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The real reason Joe Manchin is sabotaging the US clean energy plan [update]
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Coal investor and US Senator Joe Manchin III (D-WV) opposes his own political party’s clean energy program. And since not a single Republican will support the infrastructure bill that contains the program, Manchin has disproportionate power to sink the US plan to decarbonize in order to slow global warming and meet the Paris Agreement target of net-zero by 2050. Why does he oppose it?
July 14, 2022 update: Senator Joe Manchin (D-WV) said Thursday that he would not support funding for climate or clean energy programs, thus, along with the Republican Party, effectively torpedoing the climate agenda.
Manish Bapna, president and CEO of the NRDC Action Fund, just released the following statement:
The House did its job. The Senate failed because Joe Manchin and the Republicans blocked Senate action. The consequences will be profound – at home and abroad.
The climate crisis is inflicting rising costs and mounting dangers across this country and around the world. Seven in ten Americans expect our government to act. This was a squandered chance to respond with strategic investment to confront the climate crisis in a way that would strengthen the economy, create a more equitable society and make the country more secure.
December 20 update: Manchin announced on Fox News Sunday yesterday that he will not vote for the Build Back Better Framework, which contains crucial climate change provisions, citing concerns for inflation and the deficit:
Manchin’s sudden public announcement has gone down very badly with everyone apart from Republicans. The White House issued a statement that debunked Manchin’s two excuses for not supporting the bill. On inflation:
Senator Manchin claims that this change of position is related to inflation, but the think tank he often cites on Build Back Better — the Penn Wharton Budget Institute — issued a report less than 48 hours ago that noted the Build Back Better Act will have virtually no impact on inflation in the short term, and, in the long run, the policies it includes will ease inflationary pressures. Many leading economists with whom Senator Manchin frequently consults also support Build Back Better.
And on the deficit:
Senator Manchin cited deficit concerns in his statement. But the plan is fully paid for, is the most fiscally responsible major bill that Congress has considered in years, and reduces the deficit in the long run. The Congressional Budget Office report that the Senator cites analyzed an unfunded extension of Build Back Better. That’s not what the President has proposed, not the bill the Senate would vote on, and not what the President would support. Senator Manchin knows that: The President has told him that repeatedly, including this week, face to face.
Senator Bernie Sanders (D-VT) stated on CNN that Manchin should ask the people of West Virginia what they want:
According to today’s front-page story in West Virginia’s Charleston Gazette-Mail, headlined: “We need this so bad”: Build Back Better backers say bill would protect WV’s most vulnerable as Manchin Resists,” West Virginia citizen advocacy groups held many events last week urging quick passage of the legislation. The Gazette-Mail writes:
A September report by the independent economics consulting firm Analysis Group found a clean electricity payment program would result in an increase of 7.7 million jobs, a $907 billion economic boost and $154 billion more in increased tax revenue for federal, state and local governments by 2031.
Sanders also made the point about Manchin’s contradictory behavior about deficit concerns:
I also find it amusing that Sen. Manchin indicates his worry about the deficit after voting just this week for a military budget of $778 billion, four times greater than Build Back Better over 10 years and $25 billion more than the president requested.
Electrek’s Take: Manchin’s comments on Fox News contradict everything he’s said to the White House and to his own Democratic Party colleagues. At the very least, it’s bad politics to broadside your own party, and at most, he is putting the entire world’s efforts to fight the climate crisis in peril for his own selfish reasons.
Manchin brings to mind Gavrilo Princip, the Bosnian Serb student who ignited World War I by assassinating Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife. One man’s actions created a devastating war that still resonates more than a hundred years later.
And Manchin, in one Fox News interview, unless he reverses course yet again, could damn future generations to lifetimes of environmental misery. Shame on him.
Manchin’s “official” reason
The $150 billion clean electricity program is a carrot and stick approach. It would reward utilities that switched from burning fossil fuels to clean energy, and penalize those that don’t.
Sam Runyon, Manchin’s spokesperson, wrote in an email to the New York Times:
Senator Manchin has clearly expressed his concerns about using taxpayer dollars to pay private companies to do things they’re already doing. He continues to support efforts to combat climate change while protecting American energy independence and ensuring our energy reliability.
Manchin’s reason via his spokesperson is nonsensical. Most US utilities are doing very little when it comes to transitioning to clean energy. They need both the carrot and stick. In January, Electrek reported:
Sierra Club analysts examined plans for 79 operating companies owned by 50 parent companies and assigned a score to every utility based on its plans to retire coal, stop constructing new gas plants, and aggressively build out new clean energy by 2030.
Sierra Club then provides a map of the US so you can see who’s succeeding and failing, and a search function to look up your utility.
Spoiler! There are a lot more D and F grades than A or B grades.
Read more: What’s your utility company doing (or not) to adopt clean energy?
Manchin’s real reason
So what in the heck is going on with Manchin? Is he worried, as his fellow West Virginia Senator Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV) said, that the program is “designed to ultimately eliminate coal and natural gas from our electricity mix, and would be absolutely devastating for my state”?
Not quite.
Yes, the program is designed to eliminate coal and natural gas. But I really don’t think it’s because Manchin is mainly worried about job elimination. As I wrote in April:
I watched Senator Joe Manchin (D-WV) and Cecil Roberts, president of US coal’s largest union, the United Mine Workers of America, discuss a possible transition from coal to renewables in Appalachia with the National Press Club yesterday. (You can watch the full discussion here.) It was an important and intriguing conversation. Coal workers are rightly concerned about future work and training as their industry declines, but I didn’t hear about any concrete road maps out of coal from Manchin.
