What her “Dirty Air Act” would mean for Alaska
Jeffrey Holmstead, head of the environmental strategies division at Bracewell & Guiliani, and Roger Martella Jr., a partner at Sidley Austin, walked Senate staffers through the details of the amendment, via speakerphone, during a meeting held at 8:45 a.m. in Room 370 of the Hart Senate Office Building on Sept. 23, 2009, a person familiar with the meeting told POLITICO. The meeting, convened by aides to Murkowski and Sen. Jim Inhofe (R-Okla.), was called to gauge interest among staffers to four or five Democrats.
Holmstead and Martella are lobbyists for big corporations and polluters (see here). Senate Majority Leader Reid described Murkowski’s “misguided amendment” as “a highly hazardous one to our health and the environment” (see Senate Majority Leader expects to pass bipartisan energy and climate bill this spring: It “may be the most important policy we will ever pass”). Working with James “I Am The Planet’s #1 Worst Enemy“ Inhofe is a new low for this once-moderate Senator from the state most devastated by climate change.
The rest of this post is a reprint of “Lisa Says, Let Alaska Melt” by guest bloggers are Daniel J. Weiss, Director of Climate Strategy at the Center for American Progress Action Fund, and Jaren Love.
Alaska 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.
New details are emerging of just how involved a pair of energy industry lobbyists were in writing a controversial amendment by Alaska Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski that would strip the Environmental Protection Agency of its authority to regulate carbon dioxide as a pollutant….
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this is an article on North Dakota trying to keep Minnesota from taxing carbon.
http://www.startribune.com/business/81606907.html?elr=KArksLckD8EQDUoaEyqyP4O:DW3ckUiD3aPc:_Yyc:aUUsZ
Whatever photographer took that picture was absolutely brilliant. The hands, the mouth, the hair, it’s all right there in beautiful cedar!
Seems like I heard about some quid pro quo stuff being a bit underhanded? I guess I am just old fashioned.
On the other hand, perhaps she intends to lure the lobbyists to give her ever increasing amounts of cash and favors and at the last minute, having gathered all this evidence, “out” them, gives all she collected to the Native Dept., plus all she can sue from litigation. Saves the “Climate Bill!” Becomes a National Climate Hero! She and Palin, the “can do” women from Alaska …”A double female Ticket!!! “
Alaska blogger the Immoral Minority (http://theimmoralminority.blogspot.com), primarily an anti-Palin site, takes up the issue (I can’t get a link, but here’s the post):
“Is Alaska’s Lisa Murkowski the best Senator that an energy lobbyist can buy? They seem to think so.
Alaska Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski has received more than $124,500 in donations from clients of an energy lobbyist involved with drafting a controversial environmental amendment.
Several months ago, Murkowski’s staff reached out to two lobbyists — Bracewell & Giuliani’s Jeffrey Holmstead and Sidley Austin’s Roger Martella Jr., — for technical assistance on how to craft the amendment, which would bar the Environmental Protection Agency from regulating carbon dioxide as a pollutant.
Holstead’s clients include Duke Energy, CSX, Progress Energy, Southern Co. and other top utility and energy companies that would be deeply impacted financially by climate regulations.
Several of those companies rank amid Murkowski’s top donors. Over the course of her career, the senator has received $38,000 from Southern Co. and $22,550 from Duke Energy, according to research by ethics watchdog Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington. In total, Murkowski has received more than $126,500 from Holmstead’s firm, clients, and employees, since 2004. Neither Holmstead or Martella made any personal donations to Murkowski.
Holmstead said he had no knowledge of the donations.
“I don’t know anything about my client’s campaign contributions,” he said. “I don’t even know about any campaign contributions my firm may have done.”
Okay let me get this straight. I am supposed to believe that the LOBBYIST for these companies has NO IDEA whose political campaign they contribute to? If you buy that then I have an idea for a bridge to Gravina Island I would like to interest you in.
It is no accident that Senator Murkowski is prostituting herself to the energy lobby. She is after all her father’s daughter. The senior Murkowski knew what he was doing when he appointed Lisa to his old senatorial seat. She was raised to understand how to utilize backroom deals and play political grab ass with lobbyists.
“Daddy’s little Senator” has a very important job to do for her father and the Big Energy good old boys. And that is why she gets the lionesses share of the oil and gas lobby money. They know Frank raised his little darling to play ball with them, and clearly she learned her lessons well.
And just how badly has Murkowski sold out her Alaskan constituents in favor of the lobbyists?
“It’s a highly political move, and a highly hazardous one to our health and the environment,” said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid on Thursday. “If this senator succeeds, it could keep Congress from working constructively in a bipartisan manner to pass clean energy legislation this year. That’s why I will work hard to defeat this misguided amendment.”
You know personally I would like to thank Senator Murkowski for her work on Alaska’s behalf. And I think I will do just that in this next election cycle.
But don’t worry about Murkowski if she loses, there is always room for another energy lobbyist in the world. Isn’t working for their favorite lobby where ALL unethical politicians end up?
Posted by Gryphen at 7:45 AM 17 comments Links to this post
Labels: Alaska, energy, environment, Lisa Murkowski, Lobbyists, oil, Senate”