In a must-read piece co-published today byย Salon.comย andย The Tyee,ย Geoff Dembicki exposes the dark underbelly of the public relations and lobbying industry,ย revealing the interconnectedness between Alberta tar sands movers and shakers in Alberta and their oily compatriots inย Washington.ย
The investigative article focuses on the fossil fuel industry front group Consumer Energy Alliance (CEA), which is run out of the offices of the PR firm HBW Resources, headed by David Holt, Andrew Browning, and Michael Whatley.
Geoff Dembicki’s article โBig Oil and Canada thwarted U.S. carbon standards,โ exposes CEA‘s effort to thwart government efforts to favor relatively cleaner conventional fuels over the dirtiest forms of extreme unconventional energy like the Alberta tarย sands.ย
Dembicki reveals how CEA influenced the debate at both the national and state-by-state levelsย onย low carbon fuel standards (LCFS), working toย defeat or delay any efforts to differentiate between the emissions footprints of extreme and unconventional fuels like tar sands oil and cleaner-but-still-dirty conventionalย oil.
Oil industry power players, includingย BP, Chevron, ExxonMobil, Marathon, Shell and Norwayโs Statoil are among the CEA‘s key financially backers, and many of these companies also happen to have deep ties to the Alberta tarย sands.
DeSmogBlogย has previously written about CEA, as has The Tyee onย numerous occassions.ย But what makes Dembicki’s article so unique this time around is the valuable insight into CEA‘s behavior revealed in records obtained via the Freedom of Information Act from the Alberta government. The documents lend insight into how CEA interacts with the Alberta government, and in turn, how the Alberta government, working alongside CEA, influences the American government at both the state and federalย level.
An excerpt from the article explains the significance of the FOIAย documents:
The messages lay bare a sophisticated and stealthy public relations offensive, one designed to manipulate the U.S. political system; to deluge the media with messages favorable to the tar-sands industry; to sway key legislators at state and federal levels; and most importantly, to defeat any attempt to make the gasoline and diesel pumped everyday into U.S. vehicles less damaging to the climate. The goal of it all? โDefeatโ Obama’s effort to reduce carbon consumption and keep America hooked on Canada’s $441 billion tar sands industry, no matter what the cost to our planet’sย future.
The article demonstrates once again what the father of modern propaganda, Edward Bernays, referred to as the โinvisible government which is the true ruling power of our countryโ in his 1928 classic,ย Propaganda.
Some highlights from theย article:
- Michael Whatley (the โWโ in HBW Resources) worked overtime to defeat low carbon fuel standards, dating back to December 2009, waging an all out lobbying assault to ensure that low carbon fuel standards would not be implemented, working on a state-by-state basis. How did Whatley gain so much influence, youย ask?
Dembickiย explains,
โWhatley served as attorney and senior policy advisor on George W. Bushโs first presidential campaign and transition team. And Whatley was later appointed chief of staff to Senator Elizabeth Dole, a former cabinet secretary and the wife of GOP elder statesman Bobย Dole.โ
Whatley is now in private practice at HBW seeking to influence policymakers on behalf of his industry clients, aย Beltway Bandit parย excellance.
- Another key player is Whatley’s close pal, Gary Mar, a former Canadian politician and โsmooth-talking and ambitious diplomat at the Canadian embassyโย in Washington, DC, who played an instrumental role while CEA/HBW wagedย the anti-LCFS battle throughout theย U.S.ย
Dembickiย writes,
โMarโs lobbying wasnโt just confined to the U.S. capitol. Anytime state policymakers tried to introduce global warming laws potentially bad for Albertaโs oil sands, Mar hit the road, ready to glad-hand and charm. One major victory came in early 2009, when he apparently worked closely with the Maryland legislature to remove a climate bill that would have banned sales of high-carbon roadย fuel.โ
Both Mar and Whatley understood full well that the apperance, or illusion, of a mass groundswell of support for dirty air is necessary โ astroturfing and front groups are key tools in deceptive PR propagandaย campaigns.
Dembickiย summarizes,
โDespite their skills and experience, Mar and Whatley knew that defeating climate policy required allies. Thatโs why one of the first strategy proposals in Whatleyโs January 25, 2010, campaign briefing to Mar was to team up with ‘affiliated energy coalitions and trade associations, thought leaders, elected officials, unions and key allies.’ The goal was to enlist these players to ‘build opposition’ towards low carbon fuel standards ‘in each of our target regions.’ The campaign apparently needed ‘state-based and regional 3rd party advocates for Canadian oil sands’ to give itย legitimacy.โ
These โthird party advocatesโ included the likes of โairlines, truckers, railroads, highway users, shippers,โ or those most dependent on fossilย fuels.
Corporate front group โthink tanksโ also play a key role, Dembickiย explains:ย
โWhatleyโs proposal suggested engaging with seven prominent think tanks, two of which, the Cato Institute and the Heritage Foundation, received millions of dollars in funding from Koch Industries to question the science behind globalย warming.โ
Read the whole articleย and check out the emailsย obtained via FOIAย for a glimpse inside the world of unethical dirty energy PRย campaigns.
Stay tuned for the forthcoming original investigation by DeSmogBlog about CEA, asย well.
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