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Auction 2012: Energy Lobby Finds Power In Money And Fear

First Posted: 01/31/2012 10:46 am Updated: 01/31/2012 6:33 pm

Auction 2012 is a weeklong series in collaboration with "The Dylan Ratigan Show" and United Republic.

When George W. Bush overruled scientists at the Environmental Protection Agency in 2008 and set a new smog standard that was considerably weaker than they had recommended, it was just another example of how closely entwined the interests of the energy sector and the Republican Party had become.

But when President Barack Obama this fall suddenly killed the stronger smog standards championed by his own EPA administrator -- thereby leaving the Bush-era standards unchanged -- it was a clear indication that the energy lobby's influence is powerful enough to intimidate the Democrats as well.

Obama's decision was widely seen as driven by politics, not science or even economics.

Lowering the ozone standard from 75 parts per billion to 60 parts would have prevented 4,000 to 12,000 premature deaths annually, along with 58,000 cases of aggravated asthma and 2.5 million days of missed work or school, according to the EPA. The agency also estimated that tightening the standard could cost as much as $90 billion per year, but that the benefits would total as much as $100 billion per year.

Industry groups contended that millions of jobs would be lost. Environmentalists and progressives argued the new standard would likely have created jobs -- and green jobs at that.

Powerhouse lobbying groups, including the American Petroleum Institute, Business Roundtable and U.S. Chamber of Commerce, led a fierce fight, repeatedly meeting with White House officials to argue against the rule. Industry representatives worked the refs -- then-White House chief of staff Richard Daley and regulatory czar Cass Sunstein -- appealing to their own anti-regulatory leanings.

And behind all that was the implicit -- or perhaps explicit -- threat that if Obama sided against the big money, it would return to haunt him, quite possibly in the form of massive ad purchases in swing states labeling him a job-killer in his reelection year. Especially in the new campaign finance era, there is legally no limit to how much firepower the energy sector could bring to bear.

Of course, those attacks may come anyway.

The energy industry pours hundreds of millions of dollars a year into political contributions and lobbying -- considerably less than the financial, legal or health sectors, but by any other standards, a massive amount.

Oil and gas interests, for instance, spent $145 million on lobbying in 2011, with electric utilities right behind at $144 million, according to data collected by the Center for Responsive Politics. In a telling sign of clout, more than half of the 2,177 registered lobbyists working on the energy sector's behalf were formerly government officials.

Unlike Wall Street, which historically has spread its campaign contributions around to both parties, the oil and gas industry leans heavily toward Republicans, especially over the last 15 years. At the same time, the GOP's anti-tax policies, anti-regulatory campaigns and pro-drilling rhetoric have become increasingly indistinguishable from the American Petroleum Institute's agenda.

In the early 1990s, the oil and gas industry's campaign spending favored Republicans over Democrats, but not by that much. For every $1 the industry gave to Democrats, it gave Republicans $1.78. But starting in the 1996 election cycle, that changed dramatically. By the 2010 election cycle, for every $1 the industry gave Democrats, it gave Republicans about $3.43. And so far in the 2012 campaign cycle, the tilt toward the GOP is more than 7 to 1, with individuals and companies associated with oil and gas contributing almost $12 million to Republicans and $1.6 million to Democrats.

In 1994, six of the top 20 recipients of oil and gas money were Democrats. Today, every single one is a Republican.

Click image to enlarge.

The like-mindedness linking the industry and the GOP is best illustrated these days by the party's unprecedented congressional assault against environmental regulations. Last year, with Republicans back in control of the House, there were at least 159 votes on anti-environmental protection measures on the House floor alone, including 83 targeting the EPA, according to a list compiled by Democrats on the House Energy and Commerce Committee.

That's because the energy lobby never rests, said Tyson Slocum, director of the energy program for the consumer watchdog group Public Citizen.

"You're not satisfied with having a D.C. operation just to make sure that government doesn't do you any harm," he said, explaining industry thinking. "The goal is not to maintain the status quo. What you really want to do is to try to gain advantage."

For the fossil fuel industry, that can also mean "trying to demonize alternatives to your business model," including alternative energy sources and greater energy efficiency, Slocum said.

And often the battle has come down to tax breaks.

The energy industry won its most recent major tax break in 2004, after the World Trade Organization had repeatedly declared U.S. export tax incentives illegal. Congress set out to replace them with an income tax deduction for domestic manufacturing -- and somehow oil and natural gas production, despite having been explicitly precluded from the earlier incentives, was covered by the new deduction. That windfall now adds about $1 billion a year to the industry's bottom line.

Federal tax breaks for oil and gas total somewhere between $4 billion and $9 billion a year, even as the industry revels in record profits, undaunted by the financial crisis that has crippled so much of the American economy.

Obama's line at the 2012 State of the Union address -- "We've subsidized oil companies for a century. That's long enough." -- was greeted by applause. But if history is any guide, his proposal will come to naught.

Perhaps most important of all, the energy industry's political power has allowed it to crush -- and now make politically unthinkable -- any effort to assess the external costs of greenhouse gases created in the production and consumption of fossil fuels.

