Denial-a-palooza Round 4: 'International Conference on Climate Change' Groups Funded by Exxon, Koch Industries

Brendan DeMelle DeSmog
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In what has become an annual non-event, the Heartland Institute will gather the whoโ€™s-who of the global warming denial network together in Chicago this weekend for the fourth International Conference on Climate Change.ย 

As in years past, the event is expected to receive very little mainstream media coverage.ย  The deniers like to think the reason is some liberal media conspiracy.ย  In reality, the lack of interest stems chiefly from the fact that this denial-a-palooza fest is dripping with oil money and represents a blatant industry effort to greenwash oil and coal while simultaneously attacking the credibility of climateย scientists.

Despite the lack of press interest, the show must go on.ย  After all, the Chicago meet-up will provide deniers and industry front groups a chance to coordinate their ongoing efforts to smear the reputation of the IPCC, and they can reminisce about the Climategate non-scandal like boys in the schoolyard kicking around a rusty oldย can.

For insight into the underlying aim of the Chicago denier conference, let us take a look at the funding sources for the sponsoringย organizations.

Funding:

19 of the 65 sponsors (including Heartland itself) have received a total of over $40 million in funding since 1985 from ExxonMobil (funded 13 orgs), and/or Koch Industries family foundations (funded 10 orgs) and/or the Scaife family foundations (funded 10 orgs).ย  See below for a full fundingย break-down.

ExxonMobil (1998-2008): $6,588,250 ($389,250 more than reported in 2009)
Koch Foundations (1985-2008): $17,572,210 ($13,133,290 more than reported in 2009)
Scaife Family Foundations (1985-2008): $16,352,000 ($20,516,640 less than reported in 2009*)
Total Funding 1985-2008: $40,512,460

*The Heritage Foundation sponsored the 2009 conference and is notably absent from sponsoring the 2010 ICCC. Heritage has received $23,096,640 from Scaife, $2,417,000 from Koch and $565,000 from Exxon between 1998-2006.

ExxonMobil has backed off funding many of the groups who have sponsored global warming denial, thanks in large measure to the relentless work of ExxonSecrets.org, a project of Greenpeace USA.ย  However, the funding gap has been filled by the private oil fortunes of the Koch and Scaife families, who continue to pump funds into the network of climate denial and โ€œfree marketโ€ย groups.

โ€œThese same anti-regulatory โ€˜free marketโ€™ organizations are hell-bent on keeping us addicted to dirty oil and coal.ย  Theyโ€™ve pushed for more offshore drilling, fought improvements to fuel economy standards and stalled action on global warming through denial and deception,โ€ says Kert Davies, Research Director of Greenpeace USA.

According to the Media Transparency project, the Scaife Family of Foundations is โ€œfinanced by the Mellon industrial, oil and banking fortune. At one time its largest single holding was stock in the Gulf Oil Corporation. [Scaife] became active in funding conservative causes in 1973, when Richard Mellon Scaife became chairman of theย foundation.โ€

The Koch foundationsโ€™ money comes from the profits generated by oil conglomerate Koch Industries, the โ€œnationโ€™s largest privately held energy company, with annual revenues of more than $25 billion. โ€ฆ Koch Industries is now the second largest family-owned business in the U.S., with annual sales of over $20 billion.โ€ The Koch brothers, David and Charles, control the three family foundations that have โ€œlavished tens of millions of dollars in the past decade on โ€˜free marketโ€™ advocacy institutions in and around Washington.โ€

The Koch connections are the most interesting because of the lengths they go to attempt to deny their involvement.ย  DeSmogBlog asked a Koch spokesperson if they were involved in sponsoring the ICCC and received thisย reply:

โ€œIn response to your question as to whether Koch is supporting the ICCC – no, Koch Industries and the Koch foundations are not supporting the International Conference on Climateย Change.โ€

The claim is similar to the pre-emptive response that the same Koch spokesperson sent to DeSmogBlog, CrooksAndLiars and others in April before the Tax Day Tea Parties:

โ€œKoch companies value free speech and believe it is good to have more Americans engaged in key policy issues. That said, Koch companies, the Koch foundations, Charles Koch and David Koch have no ties to and have never given money to FreedomWorks. In addition, no funding has been provided by Koch companies, the Koch foundations, Charles Koch or David Koch specifically to support the tea parties. Thanks for yourย consideration.โ€

In both cases, Koch denies responsibility by hiding one degree of separation from the event.ย  They claim their hands are clean, yet huge amounts of Koch money are funneled into the organizations doing the lionโ€™s share of work to organize the tea parties and the ICCC denial-a-palooza.ย  Americans For Prosperity and its sister organization FreedomWorks (formerly united as Citizens for a Sound Economy) have received a total of over $17 million from Koch foundations between 1985 and 2008.ย  That works out to 64% of the major funding for FreedomWorks/CSE, and 90% of the major funding for Americans for Prosperity. (Based on totals from โ€˜major fundersโ€™ compiled by MediaMatters.)ย  The totals for 2009 arenโ€™t out yet, but there is little reason to believe funding has decreased, meaning millions more dollars have likely been pumped into thisย network.ย 

All this oily funding begs the question: if the Koch brothers arenโ€™t funding FreedomWorks and AFP for the purpose of organizing tea parties and conferences attacking climate science, what are they payingย for?ย ย 

Climate denial is a central facet of AFPโ€™s work. Consider AFPโ€™s Hot Air tour with its Carbon Cops protesting the EPAโ€™s move to put a price on climate-changing C02. ย  Or AFPโ€™s participation in the Energy Citizens Alliance, the Astroturf group set up by the American Petroleum Institute to fight national legislation onย climate.

