Electric Utility Executives Pony up for the GOP Roll Back of Environmental Protections

picture-7019-1570723309.jpg
on

This week, as President Trump reportedly prepares to begin unwinding the EPAโ€™s Clean Power Plan, and as Congressional Republicans continue their systematic dismantling of environmental protections, the heads of electric utilities are showing up in Washington, D.C. to raise money for the GOPย leadership.

On Tuesday night (March 14), the Edison Electric Institute (EEI), the major trade association for investor-owned utilities, hosted a big money fundraiser โ€” the cheapest seats cost $1,000 and ran up to $25,000 for the dinner โ€” to benefit Speaker of the House Paul Ryan. On the Senate side, Majority leader Mitch McConnell reaped the rewards of a benefit reception that cost attendees between $2,500 andย $5,000.

Earlier in the day, the group held a lunchtime fundraiser for the Chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee Greg Walden ($1,000 per individual; $2,500 per PAC

Credit: UtilitySecrets.org

These events were exposed by the newly launched UtilitySecrets.org, a project of the Center for Media and Democracy and the Energy and Policy Institute. The watchdog groups obtained invitations to the five fundraisers, hosted this week while utility executives are gathered in the capital for an EEIย conference.

The events themselves reveal a deliberate effort by electric utilities to influence decisionmaking around the very environmental regulations and policies that impact power production โ€” and utility profits. And they coincide with the steady rollback of key environmental protections meant to prevent harmful impacts from coal- and gas-fired electric generation, such as the Stream Protection Rule and the Obama administrationโ€™s Clean Power Plan, which would limit greenhouse gas emissions from powerย plants.

โ€œAt the same time that Republicans in Congress are rolling back environmental protections, the fat cat CEOs from electric utilities are writing big checks for Republican leadership,โ€ said Nick Surgey, research directorย at the Center for Media and Democracy. โ€œThe utilities might occasionally talk a good game on the environment, but those words are meaningless when they continue to fund politicians who are standing in the way of positive change to tackle climateย change.โ€

Revolving Door Lands an Enemy ofย Solar at Energyย Department

Meanwhile, utilities that perceive the spread of rooftop solar as a threat to their business model just landed a key ally in the Department of Energy (DOE). As also reported on UtilitySecrets.org, longtime solar antagonist Brian McCormack was just named as chief of staff under Sec. Rick Perry at the DOE. McCormack worked as EEIโ€™s vice president of political and external affairsย and served as EEIโ€™s liaison of sorts to the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), where he helped cultivate an official policy to undermine rooftop solar by combatting net metering.

Brian McCormack, former Edison Electric Institute vice president and new chief of staff in the Department of Energy. Credit: UtilitySecrets.org

McCormack was also anย editor of a 2015 report funded by EEI and released byย Louisiana State University (LSU). His contributions โ€” which EEI asked LSU not to acknowledge though it ultimately did โ€” included stripping out mentions of solarโ€™s positive environmental impacts and cutting sections about rising prices of electricity delivered byย utilities.

David Pomerantz, executive director of the Energy and Policy Institute, called McCormack โ€œone of the people pulling the strings of the utility industryโ€™s war on distributed solarย power.โ€

Possible Conflict on Auto Emissionย Standards

While the EEI member utilities will be steadily working with Republican leaders to push back on the Obama-era climate and environment protections that directly impact utilities’ย generation of electricity, there is one legacy climate policy that puts the utilities at odds with GOP leaders. President Trump is expected to announce this week that the administration is pressing reset on fuel efficiency standards that could prove critical in speeding up the adoption of electricย vehicles.

Most Republican leaders side with the automakers whichย would rather not comply with Californiaโ€™s relatively strict emissions standards, which โ€”ย long story shortย โ€” formed the basis of the federal rules that the Obama administration negotiated with Detroit, and which help catalyze sales of plug-in vehicles. Utilities, however, see EVs as a lifeline to help bolster sagging revenues, and support policies that promote the wider deployment of plug-inย cars.

As EEI members seek to curry favor with the Republican leadership, it will be interesting to see if utilities can compete with the oil and gas interests that wish to keep Americans driving expensive, inefficient gas guzzlers for as long as thereโ€™s oil to beย drilled.

Main image: Speaker of the House Paul Ryan. Credit: Tony Alter, CC BY-2.0.

picture-7019-1570723309.jpg
Ben Jervey is a Senior Fellow for DeSmog and directs the KochvsClean.com project. He is a freelance writer, editor, and researcher, specializing in climate change and energy systems and policy. Ben is also a Research Fellow at the Institute for Energy and the Environment at Vermont Law School. He was the original Environment Editor for GOOD Magazine, and wrote a longstanding weekly column titled โ€œThe New Ideal: Building the clean energy economy of the 21st Century and avoiding the worst fates of climate change.โ€ He has also contributed regularly to National Geographic News, Grist, and OnEarth Magazine. He has published three booksโ€”on eco-friendly living in New York City, an Energy 101 primer, and, most recently, โ€œThe Electric Battery: Charging Forward to a Low Carbon Future.โ€ He graduated with a BA in Environmental Studies from Middlebury College, and earned a Masterโ€™s in Energy Regulation and Law at Vermont Law School. A bicycle enthusiast, Ben has ridden across the United States and through much ofย Europe.

Related Posts

on

Victoria Hewson called the 2050 ambition a โ€œhuge own goalโ€ while working for a Tufton Street think tank.

Victoria Hewson called the 2050 ambition a โ€œhuge own goalโ€ while working for a Tufton Street think tank.
on

Ahead of a city council vote, Resource Works launched an influence campaign with stock submissions for restaurant owners, hospitality workers, and residents.

Ahead of a city council vote, Resource Works launched an influence campaign with stock submissions for restaurant owners, hospitality workers, and residents.
on

Ahead of the November 29 election, dairy producers tell Irish government to step off the โ€œtreadmillโ€ of unsustainable milk production โ€“ and share a more holistic vision.

Ahead of the November 29 election, dairy producers tell Irish government to step off the โ€œtreadmillโ€ of unsustainable milk production โ€“ and share a more holistic vision.
on

The head of the CO2 Coalition tells DeSmog that Wright agrees carbon dioxide is โ€œnot the demon molecule, itโ€™s the miracle molecule.โ€

The head of the CO2 Coalition tells DeSmog that Wright agrees carbon dioxide is โ€œnot the demon molecule, itโ€™s the miracle molecule.โ€