SustainableBusiness.com Newswire
04/21/2009 09:22 AM ET
News from: Center for Public Integrity
“Clean Coal’s” Lobbying Blitz
$45 million a year campaign to sell coal as indispensable to America’s energy future
Washington D.C., April 21, 2009 — As hearings begin this afternoon on landmark climate change legislation, the debate will bear the mark of an unprecedented corporate campaign over the past year to preserve coal’s role in the nation’s energy future. The drive is bolstered by at least $15.6 million in federal campaign contributions in the 2008 election cycle, according to ““The ‘Clean Coal’ Lobbying Blitz,” a new story by the Center for Public Integrity, focusing on the American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity (ACCCE).
Many now recognize the ads by ACCCE, with the bright orange power cord plugged into a lump of coal, but the Center tells the story of its origins at least five years ago as the industry grappled with the growing drumbeat for policy action on global warming.
The burning of coal for electricity is a leading cause of greenhouse gas emissions, but ACCCE promotes the message that carbon capture technology could solve the pollution problem.
The $45 million a year campaign positions coal as an indispensable component of the nation’s energy mix — one that keeps electricity affordable because it is so much cheaper than alternatives. The campaign, which rolled out one year ago, is three times larger than the industry’s previous lobbying and public relations efforts. But it’s just a small slice of the money the industry has amassed; amidst the punishing economy of 2008, the top five U.S. coal mining companies saw their profits more than double to $1.9 billion last year, the Center reports.
The Center’s story provides a new picture of the coal coalition’s political influence, with data compiled by the Center for Responsive Politics. Political action committees and individuals, including many top executives, employed by the 48 mining, manufacturing, rail and utility companies that are a part of ACCCE contributed $15.6 million to federal candidates in the 2008 election cycle — with a reach so wide that 87 percent of Congress received money. Two key members who only rose to their leadership posts after the election received no ACCCE-member contributions: Energy and Commerce Chairman Rep. Henry Waxman, D-CA and his global warming subcommittee chairman, Rep. Ed Markey, D-MA. But the vast majority of their Committee colleagues did. And the draft climate legislation by Waxman and Markey — who only a year ago pushed for a moratorium on new coal plants — offers the industry a pathway forward and provides billions for clean coal research.
Although ACCCE’s promotion of clean coal has been ridiculed in a high-profile advertising campaign led by former Vice President Al Gore’s Alliance for Climate Protection, the coal coalition is facing the upcoming policy debate with optimism. “Not so long ago, people questioned whether coal was going to be a fuel for the future,” ACCCE spokesman Joe Lucas told the Center. “Clearly there are fewer and fewer people who don’t think it will be.”
In its recent report showing how the number of climate lobbyists has quadrupled in the last five years, the Center singled out ACCCE as having spent more on lobbying on climate last year — $9.95 million — than any other organization solely devoted to the issue. The Center’s new report looks behind that number, and traces the origins, goals, strategies and influence of one of the most important voices weighing in on federal climate policy.
The Climate Change Lobby is generously supported by a grant from the Deer Creek Foundation and is part of an ongoing investigative series on climate change policy issues. In addition, organizational support for the Center is provided by Carnegie Corporation of New York, the Ford Foundation, the JEHT Foundation, the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the Park Foundation, the Popplestone Foundation, the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, and many other generous institutional and individual donors.
The Center for Public Integrity is a nonprofit, nonpartisan and independent digital news organization specializing in original investigative journalism and research on significant public policy issues. Since 1990, the Washington, D.C.-based Center has released more than 475 investigative reports and 17 books to provide greater transparency and accountability of government and other institutions. It has received the prestigious George Polk Award and more than 32 other national journalism awards and 18 finalist nominations from national organizations, including PEN USA, Investigative Reporters and Editors, Society of Environmental Journalists, and National Press Foundation. In 2007, the Society of Professional Journalists recognized three Center projects with first-place online awards — the only organization that year to be recognized with three awards. The Center has been honored with the Online News Association’s coveted General Excellence Award, and a special citation for the body of its investigative work from the Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government. www.publicintegrity.org
For more information please contact:
Steve Carpinelli
Center for Public Integrity
(202) 481-1225
communications@publicintegrity.org