation passed by the House, now pending in the Senate, faces fierce opposition from the proprietors of fossil fuel companies, and much has been reported on how domestic oil and coal companies have flooded the debate with money, lobbying, and misinformation. These opponents of clean energy reform claim to be “standing up” for American jobs and security. However, according to an investigation by ThinkProgress, many of the lobbyists and right-wing operatives engineering the attacks on clean energy reform either work directly for petro-governments, or work for companies in the business of importing foreign oil:

– Nigeria’s Bayelsa State, the region of the country producing much of its crude oil, is registered with the Carmen Group as its representative in DC. (Update: The Carmen Group later informed ThinkProgress that it no longer represents Nigeria.) The Carmen Group is run largely by employs lobbyist David Keene as a Managing Associate, who also manages the American Conservative Union. (Update: The Carmen Group’s Managing Director Richard Masterson tells ThinkProgress that Keene “does not work for any energy-related interest at the Carmen Group.”) Keene has lobbied against clean energy reform and used his conservative organization to generategrassroots” opposition to legislative efforts to move away from a fossil fuel based economy. Although the extent to which the Carmen Group “provide[s] general representation before the United States Congress” is unclear — as Justice Department disclosures indicate — the Nigerian state has lavished Carmen group lobbyists with $903,450 in payments since 2006. According to a report produced Monday by the State Department, Nigeria is at risk of becoming a haven for terror and extremism. In the past, Keene, the coordinator of the CPAC convention, has been caught auctioning off conservative grassroots support to his corporate lobbying clients for as much as $2 million dollars.

The lobbyist-run front group Americans for Prosperity is perhaps the most active anti-clean energy group in the country. In addition to working furiously to orchestrate anti-clean energy themed tea parties, Americans for Prosperity is running anti-clean energy legislation ads, anti-climate change science ads, and is even barnstorming around the country with anti-clean energy “hot air” rallies. The organization was founded and is bankrolled by David Koch of Koch Industries, a major refiner of oil. Through Koch Industry subsidiaries — Koch Supply & Trading and Flint Hills Resources — Koch imports crude oil and unfinished oils from a variety of foreign sources, including from Saudi Arabia and Nigeria.

Currently, FreedomWorks is focusing their energy activism on supporting the status quo reliance on fossil fuels. Throughout 2009, as FreedomWorks leader Dick Armey organized tea party opposition to clean energy reform, he simultaneously worked for the lobbying firm DLA Piper on the account of Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Prime Minister of the United Arab Emirates. According to disclosure forms filed with the Justice Department, the UAE paid Armey’s lobbying firm at the time to help maintain the “development of UAE energy resources, which represent about 10 percent of global oil reserves.”

Oil companies have attempted to demonstrate popular support for fossil-fuel dependence by hosting “Energy Citizen” rallies around the country, where employees of oil companies are bused in for large events. The “Energy Citizen” website claims that converting a clean energy economy would mean “less energy independence.” Ironically, the main sponsor of the Energy Citizen effort is the American Petroleum Institute, which is a trade association for companies like Chevron, Exxon Mobil, and Sunoco. These companies, in turn, are highly dependent on foreign oil imports — from countries including Algeria, Nigeria, Saudi Arabia, Libya, and Venezuela. For perspective, Exxon Mobil imports 27%, Valero 29%, and Chevron 36% of its oil from Persian Gulf countries alone.

As a report by Rudy deLeon and Dan Weiss has argued, “America’s dependence on foreign oil transfers U.S. dollars to a number of unfriendly regimes, while robbing the United States of the economic resources it desperately needs for domestic development and American innovation.” It is alarming, though, that American lobbyists — funded by foreign oil — are working furiously to continue the status quo that is putting the nation’s security at risk.

Update

A new Center for American Progress report, published today by Rebecca Lefton, finds that the United States imported 4 million barrels of oil — or 1.5 billion barrels per year — from “dangerous or unstable” countries in 2008 at a cost of about $150 billion.

Security

START Deal Held Up For Something Pointless

rocketSTART negotiations are soon to reconvene in Geneva, and while the two sides seem very close to finalizing an agreement, there have been a lot of questions concerning why a deal on a new START treaty has not yet happened. Now more than a month since December 5th – the date that START expired – we have a bit more of an idea what one of the major obstacles is: telemetry. Josh Rogin in Foreign Policy reports:

Were you wondering what the last remaining sticking point was inside the U.S.-Russian negotiations over a START follow-on treaty? Well, as it turns out, the issue is … rocket science, and, more specifically, telemetry data.

Telemetry is the information that a missile sends back after it is tested and in the previous START treaty this information had to be shared between the US and Russia. However in the negotiations over a new treaty this has been a major sticking point. The Russians want to get rid of it, as they see it as unfair to keep it in a new treaty, because the US isn’t testing any new missiles. As former Ambassador Linton Brooks noted, “It’s an interesting argument but it’s the argument they make.”

