Greenpeace uncovers "astroturf" campaign to challenge US climate bill
Leaked email reveals that American Petroleum Institute is planning a series of rallies to protest against Waxman-Markey bill
BusinessGreen, Aug. 17 2009
The
scale of the challenge faced by the Obama administration as it seeks to
secure support for the Waxman-Markey Climate Change bill was again
underlined late last week. It emerged oil and gas industry lobbyists
are planning a nationwide campaign designed to create the impression of
widespread grassroots opposition to the legislation.
A leaked email
obtained by Greenpeace USA reveals that the American Petroleum
Institute (API) is preparing a series of "Energy Citizen" rallies over
the next few weeks, intended to heap pressure on key senators ahead of
the crucial Senate vote in late September.
Greenpeace
accused the API of engaging in "astroturfing" - the controversial
tactic of creating the illusion of a largely spontaneous grassroots
protest that has in fact been organised by corporate-backed groups. The
practice has been widely accused of undermining President Obama's
efforts to pass universal healthcare legislation and environmentalists
are increasingly concerned that his climate change programme could face
a similar fate.
In
the email, API president Jack Gerard urged the group's member companies
to encourage staff to attend the planned rallies and to also extend
invites to " all vendors, suppliers, contractors, retirees and others
who have an interest in our success".
He
stresses that attendees will have to do little more than turn up,
explaining that API will provide all the "up-front resources" and has
appointed "a highly experienced events management company that has
produced successful rallies for presidential campaigns, corporations
and interest groups" to manage the events.
The
email also calls on member companies to not disclose details of the
planned events, urging them to "please treat this information as
sensitive and ask those in your company to do so as well& we don't
want critics to know our game plan".
The
plans will be of particular concern to the Obama administration as the
API includes several members of the US Climate Action Partnership
(US-CAP), a business group that supports the Waxman-Markey bill and had
managed to sign up a number of influential oil and energy firms.
In
a letter to Gerard, Greenpeace USA executive director Phil Radford
requested clarification on the extent to which those API members that
are also committed to US-CAP were involved in the development of the
Energy Citizen rallies.
"It
would logically appear that the Energy Citizen campaign's objective is
to defeat climate change regulation," he wrote. "This goal runs
contrary to several prominent API members' public support for climate
action, namely Shell, BP America, ConocoPhillips, General Electric and
Siemens. These companies are all a part of the pro-cap-and-trade US
Climate Action Partnership, which has publicly supported the
Waxman-Markey bill& Can you explain the contradictory objectives of
supporting cap and trade on one hand and working to defeat it on the
other? And also reveal if any API members opted out of the Energy
Citizen effort?"
ConocoPhillips has already distanced itself from US-CAP, however, and a spokesman for Shell told the Guardian newspaper that it would not be taking part in the rallies.
The
revelations further highlight the intense battle on Capitol Hill
surrounding the climate change bill and come just days after it emerged
a Capitol Hill lobbying firm, Bonner & Associates, had been
involved in sending fake letters to legislators protesting against the proposed legislation.
They
also follow new research from the Center for Public Integrity, which
found that 460 new business and advocacy groups began lobbying on
climate chan ge issues in the run-up to the House vote on Waxman-Markey
in June. The surge in interest took the total number of registered
parties lobbying around the bill to more than 1,100.