.
1/15/18, "Environmental group may have to register as foreign agents," Washington Examiner, Kevin Mooney, opinion
"U.S. environmental activists who are working to halt the production
and use of fossil fuels could be required to register as foreign agents
if Congress gets serious about enforcing an existing law.
There was some potential movement in that direction last October [2017] when
Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, introduced
legislation that would put some teeth into the Foreign Agents
Registration Act. The law, which was first passed in 1938, calls for
individuals and organizations to provide full disclosure when they are
working to advance the public policy interests of a foreign government.
As the Washington Examiner has reported,
Grassley’s proposed legislation would close off an exemption that has
allowed lobbyists for foreign interests to avoid registration while
providing the U.S. attorney general with additional authority to conduct
investigations.
While
the media remains largely focused on ongoing investigations into
allegations of Russian interference in the 2016 campaign, the connection
between Vladimir Putin’s government and U.S. environmental groups
deserves more scrutiny.
Klein Ltd., a Bermuda-based shell corporation run by executives with strong ties to longtime Putin friend Leonid Reiman and Russian energy investment groups including Firebird New Russia Fund and Vimpelcom Ltd., reportedly funneled $23 million to the Sea Change Foundation, according to a detailed 2014 U.S. Senate Environment and Public Works Committee report.
Klein’s legal counsel dismisses such charges as “completely false and irresponsible.” But in a letter
addressed to U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, members of
Congress document evidence pointing to a paperless money trail that
flows from Russia into U.S. environmental groups through the Sea Change
Foundation. The implication is that the Russians have been pouring tens
of millions of dollars into willing environmental advocacy groups in an
effort to spread propaganda directed against fracking in the U.S. and
the technology that makes it possible, according to evidence presented
in the letter.
Rep. Lamar Smith, R-Texas, chairman of the House Committee on
Science, Space, and Technology, and his colleagues have called on the
U.S. Treasury Department to conduct an investigation into the
allegations of Russian collusion with U.S. environmental groups. In
response to a media inquiry I sent last year asking about the
allegations, a U.S. Treasury spokesman said in an email message, “We
respond as appropriate to Congressional inquiries, but wouldn’t comment
publicly on an investigation.”
The motivation for Russian interference here is clear. As the
congressional letter notes, American ingenuity in the oil and gas
industry have significant geopolitical ramifications. Thanks to
innovative extraction technologies such as hydraulic fracturing and
horizontal drilling, the U.S. now has access to vast reserves of oil and
gas previously held to be unrecoverable. The unexpected energy resource
bonanza has dramatically shifted the dynamics of the economic and
geopolitical landscape in America’s favor.
The U.S. is the top producer of natural gas in the world. In 2016, U.S. natural gas imports set a record low even though consumption has increased. In 3 of the first 5 months
of 2017, U.S. natural gas exports were greater than imports — the
growing trend points to the U.S. becoming a net exporter. This new
commitment to natural gas means less expensive energy bills for
consumers as well as economic, environmental, and national security
benefits for the country as a whole. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce
estimates that the fracking boom has created 2.7 million jobs, with an estimated additional 3.5 million projected by 2035.
From a foreign policy perspective, the U.S. can now export liquefied
natural gas to parts of Europe that have been dependent on Putin’s
government for their gas. This weakens Putin and puts the U.S. in a
stronger position to exert influence. Up until now, periodic disputes
with Russia have resulted in economic bullying tactics from Moscow that
include wintertime threats to close pipelines supplying oil and natural gas. Those days may be over now that American natural gas development is poised to impact Russia and its Gazprom oil company.
However, an international campaign known as “Keep It in the Ground”
has been pushing an anti-fossil fuel agenda that advances Russia’s
geopolitical interests at the expense of the U.S. and America’s allies.
The campaign claims support from more than 400 organizations
across the globe, with a sizable percentage operating inside the U.S.
The campaign is opposed not just to the extraction of fossil fuels, but
to any fossil fuel-related project including pipelines, rail
transportation, refineries, and energy exploration.
These groups include Greenpeace, the Sierra Club, 350.org, the Center
for Biological Diversity, WildEarth Guardians, the Rainforest Action
Network, Earthworks, and the Chesapeake Climate Action Network, to name
just a few. Some of the larger environmental advocacy groups in the
U.S., such as the Natural Resources Defense Council and the League of
Conservation Voters, don’t appear on the list of 400, yet do support the
same anti-fossil policy aims and draw from the same pool of financial
supporters.
The common denominator here between many of these groups is the San
Francisco-based Sea Change Foundation, which has been identified as the
incubator for Russian funding of environmental groups. Another key
player is the Energy Foundation, which is also based in San Francisco
and appears to be an offshoot of the Sea Change Foundation.
If Grassley succeeds in bolstering the Foreign Agents Registration
Act, a good starting point for an investigation would be with the “Keep
It in the Ground” campaign members and with other environmental groups
that support the campaign’s agenda.
While these groups are free to advocate for their preferred policies,
they should not be permitted to posture as grassroots activists if they
are in fact doing the bidding of foreign interests, to the detriment of
average Americans who benefit from affordable and reliable sources of
energy."
"Kevin Mooney (@KevinMooneyDC)
is a contributor to the Washington Examiner's Beltway Confidential
blog. He is an investigative reporter in Washington, D.C. who writes for
several national publications."
....................
Added: "All the funds from the [Sea Change] foundation come from their [Simons family] personal fortune, or
wealth associated with Renaissance Technology, the wildly successful
hedge fund that Nat's father, James Simons, created and where Nat spent
years as a portfolio manager. There's also income from a vaguely named
company based in Bermuda, which has drawn accusations from various
conspiracy-prone bloggers." (So one is a "conspiracy blogger" if
one questions financing and expenditures of a massively funded
political effort aimed directly at defenseless Americans who aren't
millionaires and have no political power? Where did you get the idea
that "trust us" is sufficient? ed.)
Sea Change Foundation's " past grantees include the Center for American Progress (CAP), a
progressive think tank in Washington, D.C....Beyond giving millions every year to
its main grantee, the Energy Foundation, and well over $1 million a year
to major organizations such as the Sierra Club, World Wildlife Fund,
Natural Resources Defense Council, and CAP, it also gives mid-six-figure
grants to a wide array of other groups involved in energy or climate
issues."
..............
Tuesday, January 16, 2018
Congress seeks investigation into Russian collusion with US environmental groups pushing what appears to be propaganda advancing foreign interests to the detriment of average Americans. US groups accepting Russian financing via paperless money trails could be required to register as foreign agents-Washington Examiner, Kevin Mooney, opinion
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