Just as one point of reference, a 2009 report from the National Research Council tried to estimate the costs of air pollution and other harms that are not reflected in the market price of fossil fuels. The report pegged the price of the damage from fossil fuel production and consumption at $120 billion in the U.S. in 2005 alone -- and that notably did not include the cost of climate change, harm to ecosystems, effects of some toxic air pollutants and risks to national security, all of which the report was unable to quantify.

Looking at power plants' burning of coal, the report found that damages from sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides and particulate matter averaged about 3.2 cents for every kilowatt-hour of energy produced. It estimated climate-related monetary damages at 0.1 cents to 10 cents per kwh, depending on assumptions. By contrast, coal costs 7 to 14 cents per kwh.

Yet any kind of carbon tax or fee is politically impossible right now, said Kyle Ash, senior legislative representative for Greenpeace. It's not so much an issue of dogma. "There are a lot fewer climate deniers than people think," he said.

It's a matter of money. "There's a lot of good data on which politicians are taking how much money from fossil fuel industries, and you can see clear connections," Ash said, pointing to a recent Greenpeace report titled "Polluting Democracy." "I think it's about who's paying for their campaigns," he said.

The clearest evidence, he said, comes in the otherwise unresolvable contradiction between what politicians say and what they do.

"The contradiction is that they're also really opposed to federal outlays, and they want to cut taxes," Ash said. "But they're fighting against the removal of fossil fuel subsidies."

The Auction 2012 series explores the ways industries influence policymaking in five areas: banking, energy, health care, trade and education. Read Dylan Ratigan's blog post introducing the series and his blog post on energy.

Follow this diagram of energy-industry power from Dylan Ratigan's book "Greedy Bastards":



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Auction 2012 is a weeklong series in collaboration with "The Dylan Ratigan Show" and United Republic. When George W. Bush overruled scientists at the Environmental Protection Agency in 20...
Auction 2012 is a weeklong series in collaboration with "The Dylan Ratigan Show" and United Republic. When George W. Bush overruled scientists at the Environmental Protection Agency in 20...
 
 
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scholasticus
I don't have to believe your "-ism".
11:12 PM on 01/31/2012
RepubliCants have been against clean air all my life (over 50 years). Do you enjoy breathing filthy Republicant air? I recently invested in a respirator to wear on my daily fitness walks. No use waiting for the pols to be responsible. Be proactive on your health.
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Aladdin Sane1
"Are you the police?""No, ma'am, we're musicians."
11:01 PM on 01/31/2012
All I wanted was the dirt out my food. All I wanted was the dirt out of my water. All I wanted was the dirt out of my air. All I wanted was the dirt out of my energy.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Enroh Mot
Veritas Lux Mea
11:00 PM on 01/31/2012
We have the best government that money can buy here in the Corporate States of America.
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10:48 PM on 01/31/2012
Why don't oil/coal/etc companies get off their asses and innovate clean energy, cause it has to happen at some point. They can keep their monopolies if they are smart about it.
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Lo Chiaro
Knowledge + wisdom defeats ignorance
10:47 PM on 01/31/2012
Glad for the reporting. Wish it had a constructive effect. Knowledge no longer seems to matter.
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scholasticus
I don't have to believe your "-ism".
11:17 PM on 01/31/2012
Correct. Most Americans are too busy to be bothered with spending a few hours a week educating themselves on how the rich people cheat on taxes and dump poison into the environment. It's been going on for decades. The facts are there for all to read, online, but who has time?
10:30 PM on 01/31/2012
Gee, no surprise. Corporate energy is probably behind the Republican push that voted down a new chair-woman because of her environmentally friendly bias. Omigosh.. we can't have that.. http://www.twincities.com/politics/ci_19853115?source=pkg
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Janzee12000
You're all individuals!
10:30 PM on 01/31/2012
Whenever I have a discussion with some in the energy biz abt regulations I always get the feedback , "it'll cost jobs". That's stale and it proves to me that their interest in any discussion about the benefits of alternate fuels or any change in the way they see things is seen as some kind of threat.
10:28 PM on 01/31/2012
In this new age, the big and powerful energy companies that rely on hydrocarbons will fall to the small and nimble energy systems engineered by innovative minds. Hydrocarbons are finite in resources while the infinite energy from the sun can be harnessed, stored, refreshed by these new systems to supply our daily needs of energy all within the confines of our homes.
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olitenup
10:14 PM on 01/31/2012
The only lobby, that inside the beltway doesn't open it's legs for, is us. We the people
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08:47 PM on 01/31/2012
write obama to educate him on the extreme and real dangers of high volume fracking...he can't be allowed to throw his support behind the destruction of our drinking water...our environment...our infrastructure.....our health....

http://www.whitehouse.gov/contact/submit-questions-and-comments
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silverwolf13
I know that I do not know.
09:20 PM on 01/31/2012
President Obama does not need to be educated as to the dangers of fracking or of methane release into the atmosphere (though that should come later). He needs to be educated to the fact that the slightest deviation from the fossil fuel companies' program condemns you to eternal damnation.

