Heartland's America First Energy Conference Stacked With Climate Change Deniers

authordefault
on

By Kert Davies, crossposted from Climate Investivationsย Center

On November 9th, the climate change denying Heartland Institute is holding an energy conference in Houston to applaud the Trump Administrationโ€™s repeal of environmental protections and clean energy policy. According to itsย website, the conference will celebrate โ€œthis remarkable moment in historyโ€ referring to the statement that โ€œTrump has already turned back years of Obamaโ€™s anti-energyย policiesโ€.

According to Heartland, the โ€œcountryโ€™s best energy policy expertsโ€ will be speaking at the event. In reality, there are rather few โ€œenergy policy expertsโ€ on the agenda. The lineup includes career climate change deniers such asย Myron Ebell,ย Steve Milloy,ย H. Sterling Burnett,ย Paul Driessen,ย Craig Idso, andย Fred Palmer.

Our spoof ofย Heartlandโ€™s America First Energy conferenceย exposes the illegitimacy of these โ€œexpertsโ€, who range from hard line climate deniers to fossil fuel industryย apologists.

Background on all the speakers can be foundย here.

Many speakers have deep ties to theย Cooler Heads Coalitionย (CHC), a group of organizations that deny climate change and oppose policies to address it. From 1997-2015, the combined grants from ExxonMobil to CHC membersย top $11 million dollars.ย Since its inception, the coalition has used a variety of tactics to distort public opinion on climate change and influence decision making in Washington. For decades the coalition has authoredย biased reports,ย held briefings onย Capitol Hill,ย and released weekly newsletters attacking โ€œclimate changeย alarmistsโ€.

As reported Friday by theย Houston Chronicle, two Trump Administration officials are slated to speak at the Heartland conference this week,ย Richard W. Westerdale IIย of the State Department andย Vincent DeVitoย of the Department ofย Interior.

Richard W. Westerdale II, a senior advisor at the State Department, is listed as a speaker on the Heartland conference website. Westerdale is a former Exxon Mobil staffer and advised senior executives under the leadership of CEO Rex Tillerson, now Secretary ofย State.

David Bernhardt, deputy secretary of the Interior Department, was listed last week as a Heartland conference speaker, but apparently withdrew. Since 2009, Bernhardt was separately paid by twelve companies connected to theย oil, natural gas, mining, or water industriesย for legal services. While a top DOI official in the Bush administration, Bernhardt pushed for oil drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. He has alsoย ignored cautions by government scientistsย and usedย data from reports funded by BPย during his 2001 testimony to Congress on Arcticย drilling.

As Bernhardt disappeared from the Heartland conference website,ย Vincent DeVitoย appeared as a new speaker. DeVito currently serves as Counselor to the Secretary for Energy Policy, a newly created position within the Interior Department under the Trump Administration. As aย private sector lawyer, DeVito spent over decade representing corporate energy interests, including a consortium of major oil companies. ย DeVito alsoย worked for the utilityย being sued โ€œover the release of radiation from the Three Mile Island nuclear power plantย explosion.โ€

Heartland has recently made headlines due to their campaigning for a โ€œred-team blue-teamโ€ debate on climate change at the EPA. In such a debate, the โ€œred-teamโ€ would challenge the scientific consensus on climate change and the โ€œblue teamโ€ would defend the science. Theย Climate Investigation Centerย recently uncovered a list of names ofย โ€˜scientistsโ€™ and โ€˜economistsโ€™ย submitted by the Heartland Institute to the EPA as recommendations for theย โ€œred-teamโ€.

Judith Curry, a so-called โ€œlukewarmeโ€ denier, who was included on Heartlandโ€™s โ€œred-teamโ€ list, toldย E&E Newsย that she liked the โ€œred-teamโ€ concept butย commented,

โ€œHaving Heartlandโ€™s name affiliated with this detracts from the potential credibility of itโ€ฆBy getting these third-rate people that are very far removed from any academic investigatory credentials is not going to help them, a lot of people who are advocates, not terribly objectiveย people.โ€

A recentlyย leaked internal Heartland Institute emailย revealed their anxiety and desperation that the Trump Administration, including Scott Pruitt, isnโ€™t doing enough to kill policy action on climateย change.

It will be interesting to see what tone they take inย Houston.

authordefault

Related Posts

on

Canadian environmentalist Tzeporah Berman makes the case for a "bold idea" to end the era of coal, oil and gas.

Canadian environmentalist Tzeporah Berman makes the case for a "bold idea" to end the era of coal, oil and gas.
on

High demand for wild-caught species to feed farmed salmon and other fish is taking nutritious food away from low-income communities in the Global South.

High demand for wild-caught species to feed farmed salmon and other fish is taking nutritious food away from low-income communities in the Global South.
Analysis
on

Premier Danielle Smith can expect new tariffs, fewer revenue streams, and a provincial deficit brought on by lowered oil prices.

Premier Danielle Smith can expect new tariffs, fewer revenue streams, and a provincial deficit brought on by lowered oil prices.
on

Jeremy Clarkson spreads well-worn conspiracy theory that casts inheritance farm tax policy as plot to โ€œreplace farmers with migrantsโ€.

Jeremy Clarkson spreads well-worn conspiracy theory that casts inheritance farm tax policy as plot to โ€œreplace farmers with migrantsโ€.