In this DeSmog UK epic history series post, we remember the moment when George W. Bush declared: โAmerica is addicted toย oil.โ
President George W. Bush delivered a nasty shock to his oil industry sponsors when, on 31 January 2006, he delivered his State of the Union Address โ watched by millions โ and declared: โAmerica is addicted toย oil.โ
This was a precipitous alarm raised at the beginning of what would be a truly miserable year for ExxonMobil in terms of its climate change public relationsย campaign.
Bush said his administration had spent $10 billion developing alternative fuels in the last five years, announced a 22 percent increase in โclean energyโ research funding, and promised โzero-emission coal-fired plantsโ, solar, wind and nuclearย energy.
The man who presided over the disastrous war in Iraq called for better electric cars and competitive ethanol โto replace more than 75 percent of our oil imports from the Middle East byย 2025.โ
Bush concluded: โBy applying the talent and technology of America, this country can dramatically improve our environment, move beyond a petroleum-based economy and make our dependence on Middle Eastern oil a thing of theย past.โ
ExxonMobilย Transition
This electric speech coincided with the announcement that Lee Raymond would retire as the boss of ExxonMobil. Raymond was richly rewarded with a $98 million immediate payment, $183 million in shares (alongside a further $70 million in stock options), a $1 million consultancy contract, and then his country clubย fees.
As Steve Coll, author of Private Empire: ExxonMobil and American Power, writes: โAltogether, his retirement package was worth just underย $400m.โ
Paul Sankey, the then oil analyst at Deutsche Bank, and his colleagues seemed to think this one man was worth such extraordinary riches, writing that โthe single biggest and most powerful legacy of Lee Raymondโ was โrawย profitabilityโ.
They added: โThe current level of cash flow being generated by the company is unprecedented by historicย standards.โ
Denial Thinkย Tanks
The following month, the party continued for the free market think tanks benefiting from the Exxonย fortunes.
The oil giant sponsored the Marshall Instituteโs 20th anniversary dinner at the same time the sceptic pioneer offered its โ24 Frequently Asked Questions on Climate Changeโ, which included such gems as: โWill climate change lead to massive species extinctions? No. The warming of the 20th century was implicated in the extinction of only one species, indicating that species are more resilient to climate change than indicated in modelingย studies.โ
The Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI), a Libertarian think tank, also manifestly failed to read the change in winds and continued unabated in its robust attack on climate science. In February 2006, protesters reportedly funded by the think tank heckled Dr David King, the chief scientific advisor to the British Government, during his public lectures in the US.
Raymond andย Cohen
Rex Tillerson, ExxonMobilโs new chief executive, threatened a revolution in the way the firm dealt with the climate crisis. The 53-year-old was a fierce advocate of the free market; his favourite novel was Atlas Shrugged by the extreme Libertarian Ayn Rand and, during his entire working life, he had only servedย ExxonMobil.
Yet, from the beginning of his command, he signalled a different approach to Raymond: โLet me assure you we never set out for the company to be public enemy number one,โ heย said.
One of his first moves was to call Ken Cohen, the vice president for public affairs, into his office as part of โa small interdisciplinary groupโ tasked with overhauling the entire strategy on climate andย communications.
Coll records: โThe review conducted in secret included a case-by-case evaluation of think tanks and advocacy organizations funded by ExxonMobil and active on climateย issues.โ
The result of this investigation was an announcement by Cohen to the worldโs media that the company would stop funding a โsmall handfulโ of think tanks without naming any particularย culprits.
ExxonSecrets
Greenpeace US examined the published company reports and established that cash taps would be turned off for Fred Smith, founder of the CEI and also the Environmental Literacy Council, Free Enterprise Education Institute, the Center for the New Europe USA and the Center for the Defense of Freeย Enterprise.
The Cato Institute, inspired by free market economist Friedrich von Hayek and founded with the help of Charles Koch, was unceremoniously cut off. The think tank was handed $270,000 in 2005, which lifted the total for the last seven years above $2ย million.
Greenpeace then launched its campaign ExxonSecrets, exposing hundreds of individuals and think tanks โ many descended from the Libertarian Antony Fisher โ that were still in the pay of the oilย company.
The environmental activists showed that, over the previous eight years, ExxonMobil had donated $23 million. Meanwhile, the Union of Concerned Scientists named 24 beneficiaries that were attacking climateย science.
The scientists named four think tanks in the infamous Global Climate Science Communications Plan that continued to receive cash after Cohenโs promise, including the Heartland Institute and the George C. Marshallย Institute.
Climate andย Tobacco
The pressure from the environmental movement had made the funding of the CEI and other free market think tanks a reputational hazard, and it seems Exxon executives began to understand that the harm outweighed the good from thisย relationship.
The following year, Cohen explained to reporters: โThe fact that we were supporters of some of those groups had become a real distraction to the issue at hand, which is: how do we produce the energy the world needs without more greenhouse gasย emissions.โ
The oil company was taking dramatic action as environmentalists tried to tar its climate campaign with the same brush as the tobacco denial of cancer research. Sceptics in the United States were also under sustained attack fromย environmentalists.
Climate denier Dr Seitz, a close collaborator with Fred Singer, head of the sceptic Science and Environmental Policy Project (SEPP), was subjected to a Vanity Fair investigation plastered on the front cover of its May edition, which reported that he directed $45 million in funding from tobacco companies to hide the link between smoking and lungย cancer.
James Hansen from NASA joined the National Environmental Trust, a press conference in April 2006 announced to promote theย magazine.
Hansen was on hand to โdiscussโ the evidence โlinking one of the most prominent scientific sceptics on global warming and his tactics to the three-decade industry conspiracy to hide the connection between smoking and lungย ailments.โ
Next time on the DeSmog UK epic history post, we examine the demise of one UK free market climate-denying think tank after its funding was linked toย ExxonMobil.
Photo: Image Editor viaย Flickr
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