Fossil Fuel Firms Linked to Trump Get Millions in Coronavirus Small Business Aid

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By Emily Holden, The Guardian.ย This story was originally published by The Guardian, and is republished here as part of the Covering Climate Now partnership to strengthen the media’s focus on the climateย crisis.

U.S. fossil fuel companies have taken at least $50 million in taxpayer money they probably wonโ€™t have to pay back, according to a review of coronavirus aid meant for struggling small businesses by the investigative research group Documented and theย Guardian.

Covering Climate Now logoA total of $28 million is going to three coal mining companies, all with ties to Trump officials, bolstering a dying American industry and a fuel that scientists insist world leaders must shift away from to avoid theย worstย of the climateย crisis.

The other $22 million is being paid out to oil and gas services and equipment providers and other firms that work with drillers and coalย miners.

Melinda Pierce, the legislative director for the Sierra Club, said: โ€œThe federal money Congress appropriated should be going to help small businesses and frontline workers struggling as a result of the pandemic, not the corporate polluters whose struggles are a result of failing business practices and existed long before COVID-19 entered the publicย lexicon.โ€

More than 40 Democratic lawmakers haveย arguedย that fossil fuel companies should not get any assistance under the coronavirus aidย package.

Some Democrats have also warned the forgivable loans being made under Congressโ€™ Paycheck Protection Program could be a transparencyย disaster.

Banks and lending institutions are distributing the money, so the government says it cannot track recipients in real time. The loans revealed have been made public only through news reports and securities filings by publicly traded companies, although the Federal Reserve hasย committedย to issuing monthlyย reports.

So far, itโ€™s clear the program is not working as intended. The funds are aimed at helping small businesses to keep paying their employees and covering other recurring expenses during the economic downturn. But they have been exploited by large companies forced to return the money amid a public outcry, including the Los Angeles Lakers, Shake Shack, and Ruthโ€™s Chris Steakย House.

The industry aid comes as the Trump administration is reportedly considering a broaderย bailoutย for oil and gas corporations, which wereย already under pressureย before the coronavirus and have watched oil pricesย nosediveย because of a global price war and low demand for gasoline. The U.S. government could make loans to oil and gas companies, essentially making taxpayers investors in theย industry.

The Federal Reserve on Thursday also announced changes to its lending rules that could help indebted petroleumย firms.

โ€œThe idea that oil workers are getting a paycheck is great,โ€ said Jamie Henn, a spokesman for the Stop the Money Pipeline campaign who co-founded the environment group 350.org. โ€œThe worry is that the moneyโ€™s going to the top and not going to filterย down.โ€

The $50 million already paid to fossil fuel companies is a small fraction of the the $2.1 trillion Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act, known as the Cares Act. But the total assistance to the industry is likely much larger than can currently be tallied and will continue toย grow.

Environmental advocates and oversight experts tracking the funds say itโ€™s impossible to count how much of the money will assist fossil fuels, including because some firms provide services across multipleย industries.

โ€œAll of this is voluntary disclosures by the companies,โ€ said Jesse Coleman, a senior researcher with Documented. โ€œNo matter what, itโ€™s going to be an incomplete picture of whatโ€™s goingย on.โ€

Coleman said in many cases the fossil fuel companies getting aid have made bad investments and โ€œnow theyโ€™re going to come crawling hat in hand and say: look at what the coronavirus did toย us.โ€

Among the coronavirus aid recipients is Hallador Coal, an Indiana-based coal miningย companyย that hired Donald Trumpโ€™s former environment chief Scott Pruitt as a lobbyist. The companyโ€™s formerย government relationsย director now works at the energy department.ย Hallador is taking $10 million to fund two months of payroll and otherย expenses.

Coal mining company Rhino Resources, which was formerly run by Trumpโ€™s Mine Safety and Health Administration head, David Zatezalo, is receiving $10ย million.

Coal firm Ramaco Resources, whose CEO, Randy Atkins, is on the energy departmentโ€™sย National Coal Council, is getting $8.4ย million.

The U.S. coal industry has been in steep decline, driven out of the market by cheap natural gas and environmental concerns. Trump campaigned on putting coal miners back to work, and his agencies have unsuccessfully explored ways to bail out coal companies, which are seeing theirย lowest employment levelsย in modern history. The Trump administration has also rescinded nearly all of the environment and climate protections the fossil fuel industry hasย opposed.

Fossil fuel companies can also take advantage of tax benefits under the coronavirus legislation, including deferring payment of social security and medicareย taxes.

The Missouri-based Peabodyย Energyย coal company has said it will speed up collecting an alternative minimum tax refund of $24 million to 2020 and defer $18 millionย of owedย taxes.

U.S. taxpayers already subsidize the fossil fuel industry at roughly $20 billion a year, according toย conservative estimates.

The Center for International Environmental Law hasย accusedย the oil, gas, and plastics industries of โ€œexploiting the crisis by aggressively lobbying for massive bailouts and special privileges in a desperate attempt to revive an oil and gas industry already inย decline.โ€

The Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis argues that federal lending to the oil and gas sector would be โ€œaย complete waste of money,โ€ย because it wouldnโ€™t fix the industryโ€™s underlying financialย problems.

Oil industry lobbyists have pushed for changes at the Federal Reserve to let companies with large amounts of debt use its Main Street Lending Program and borrow to pay off existingย loans.

In an April 15 letter to the Federal Reserve, the oil trade group the Independent Petroleum Association of America asked for the new provisions, saying โ€œoil and natural gas producers are not looking for a government handout; they are seeking a bridge to help survive this economicย disruption.โ€

Environmental advocates say the move would disproportionately benefitย small and mid-sized oil and gas companies, such as Occidental Petroleum, which hasย nearly $80 billion in liabilitiesย on its balanceย sheet.

Graham Steele, who directs the corporations and society initiative at Stanford Graduate School of Business, called the situation the โ€œclassic disaster scenario where an opportunistic administration and industry is taking advantage of aย crisis.โ€

โ€œAnd by the way, these are industries driving climate change. Itโ€™s both a bad financial proposition of the Fed and for taxpayers and a bad situation for theย planet.โ€

Main image:ย Louisianaย GOPย Rally on December 9, 2016 at Dow Hangar, Baton Rouge, Louisiana.ย Credit:ย Tammy Anthony Baker,ย CCย BYย 2.0

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