How Big Oil Lost Control of Its Climate Misinformation Machine

rjzimmerman:

Excerpt:

Trump was taught to say these things [climate denial] on climate by Heartland, the Competitive Enterprise Institute and other think tanks. They maintained this denial space in public policy dialogue,“ said Kert Davies, director of the Climate Investigations Center, a watchdog group. “And you can definitely credit Exxon and Koch brothers’ money for giving the think tanks the megaphone to keep climate science denial in the world.”

But now, just like the Republican upstarts that threaten the party establishment, Heartland is taking climate denial farther than many fossil fuel companies can support. While ExxonMobil today publicly accepts the reality of human-caused climate change and the need to address the problem, Heartland argues for the benefits of a warming world. The group is pushing theEPA to overturn its official conclusion—known as the endangerment finding—that excessive carbon dioxide is a danger to human health and welfare. The finding, affirmed by the Supreme Court, is what empowers the agency to regulate carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases.

This rift was on display at a recent meeting of the American Legislative Exchange Council, a group that influences state governments to adopt conservative priorities. Heartland wanted ALEC to approve a resolution calling on the EPA to withdraw the endangerment finding. But ExxonMobil, once at the forefront of climate denial, was among several corporations and utilities that convinced ALEC to shelve a vote on the resolution.

ExxonMobil had become just another member of “the discredited and anti-energy global warming movement,” complained Heartland’s president, Tim Huelskamp, a former Republican congressman from Kansas. “They’ve put their profits and ‘green’ virtue signaling above sound science.”

ExxonMobil is among an early group of donors that slowed or ended its funding of climate denial. But the misinformation apparatus the corporations helped create is now so independent and robust, it no longer needs—or trusts—them.

How Big Oil Lost Control of Its Climate Misinformation Machine