Dirty Energy Industries Host National “Greenwashing” Lobby Week
September 25, 2017
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Contact:
Laura Haight
518-949-1797
lhaight@pfpi.net
Washington, D.C.- A dozen environmental watchdog organizations wrote to Congress today warning that the so-called “National Clean Energy Week” in Washington, D.C. this week packages polluting energy industries such as coal, gas, nuclear, biomass, and garbage incineration alongside clean renewable energy such as wind and solar.
“The climate crisis is real, and these clean energy claims are phony,” said Dr. Mary Booth, director of the Partnership for Policy Integrity, a nonprofit that applies science to inform clean energy policy. “We’re writing Congress to remind it that clean energy doesn’t come out of a smokestack. Congress must keep its hands off Americans’ wallets when these super-polluters come asking for clean energy subsidies.”
The industry lobbyists sponsoring the week’s events include the American Gas Association, American Petroleum Institute, Biomass Power Association, Energy Recovery Institute (garbage incineration), and the Nuclear Energy Institute.
The watchdog groups contend that these highly polluting industries are trying to rebrand themselves as “clean energy” in order to secure federal tax breaks and subsidies – despite the carbon pollution, air pollution, and toxic wastes that they generate.
“At a time when we should be transitioning swiftly to truly clean forms of energy, some of the biggest polluters in the industry are in DC this week attempting to greenwash their operations,” said Wenonah Hauter, executive director of Food & Water Watch.
“Waste burning facilities are the most toxic, expensive, and climate-polluting energy industries in the U.S.,” said GAIA’s US & Canada Regional Coordinator, Ahmina Maxey. “These facilities are predominantly sited and built in low-income communities and communities of color across the country, burdening these communities with mercury, dioxins, and particulate matter while undermining investments for local economic resilience and job creation.”
“Nuclear power is dirty energy from start to finish, and despite massive amounts of government subsidies, it still can’t compete,” said Tim Judson, executive director of the Nuclear Information and Resource Service. “From mining uranium to making nuclear waste that still has no solution, it is simply too dirty, too dangerous, too expensive, and too slow to have any place in our country’s energy future.”
The following groups signed the letter to Congress:
350.org
Center for Biological Diversity
Dogwood Alliance
Environmental Integrity Project
Environmental Working Group
Food & Water Watch
Friends of the Earth U.S.
Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives (GAIA)
New York Public Interest Research Group
Nuclear Information and Resource Service (NIRS)
Oil Change International
Partnership for Policy Integrity (PFPI)
The groups urged Congress address the climate crisis and support investments in truly clean energy, such as energy efficiency, solar, wind and geothermal power. “Taxpayer dollars should not support dangerous and dirty technologies masquerading as “‘clean energy,’” the letter concluded.