Confidential sources have told Politicoย that Bill Cooper โ current congressional staffer and former fossil fuel industry lobbyist and attorney โ is under considerationย to head President Donald Trump‘s White House Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ).
CEQ works to coordinate various federal agencies dealing with environmental and energy public policy issues andย oversees the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) review process for proposed infrastructureย projects.
Cooper served as legal counsel for the U.S. House Energy and Commerce Committee on what is today known as the โHalliburton Loophole,โ a clause which exempts hydraulic fracturing (โfrackingโ) from U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) enforcement of the Safe Drinking Water Act. The Halliburton Loophole was slipped into the Energy Policy Act of 2005 and became law underย President George W.ย Bush.
A 2005 newsletter published by the Interstate Oil and Gas Compact Commission (IOGCC) credits Cooper specifically for his work in getting the clause inserted into theย bill.ย
Image Credit: Interstate Oil and Gas Compact Commission (IOGCC)
โCooper’s concerns about potential EPA regulation of fracking โ as championed by Democrats several years earlier โ piqued the interest of the Republican chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, Billy Tauzin of Louisiana, as well as Joe Barton of Texas, the chairman of the subcommittee on air quality,โ industry publication The Oil Daily furhter reportedย in December 2013. โTheir mantra was ‘Let’s fix it, and let’s fix itย right.’โ
In a Truth in Testimony formย Cooper submitted before testifying at a 2013 House Committee on Energy and Commerce hearing, he also cited the central role he played in negotiating and writing the Energy Policy Acts of 2002 and 2003, both of which had Halliburton Loophole provisions. On that form, Cooper also listed his experience as an oil and gas industryย attorney.
โPracticed law, serving clients in oil and gas exploration, development, production, including natural gas gathering, transmission, and distribution, provided counsel in the development of litigation, acquisition, and divestment strategies, personnel policies, regulatory compliance, and long-range initiatives,โ reads the form. โConducted due diligence for oil and gas exploration companies for acquisitions, divestitures, and litigation. Supervised survey crews, independent contractor drilling crews, well stimulation, geophysical, and completion crews for oil and gas wells. Prepared budgets and managed expenditures of all funds for the execution of drillingย programs.โ
Cooper presently serves as staff director for the U.S. House Natural Resources Committee’sย Subcommittee on Energy and Mineral Resources and formerly was a lobbyist for the Center for Liquefied Natural Gas (CLNG), American Petroleum Institute (API), and Southern Company.
CLNG, where Cooper worked for nearly a decade before passing through the reverse revolving door and returning to work for Congress, was created by the American Petroleum Institute.ย
Industry-Sponsoredย Junkets
Cooper’s amicability toward the oil and gas industry was clear during his first stint working as a congressional staffer, before he became a lobbyist for the American Petroleumย Institute.ย
For example, he attended the Interstate Oil and Gas Compact Commission (IOGCC)ย 2004 meeting in Oklahoma City โย on the IOGCC dime โ while working for the House Energy and Commerce Committee, according to congressional travel disclosure records reviewed by DeSmog. Sponsors of that meetingย included BP, Chesapeake Energy, Devon Energy, Dominion Energy, Kerr-McGee (now Anadarko Petroleum), Williams Energy, andย others.
IOGCC, a congressionally authorized, interstate quasi-government agency whose members are oil and gas industry state regulators,ย lobbyists, and executives, played a central role in advocating for the Halliburton Loophole.ย ย
โThanks to the Halliburton Loophole, the oil and gas industry is the only industry in America that is allowed by EPA to inject known hazardous materials โ unchecked โ directly into or adjacent to underground drinking water supplies,โ Jennifer Krill,ย Earthworksย executive director, toldย DeSmog.
As a House Energy and Commerce staffer, Cooperย traveled on numerous other industry-funded trips beyondย IOGCC‘s 2004 meeting, according toย congressional travel disclosure forms reviewed by DeSmog. Among theย trips:
-A junketย to the Alberta tar sands sponsored by Shell Oil to visit its Muskeg River site.
-A 2003ย trip to discuss the Energy Policy Act of 2003ย at a meeting of theย Independent Petroleum Association of Americaย (which today sponsors the influential fracking front group, Energy in Depth).ย
-An El Paso Corporationโfunded 2002ย paid speaking gig at the annual meeting of the Independent Petroleum Association of Mountain States (IPAMS, now the Western Energy Alliance, or WEA).
-A BP-sponsored speaking appearance in 2004 in which Cooper discussed energy policy, according to his disclosure form, but was listed by BP as an โindustryย speaker.โ
Image credit: Clerk of the U.S. House ofย Representatives
CEQ Climate Denial Historyย Redux
George W. Bush’s CEQ chief of staffย Phillip Cooney also was a former API lobbyist-turned-CEQ staffer. During his tenure at the council, Cooney doctored scientific reports about climate change written by U.S. government agencies and then left to become a lobbyist for ExxonMobil.ย
History could repeat itself, in a sense, if Cooper takes the helm at CEQ.
That’s because the Trump White House CEQ, according to a recent story by Bloomberg, may axย climate change impacts from consideration in National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) environmental reviews, a goal ofย API and CLNG for the past several years. President Barack Obama’s CEQ issued the guidanceย for government agenies to consider climate change in theseย reviews.
Cooper has publicly supported cutting climate change out of the NEPA process, and according to his bio for a recent speech at a Natural Gas Roundtable, he presently acts as a NEPA senior policy advisorย for his Committee on Natural Resourcesย job.
โWithout boxing ourselves in [we plan to] look at the CEQ‘s guide on [greenhouse gases] as a first stepโ towardย streamlining the NEPAย process, Cooper told Inside EPA in December 2016. โWe think it’s an opportunity for us to correct a lot of wrongs, and that in and of itself should streamline theย process.โ
Bill Cooper takes the podium at today’s Natural Gas Roundtable pic.twitter.com/WERA2rHAl6
โ AGA (@aga_naturalgas) November 29, 2016
Some are concerned about such maneuvers espoused by Cooper,ย however.
The push for climate change’s non-inclusion in NEPA appraisalsย โputs our country, our communities, and our people at great risk,โย Paul Getsos, national coordinator for the April 29ย Peopleโs Climate Movement march, told Bloomberg. โIt also sends a dangerous message to the world that the United States does not care about climate change or protecting front-lineย communities.โ
Cooper did not respond to a request for comment for thisย story.
Main image credit: China Central Television (CCTV) YouTubeย Screenshot
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