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The Texas Climate Change Taboo
Remember that government-sponsored "Cap & Trade Summit" in September? The one that featured nearly a full day of industry interests and their conservative "think-tank" counterparts bashing the Waxman-Markey climate change bill?
I recently obtained emails from the Public Utility Commission that confirmed my suspicions that PUC Chairman Barry Smitherman, who organized the event, went out of his way to exlude any discussion of the science behind climate change.
There's nothing earth-shattering here – just more evidence that Gov. Perry's appointees to the state's major regulatory agencies are grossly uninformed about climate science and only communicate with people who already share their belliefs.
Here's Smitherman instructing one of the presenters to "downplay ... the issue of whether the earth is really warming."
He goes on: "I too am a skeptic and have read all the material from criticisms of the temperature gathering boxes, to the effects of solar cycles, and urban heat islands. Bottom line, I have asked most of the panelists not to get bogged down in the debate about whether the earth is warming and whether man/woman is causing it."
(Click for larger image)

Here's an email from Railroad Commission Chairman Victor Carrillo to Smitherman, in which Carrillo suggests that "Climate Change" be taken out of the name of the summit. "Barry was pretty clear that we weren't going to get into the debate on whether 'climate change' or 'global warming' is a fact," Carrillo writes.

Other emails make it clear that the real organizing muscle behind the summit was one Phillip Oldham, a lobbyist for the Texas Association of Manufacturers, Neste Oil and Texas Industrial Energy Consumers.
The following email shows just how cozy Smitherman is with Oldham, who practices law in front of the PUC.
Smitherman asks Oldham: "I keep hearing that Shell and BP are publicly for the bill but privately working against it. Do you know the real story?"
Oldham responsds: "I have some info. We'll chat."

I'd love to know what lobbyist Oldham told regulator Smitherman. But of course they'd never risk putting such sensitive information in an email – the public might find out.
Recently, Washington Post columnist Dana Milbank wrote of Sen. James Inhofe (R-Oklahoma), "It must be very lonely being the last flat-earther," referring to Inhofe's increasingly isolated position on climate even among fellow Senate Republicans.
I don't think Milbank is familiar with Texas Republicans. It seems Texas will probably be the last place on earth still "debating" whether climate change is even happening.
Posted under: Climate Change, Science & Pseudoscience -
Email Forrest at
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