In other words, if telemetry is included, the Russians want to get something for it – and that something appears to be access to data on US missile defense tests. While US negotiators have been insistent that telemetry be included in a final agreement, they have also made clear that linking the START treaty to missile defense in any way is out of bounds for this treaty. Hence, the impasse.

But what is frustrating about this deadlock is that telemetry really doesn’t matter all that much to the US in a practical sense. Current technology allows the US to gain access to missile test information, whether the data is formally shared or not. Rogin notes:

Many insiders see the telemetry issue as somewhat of a red herring. New verification and tracking technologies, most of them classified, can provide the same capability without the Russians directly providing the data.

Rogin’s source adds:

Everybody knows that telemetry is bullshit [substantively], but it’s become an issue nonetheless.

So why are US negotiators fighting furiously over something pointless? Well, because conservative members of the Senate, especially Jon Kyl are looking for any little thing to blow up and use to oppose the treaty. Therefore to appease Jon Kyl, US negotiators have to go to the mat on something pointless. Travis Sharp of CNAS, explains:

For the United States, the politics matter because certain senators will go nuts without access to the data.

By constraining the hand of US negotiators, Kyl and other conservatives are, as a result, giving the Russians more leverage in these negotiations.

Yglesias

Did Haiti Form a Pact With the Devil?

My colleague Amanda Terkel observes that Pat Robertson thinks the Haitians have no one but themselves to blame for the earthquake that’s afflicting their country. After all, it’s only comeuppance for their pact with the devil:

[S]omething happened a long time ago in Haiti and people might not want to talk about it. They were under the heel of the French. Napoleon the Third and whatever. And they got together and swore a pact to the devil. They said, “We will serve you if you get us free from the prince.” True story. And so the devil said, “OK, it’s a deal.” They kicked the French out, the Haitians revolted and got themselves free.

But ever since, they have been cursed by one thing after the other, desperately poor. That island of Hispaniola is one island. It’s cut down the middle, on the one side is Haiti, on the other side is the Dominican Republic. The Dominican Republic is prosperous, healthy, full of resorts, etc. Haiti is in desperate poverty. Same island.

It’s surprisingly hard to say why Haiti is so poor, but I think we can dismiss that devil-based theory.

But was there a pact with the devil? I would also note that the Haitian Revolution began in 1791, years before Napoleon took over France as Consul. Napoleon III didn’t come to power until 1848. So clearly Robertson is confused on the basic history. But I believe that Robertson is referring to the Bois Caïman Ceremony that in Haitian national mythology initiated the revolution. This was a Vodou ceremony and the following text is normally attributed to its leader, Boukman:

The god who created the earth; who created the sun that gives us light. The god who holds up the ocean; who makes the thunder roar. Our God who has ears to hear. You who are hidden in the clouds; who watch us from where you are. You see all that the white has made us suffer. The white man’s god asks him to commit crimes. But the god within us wants to do good. Our god, who is so good, so just, He orders us to revenge our wrongs. It’s He who will direct our arms and bring us the victory. It’s He who will assist us. We all should throw away the image of the white men’s god who is so pitiless. Listen to the voice for liberty that speaks in all our hearts.

If you were a white, Catholic French person or Haitian plantation owner, I can see why you would characterize this as a prayer offered “to the devil.” The black Haitians are postulating the existence of two Gods, one for the whites and one for the blacks. The whites regard the God they pray to as the one true God. So if the blacks are praying to some second god, and doing it with a Vodou ceremony, it stands to reason that they’re engaged in a satanic ritual of some sort.

But there’s no reason for 21st century Americans to accept this interpretation of the story. From the Haitian perspective, I think you’d say they were just praying to God for his assistance and asserting the justice of their cause. This is what pretty much everyone does before heading into battle.

Yglesias

Don’t Tell Steve Levitt

Back in December 2006, some unimaginative scientists did a study that prompted the headline “Regional Nuclear War Could Devastate Global Climate”. This alleged devastation would, however, take the form of making the global climate cooler:

“We examined the climatic effects of the smoke produced in a regional conflict in the subtropics between two opposing nations, each using 50 Hiroshima-size nuclear weapons to attack the other’s most populated urban areas,” Robock said. The researchers carried out their simulations using a modern climate model coupled with estimates of smoke emissions provided by Toon and his colleagues, which amounted to as much as five million metric tons of “soot” particles.

“A cooling of several degrees would occur over large areas of North America and Eurasia, including most of the grain-growing regions,” Robock said. “As in the case with earlier nuclear winter calculations, large climatic effects would occur in regions far removed from the target areas or the countries involved in the conflict.”

One man’s catastrophe is another man’s innovative geoengineering! This cooling could easily be offset by just burning more coal and oil and tearing down all those unsightly windmills.

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