Offshoreย Drilling

23 of the sponsor organizations behind denial-a-palooza are actively promoting offshore drilling or attempting to paint the drilling disaster as โ€˜not that badโ€™.ย  Americans for Prosperity wrote on April 27th, a week after the drilling disaster began to unfold: โ€œAFP called for the opening of New Jerseyโ€™s coast to exploration and drilling, which would be part of a comprehensive strategy to both boost the stateโ€™s economy and help achieve energyย independence.โ€

The Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow (C-FACT) wrote on May 7th, โ€œShould we stop drilling offshore? We can hardly afford to. We still need to drill.โ€ย  Iain Murray of the Competitive Enterprise Institute joined in: โ€œIf we seek to reduce these risks by banning offshore drilling, as some now demand, we will undoubtedly raise the price of energy.โ€ย  See more from JunkScienceโ€™s Steve Milloy, or Americans for Tax Reform and their national blitz for moreย drilling.ย 

For a history of the ICCC event, see DeSmogBlog coverage from 2009 and 2008.ย  Also see commentary from RealClimate and WonkRoom.


Here are the funding totals for organizations sponsoring Heartlandโ€™s conference that are known to have received support from oily and โ€˜free marketโ€™ย foundations:

Alternate Solutionsย Institute

  • Received a $100,000 grant in 2008 from the Atlas Economic Research Foundation (seeย below).

American Conservativeย Union

Americans forย Prosperity

  • Received $4,025,000 from Koch Foundations between 2006-2008 (David H. Koch and Claude R.ย Lambe)

Americans for Taxย Reform

  • Received 60,000 from Koch Foundations (Claude Lambe Charitable Foundation) inย 2007.
  • Received $700,000 from Scaife (Carthage, Sarah Scaife) Foundations betweenย 1998-07.

Atlas Economic Researchย Foundation

Center for the Defense of Freeย Enterprise

Center for the Study of Carbon Dioxide and Globalย Change

  • Received $100,000 from ExxonMobil fromย 1998-2006.ย 
  • Received $25,000 from Koch Foundations (Claude R. Lambe Charitable Foundation) inย 2007.ย 
  • Received $100,000 from Sarah Scaife Foundation fromย 1999-2003.

Centro de Investigaciones de Instituciones y Mercados de Argentina (CIIMAESEADE)

  • Received $100,000 from Sarah Scaife Foundation fromย 1999-2003.

Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow (C-FACT)

  • Received $542,000 from ExxonMobil fromย 1998-2006.ย 
  • Received $1,580,000 from Scaife (Carthage and Sarah Scaife) Foundations fromย 1991-2008.

Competitive Enterpriseย Institute

Freedomworks

George C. Marshallย Institute

  • Received $840,000 from ExxonMobil betweenย 1998-2008.ย 
  • Received $170,000 from Koch Foundations (Claude R. Lambe Charitable Foundation) betweenย 2004-08.ย 
  • Received $3,592,000 from Scaife Foundations (Sarah Scaife Foundation) betweenย 1985-2008.

Heartlandย Institute

  • Received $676,000 from ExxonMobil fromย 1986-2008.
  • Received $77,578 from Koch (Claude R Lambe, Charles G Koch) fromย 1986-2008
  • Received $335,000 from Scaife (Sarah Scaife, Carthage) fromย 1986-2008

ICECAP

Illinois Policyย Institute

  • No funding records from Exxon, Koch, orย Scaife.
  • In its 2006 annual report the Cato Institute states that it made a grant of $50,000 to the Illinois Policy Institute.[2]

The Independentย Institute

Institute of Public Affairsย (Australia)

  • From The Age in 2004: โ€œThe Institute of Public Affairs, which receives funding from companies such as ExxonMobil, the most sceptical of the worldโ€™s fossil fuel giants, also engages in the debate, scouring the web and email groups for evidence that climate change isย natural.โ€

John Lockeย Foundation

Junkscience.com

Lavoisier Groupย (Australia)

Media Researchย Center

National Center for Public Policyย Research

Science & Environmental Policyย Project

Science and Public Policyย Institute


To re-cap, the International Conference on Climate Change is sponsored by organizations that have received over $40 million from just these three oilย interests.

ExxonMobil (1998-2008): $6,588,250 ($389,250 more than reported in 2009)
Koch Foundations (1985-2008): $17,572,210 ($13,133,290 more than reported in 2009)
Scaife Family Foundations (1985-2008): $16,352,000 ($20,516,640 less than reported in 2009*)
Total Funding 1985-2008: $40,512,460

Sources: US 990 Tax forms*, ExxonSecrets, SourceWatch, MediaMatters Transparency.

*Note: Some additional funding info has been added from 2008 tax forms that is not yet reported by MediaMatters, Sourcewatch orย ExxonSecrets.

Additional reporting by Morgan Goodwin.

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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