June 6, 2018

Big Oil’s Lobbying Belies Talk on Climate, Whitehouse Warns Pope

Senator writes to Pope ahead of Vatican conference on climate change with major oil companies

Washington, DC – As Pope Francis prepares to host executives from major oil companies for a conference on climate change, Senator Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) wrote to Pope Francis today to highlight the significant discrepancy between oil companies’ stated support for climate action and their lobbying and political efforts that undermine it.

Many of the oil companies with which you will be meeting are fond of saying, in essence, ‘we know climate change is real; we know our product causes it; and we support a price on carbon as a solution,” Whitehouse writes.  “As the primary author of the United States Senate’s carbon-pricing legislation, I can assure you of the absence of any support from the large oil companies.  If they supported my bill, or were even engaged to amend or improve it, I would likely know.

Whitehouse and Senator Brian Schatz (D-HI) are the authors of the American Opportunity Carbon Fee Act in the Senate to establish a price on the carbon pollution driving global climate change and putting Americans’ health and safety at risk.  The bill would significantly lower the United States’ greenhouse gas emissions while returning revenues raised to American families.

Whitehouse continues, “More regrettably, through groups that front for the fossil fuel industry in Congress, these companies maintain a powerful political opposition to any meaningful climate legislation.  Groups like the American Petroleum Institute, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the National Association of Manufacturers and others have been employed as adversaries of meaningful climate legislation, in some cases with little apparent support for their opposition from the majority of the companies that make up their membership.

Complete text of Whitehouse’s letter to the Pope is below.  A PDF copy is available here.

During his time in the Senate, Whitehouse has been a leading voice on climate issues.  He has delivered more than 200 weekly speeches about climate change on the Senate floor.  The speeches regularly touch on the intersection between religion and climate change, including Pope Francis’s encyclical Laudato si.  Read more of Whitehouse’s speeches on climate change and religion:

Your Holiness:

Thank you for your inspiring moral leadership on climate change, and for the Papal encyclical Laudato si’, which has brought hope to people around the world.

As you meet next week at the Vatican with oil industry executives to discuss climate change, I wish to bring to your attention the discrepancy, among those oil companies who do substantial business in the United States, between their public-facing statements and their political and lobbying activity as regards the United States Congress. 

Many of the oil companies with which you will be meeting are fond of saying, in essence, “we know climate change is real; we know our product causes it; and we support a price on carbon as a solution.”  As the primary author of the United States Senate’s carbon-pricing legislation, I can assure you of the absence of any support from the large oil companies.  If they supported my bill or one like it, or were even engaged to amend or improve such a bill, I would likely know.

More regrettably, through groups that front for the fossil fuel industry in Congress, these companies maintain a powerful political opposition to any meaningful climate legislation.  Groups like the American Petroleum Institute, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the National Association of Manufacturers and others have been employed as adversaries of meaningful climate legislation, in some cases with little apparent support for their opposition from the majority of the companies that make up their membership. 

These industry advocacy groups often obscure the sources of their funding, but the likeliest explanation is fossil fuel industry money buying their hostility to climate action.  The International Monetary Fund puts the annual subsidy for the fossil fuel industry, in the United States alone, at $700 billion per year, so obstruction of climate legislation (such as a price on carbon) is a highly remunerative activity for this industry. 

In this, they join an array of front groups supported by a network of secretive, ultra-rich industrialists, many of whom are massive players in the fossil fuel industry and who have as their primary mission obstructing climate legislation in order to protect their fossil fuel business interests.  This network runs both lobbying and political operations to block climate action from behind this screen of front groups.

I wish I could tell you that all was sunshine and daffodils in the United States Congress.  I wish I could tell you that, with the whole world watching and so much on the line for those who live closest to the Earth, American democracy was operating in a healthy way to solve this problem.  But on this matter, it is painfully evident that the oil industry is duplicitous in its public-facing statements as it remorselessly schemes through proxies and agents to obstruct in the United States Congress the very progress it claims to seek. 

The inaction you see in Congress is their result.  I wish I could deliver you happier news.

I close with profound thanks again for your moral leadership to protect our common home.  

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