Democrats’ climate plan takes aim at the fossil
fuel industry’s political power
A three-part plan aims to expose the industry’s
efforts to conceal the scale of the climate crisis, reform laws and sway
support
Emily
Holden in Washington
Mon 24 Aug
2020 10.00 BSTLast modified on Mon 24 Aug 2020 10.31 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/aug/24/democrats-climate-plan-fossil-fuel-industry
Senate
Democrats are set to release a 200-page plan arguing that significant US
climate action will require stripping the fossil fuel industry of its influence
over the government and the public’s understanding of the crisis.
“It’s
important for the public to understand that this is not a failure of American
democracy that’s causing this,” said Sheldon Whitehouse, a senate Democrat from
Rhode Island. “It is a very specific and successful attack on American
democracy by an industry with truly massive financial motivation to corrupt
democratic institutions.”
A 16-page
chapter of the report titled Dark Money lays out how “giant fossil fuel
corporations have spent billions – much of it anonymized through scores of
front groups – during a decades-long campaign to attack climate science and
obstruct climate action”.
The focus
on limiting the industry’s political power could be the opening punch in what
is likely to become a dirty fight over climate policy if Democrats take control
of the Senate and the White House.
The
blueprint, from Senate Democrats’ Special Committee on the Climate Crisis,
follows an extensive package of climate policy proposals from House Democrats.
Its first two sections describe the depth of the climate problem and posit
policy solutions. The third outlines how Democrats could carve a political
pathway to substantive reductions in planet-heating pollution.
Scores of
media reports and lawsuits from states have exposed the industry’s efforts to
conceal the scale of the problem and use of dark money groups to create
partisan gridlock and slow a shift away from fossil fuels. But Whitehouse said
the story has yet to reach the American public.
“I don’t
think we’ve even begun to get the news out adequately. We haven’t had proper
hearings in Congress – the best we’ve had is the Senate’s all Democrats hearing
with no ability to subpoena to investigate,” he said.
The plan
says the US is “almost alone among industrialized nations in having failed to
implement comprehensive policies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions”. It
directly blames the 2010 Citizens United supreme court decision that allowed
industries to spend virtually unlimited sums of money to sway elections.
Democrats
created the Democrats-only special committee to address climate change because
Republicans have majority control of the Senate and largely dictate the work of
committees.
The special
committee recommends a three-part plan to:
- ·
“expose
the role of the fossil fuel billionaires, executives, and corporations in
funding and organizing the groups trafficking in climate denial and
obstruction.”
- ·
“reform
federal laws and regulations to require greater transparency and reduce the
influence of money, particularly dark money, in politics.”
- ·
“alert
industries that support climate action to the depth, nature, and success of the
covert fossil fuel political scheme.”
Democratic
presidential nominee Joe Biden has said he would spend $2tn to get the US to
essentially eliminate its climate pollution by 2050. He is pitching his
proposal as a jobs plan to lift the US out of the economic downturn. But he
does not oppose fracking for natural gas – which is the main way the US
industry has grown in recent years.
At the
Democratic National Convention last week, climate activists were also let down
by a decision to remove language from the party platform opposing fossil fuel
subsidies – revitalizing skepticism about Biden and moderate Democrats’ ability
to get tough with the industry.
Republicans
meanwhile are split on the climate issue, with some outright denying the
science, many questioning the severity of the crisis, and a growing minority
pitching technologies for capturing emissions from fossil fuels so they can
continue to be used. Donald Trump has called climate change a hoax and
rescinded essentially all of the federal government’s biggest climate efforts.
The report
lays out a timeline stretching back to 1977, when an Exxon scientist told
company management that there was scientific agreement that humans were
altering the climate by burning fossil fuels. Exxon now says climate change is
“a serious issue” and denies the company misled the public.
In 1988,
Shell scientists acknowledged carbon dioxide emissions could be setting the
planet on a path to become 2C hotter, leading to rising seas and a melting
Arctic, it notes. The world is currently 1C hotter than before
industrialization and on a trajectory to be at least 3C hotter.
In 1986, a
congressional subcommittee held hearings on climate change and in 1988 Nasa
scientist James Hansen testified about the threat.
Senate
Democrats say oil companies responded by copying the playbook of the tobacco
industry to sow doubt about the problem. They started front groups and funded
think tanks like the Heartland Institute and the Competitive Enterprise
Institute to deny climate science.
Whitehouse
was elected to the Senate in 2006, and he said everything changed immediately
after the supreme court issued the Citizens United ruling in 2010. “There’s a
very clear before and after,” he said.
“I don’t
think Americans understand enough the extent to which the fossil fuel industry
has weaponized a whole variety of systems and laws that now competes with the
government itself for dominance,” Whitehouse said.
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