According to these corporations--and to their wholly-owned subsidiary, the Republican Party--there is only one path, that of complete corporate rule laid out by Saint Ayn Rand.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Vegasyankee
Making Energy for a Strong America!
08:45 PM on 01/31/2012
Since the recession, the biggest growth in this country by far has taken place in the mining, oil and natural gas industries, where jobs expanded by 60%, creating a total of 500,000 new jobs. While that number is not as large as those generated by health care or education, the quality of these jobs are far higher. The average job in conventional energy pays about $100,000 annually about $20,000 more than finance or professional services pay. The wages are more than twice as high as those in either health or education. Let's not forget about the millions of workers who jobs rely on the energy we produce in this country as well. I know it's a big surprise to a lot of you but manufacturing requires a lot of oil and many of this nations plants rely on natural gas. BTW - We are hiring and in desperate need of people in the oil & gas industry.
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silverwolf13
I know that I do not know.
09:24 PM on 01/31/2012
Miners are paid $100,000 per year? Or is that the mean average when the pay of a very few American miners is averaged in with the pay of the executives? What is the median average?
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Aladdin Sane1
"Are you the police?""No, ma'am, we're musicians."
11:07 PM on 01/31/2012
"...manufactur­ing requires a lot of oil..."

Brought to you by the finest minds of the 19th Century...
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08:30 PM on 01/31/2012
the fossil fuel fas**cists have had a rope around our necks for 120 years.....enough is enough....
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silverwolf13
I know that I do not know.
09:26 PM on 01/31/2012
Startups in a new industry failing. Wow, what a concept! Sounds like capitalism in action.
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09:45 PM on 01/31/2012
do you consider your bush/chainy spending 5 trillion dollars of china's money and counting and killing a million people and counting on their/youir little invasion of the oil rich middle east all based on their lies a failure ?????
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07:56 AM on 02/01/2012
Thank you!
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terry63
treasure hunter.
08:23 PM on 01/31/2012
I heard that another huge, Solar Panel company went belly up today.
Zip Zinzel
If a Nation expects to be both Ignorant & Free . .
12:30 AM on 02/01/2012
The Chinese Government is subsidizing the daylights out of their Solar Panel Industry
This makes their products extremely cheap, along with the STRONG Dollar

It is extremely difficult for a private company to compete with them.

That is the little-known story of Solndra going into bankruptcy after they built a new plant with the money they borrowed
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terry63
treasure hunter.
12:18 PM on 02/01/2012
The, other reason is that , Solar panels cost Thousands of dollars, but you can make your own for hundreds.
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Yorksgal
'Conservative Christian' is a complete oxymoron.
08:21 PM on 01/31/2012
I see the moronic trolls are out in force - updated talking points received.

Obviously, the trolls do not care about the future of the planet for their children to come.

There are other ways around things, but when the energy companies, et al have decided only they can provide the commodity any new innovations will be quashed.

Of course absolute power corrupts and who would know that better than a power company.
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rysagr
whip me beat me just don't bore me to death
08:56 PM on 01/31/2012
screw the children, and grandma
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Klarsonent
Semi-retired landlady, small business entrepreneur
12:55 PM on 02/01/2012
You've got it.
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AndyWright68
Freedom is inevitable!
08:04 PM on 01/31/2012
Government is the leading polluter and people still think government is the answer... how sad is that?
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silverwolf13
I know that I do not know.
09:29 PM on 01/31/2012
Your statistics, please.
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AndyWright68
Freedom is inevitable!
09:50 PM on 01/31/2012
Didn't you know that 96% of all statistics are made up on the spot?

While official accounts put US military usage at 320,000 barrels of oil a day, that does not include fuel consumed by contractors, in leased or private facilities, or in the production of weapons. The US military is a major contributor of carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas that most scientists believe is to blame for climate change. Steve Kretzmann, director of Oil Change International, reports, “The Iraq war was responsible for at least 141 million metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent (MMTCO2e) from March 2003 through December 2007. . . . That war emits more than 60 percent that of all countries. . . . This information is not readily available . . . because military emissions abroad are exempt from national reporting requirements under US law and the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change.”

And there's more. http://www.projectcensored.org/top-stories/articles/2-us-department-of-defense-is-the-worst-polluter-on-the-planet/

But don't take our word for it. Do some research. Search: government pollution and start clicking and reading.

Government is all powerful. They have all the guns and laws (violent threats against people to control how they live their lives) and if they wanted to stop pollution it would have been done already. The truth is that they (those in power) make too much money off of pollution and would never hurt their buddies in the energy industry.
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AndyWright68
Freedom is inevitable!
09:58 PM on 01/31/2012
The interesting things you find when you take the time to look.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oHVr2eiUa5w
10:37 PM on 01/31/2012
If you step on the gas pedal, you are also a polluter unless you are stepping on the hydrogen-oxygen pedal.
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07:59 AM on 02/01/2012
You cant have a large population move forward on this till you get the energy sector to pull the loaded gun away from the politicians head. GET MONEY OUT OF POLITICS IS THE ONLY WAY!