Strike Three: Exelon Leaves Chamber of Commerce Over Climate Stance

Brendan DeMelle DeSmog
on

Exelon CEO John Rowe announced today that his company will let its membership in the U.S. Chamber of Commerce lapse, citing the Chamberโ€™s efforts to fight against efforts to curb global warming.

Exelon – the largest electric utility company in the United States – is the third energy company to sever ties with the Chamber of Commerce in the past week, joining Pacific Gas & Electric and PNM Resources.

Rowe announced Exelonโ€™s departure from the Chamber during his keynote address to the annual conference of the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE).ย  Rowe explained to the nationโ€™s largest association of energy efficiency experts that the Chamberโ€™s multi-million-dollar campaign against clean energy legislation is incompatible with Exelonโ€™s commitment to climate change leadership.ย 

โ€œInaction on climate is not an option,โ€ said Rowe.

ThinkProgress notes a key statement Rowe made in 2008 when he accepted a leadership award from the Chicagoland Chamber of Commerce:

โ€Exelon has staked out an industry-leading position on the issue of climate change and, in the spirit of Daniel Burnham, we have launched our own โ€œnot so little planโ€ to eliminate the equivalent of our entire carbon footprint by the year 2020. I do not know if it will stir menโ€™s souls, but I hope it will stir policymakers and others in our industry to action,โ€ Rowe said.

The U.S. Chamber has moved in the opposite direction, claiming that a cap-and-trade program to limit global warming pollution would โ€œstrangle the economy,โ€ and calling for a โ€œScopes monkey trialโ€ on the science of global warming (an invitation rightly ignored by the EPA).

Bravo to Exelon for leaving the Chamber in the dust and calling for swift action to address climate change.

Which companies will be next to stand up publicly to the Chamberโ€™s intransigence on climate action?ย 

How about some more of the member companies who sit on the board of directors at the Chamber of Commerce, yet publicly state support for federal action on climate change?ย  According to an NRDC analysis, there are at least 18 companies that publicly support economy-wide reductions in CO2 emissions and/or federal cap-and-trade legislation, yet retain their seats on the Chamber board:

Alcoa
Caterpillar Inc.
Deere & Company
Dow Chemical Company
Duke Energy
Eastman Kodak
Entergy
Fox Entertainment Group
IBM
Lockheed
Nike Inc.
PepsiCo
Rolls Royce North America Inc.
Siemens Corporation
Southern Company
The Robertson Foundation
Toyota Motor North America Inc.
Xerox

Each of these companies owes the public an explanation โ€“ or a resignation โ€“ to answer for the incongruity of their current position as a board member of the Chamber and a supporter of action on climate.ย  They cannot continue to support both sides and retain any credibility on this urgent issue.ย 

Who will be next to stand up andย quit?

Brendan DeMelle DeSmog
Brendan is Executive Director of DeSmog. He is also a freelance writer and researcher specializing in media, politics, climate change and energy. His work has appeared in Vanity Fair, The Huffington Post, Grist, The Washington Times and other outlets.

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