What Could *cough* Go Wrong?

Started by TehBorken, Nov 02 06 01:28

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TehBorken

  [span style="font-family: Arial;"][font face="tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif"]Bush Names Exxon Chief to Chart America's  Energy Future[span][font face="tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif"]  [/span][/span][/b][span style="font-family: Arial;"][span][/span][o:p][/o:p][/span][/font][/font]  [font face="tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif"]
Even for an  administration dedicated to putting industry lobbyists in charge of the very  agencies they have devoted their careers to undermining (coal and oil lobbyist  J. Stephen Griles as Deputy Secretary of the Interior is one of dozens of  examples), President Bush has recently outdone himself. He has named Lee  Raymond, the retired chief of ExxonMobil, to head a key study to help America  chart a cleaner course for our energy needs. Raymond currently chairs the  National Petroleum Council (NPC), one of the most powerful lobbies in  Washington.

Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman says the study will address  the supply and demand of oil as well as "...assess the potential contribution of  conservation, efficiency, alternative energy sources, and technology advances"  and determine "the potential long term impact of alternative energies that are  plentiful, affordable, reliable and transportable."

Energy Department  Under Secretary David Garman, added that the NPC is "well qualified to provide a  balanced and informed perspective on strategies and action affecting the energy  future for both the U.S. and for every country on  earth."

Environmentalists are outraged about the appointment of Lee  Raymond. During his long tenure at ExxonMobil, the company spent $19 million on  front groups designed to discredit the science on global warming. It also  resisted funding clean energy alternatives and lobbied aggressively to drill in  the Arctic Refuge.

In a Wall Street Journal article on June 14,  2005, Mr. Raymond said, "it's yet to be shown how much of this [global warming]  is really related to the activities of man."

ExxonMobil is considered a  rogue company even among its peers. It vocally opposes U.S. energy independence  and presses for deeper reliance on oil producing nations such as Saudi Arabia,  where the company has sunk heavy investments. Critics argue that Mr. Raymond's  legacy is to deny that oil dependence is a problem.

ExxonMobil is the  only major oil giant calling renewable energy an "uneconomical" investment.  Known for abruptly shutting off the microphone at shareholders meetings when  opposition is voiced, Mr. Raymond has the reputation of an impatient,  authoritarian leader who shows no qualms about publicly belittling those who  disagree with him.

The Exxpose Exxon coalition, a collaborative effort  of many of the nation's largest environmental and public advocacy organizations  representing millions of Americans, called on Secretary Bodman "to remove the  Global Oil and Gas Study from the purview of Raymond and the NPC."

"This  issue is too vital to be handed over to a company and an industry that have  demonstrated again and again that they will maximize profits at the expense of  our national security, the environment, and U.S. consumers," they argued. The  coalition recommended the study be given to an independent body such as the  National Academy of Sciences.

"Putting Lee Raymond in charge of solving  U.S. energy problems is like putting Jack Abramoff in charge of solving  corruption," said Shawnee Hoover, campaign director for the Exxpose Exxon  Coalition.

[a href="http://www.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?key=219958103&url_num=5&url=http://action.foe.org/campaign.jsp?campaign_KEY=5790"]Take  Action - Tell Secretary Bodman Not to Let Exxon Chart America's Energy  Future[/a].

References:
Exxpose Exxon Backgrounder, [a href="http://www.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?key=219958103&url_num=6&url=http://www.ExxposeExxon.com"]http://www.ExxposeExxon.com[/a]
Undersecretary  Garman, Presentation with notes, 6/21/06, [a href="http://www.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?key=219958103&url_num=7&url=http://www.npc.org"]http://www.npc.org[/a]
Remarks  for Secretary of Energy Samuel Bodman, U.S. Department of Energy, 6/21/06. [a href="http://www.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?key=219958103&url_num=8&url=http://www.energy.gov/print/3764.htm"]http://www.energy.gov/print/3764.htm[/a] [/font]  
The real trouble with reality is that there's no background music.