Surely Manchin, of all people – the chair of the US Energy and Natural Resources Committee – should be able to speak definitively and comprehensively about renewable adoption and job creation, rather than vaguely repeating himself about the possibilities of carbon capture and sequestration. Even Roberts called for federal support for wind turbines and solar panels to be manufactured in Appalachia, and spells out a plan in the union’s new report (although it still leans heavily on coal).
And everyone knows – even Roberts – that coal is gasping its last hacking breath. Even Roberts is willing to transition to clean energy jobs! West Virginia voters support many provisions in the Build Back Better plan, including clean energy.
The real reason why Manchin won’t back clean energy?
Greed.
Manchin gets a lot of money from fossil fuel companies that aren’t even in West Virginia. They own him.
The Charleston Gazette-Mail sums it up:
Employees and political action committees for out-of-state oil and gas companies — most of which are based in Texas — dwarfed contributions from in-state [West Virginia] individuals and political action committees by more than tenfold, according to the senator’s newly filed quarterly campaign finance report.
You can read the full list of examples reported by energy and environment reporter Mike Tony of the Gazette-Mail, but here are a couple of standout examples:
Manchin for West Virginia, the senator’s campaign committee, reported drawing just under $1.6 million in contributions in the quarter, leaving it with $5.38 million in cash on hand.
More than a quarter of that roughly $1.6 million came from the oil and gas industry. Just over $30,000 came from individuals and political action committees in West Virginia.
…
Manchin has made $4.35 million since 2012 from stock he owns in Enersystems Inc., the Fairmont-based coal brokerage he founded in 1988, according to his U.S. Senate financial disclosures. He has denied that his vested coal interests have influenced his policymaking that affects the coal industry. But he has declined to divest his holdings, saying his ownership is held in a blind trust and, therefore, avoids a conflict of interest.
So, that’s $400,000 coming from fossil fuels in just one quarter. And guess who the top recipient is overall of oil and gas, mining, and coal money, not just in the Senate, but in all of Congress? Manchin. (He’s No. 2 for utilities.)
Electrek’s Take
I am mad as hell about this, and more than just a little bit scared. I don’t want to be dramatic, but it’s not good.
Let’s drill it down a bit (no pun intended): We are in the midst of a global climate emergency. China may be the No. 1 polluter overall, but the US is No. 2, and each person in America emits twice as much carbon as each person in China. Plus, the US has emitted more carbon than any other country – so this is the US’s problem to solve.
When Biden was elected, he immediately signed an executive order to have the US rejoin the Paris Agreement. He has stressed the importance of decarbonizing and has a plan. He vowed that the US will cut its emissions to 50% of 2005 levels by 2030.
Hope sprung from those declarations for those of us who know that the future of humanity is hanging in the balance. The infrastructure bill has me holding my breath. It’s hard for me to even look at the negotiation process.
The Biden clean energy program is fundamental to that plan. The whole world, not just the US, needs it. We can wait no longer.
And just weeks before the do-or-die COP26 summit in Glasgow, that plan is about to be derailed by one man.
One man’s greed is going to hurt the world’s entire population of 7.75 billion people. That’s not hyperbole: The respected medical journal the Lancet says “climate change is the greatest global health threat facing the world in the 21st century.”
Hope for a miracle.
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Vietnam dismisses two deputy PMs amid corruption probes
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HANOI – Vietnam dismissed two deputy prime ministers amid lengthy investigations driven by a campaign to clean up corruption and protect the Communist Party’s legitimacy.
The National Assembly voted to dismiss Deputy Prime Minister Vu Duc Dam from office during a four-day special session that began on Thursday. Mr Pham Binh Minh, who has held the position since late 2013, was also voted out.
The Parliament did not provide reasons for the dismissals. Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh earlier on Thursday asked the National Assembly to dismiss Mr Dam and Mr Minh at their requests, VnExpress news website reported.
Of the 484 delegates who voted, 476 approved the dismissals and three did not vote, according to a tally provided by the National Assembly.
Delegates also voted to approve Minister of Natural Resources and Environment Tran Hong Ha, 59, and head of the Haiphong provincial Communist Party Tran Luu Quang, 55, to replace Mr Dam and Mr Minh.
Party officials in September stepped up efforts to prod officials to resign if they have been reprimanded, disciplined and are deemed to have low competency. Party Chief Nguyen Phu Trong has also urged timely dismissals of officials who have not been effective in their roles or have committed wrongdoings.
The dismissals come as the authorities aggressively tackle graft as part of a years-long campaign that has ensnared hundreds of officials and businessmen. The probes have defined Mr Trong’s legacy as he serves a rare third five-year term.
There were signs that this was coming for the two top-ranking officials. Late in December, the two were dismissed from the powerful party Central Committee. Mr Minh, a former foreign minister, was also dismissed from the Politburo, which plays a leading role in the country’s governance. The dismissals came at their requests, Thanh Nien newspaper reported earlier.
Police recently detained Mr Dam’s assistant on alleged abuse of power amid investigations involving Viet A Technology JSC, a maker of Covid-19 test kits. The authorities in September also detained Nguyen Quang Linh, an assistant of Mr Minh’s, and Nguyen Thanh Hai, director of the department of international relations under the government’s coordinating office, for alleged bribery tied to the organisation of repatriation flights for Vietnamese abroad during the pandemic. The authorities have begun criminal proceedings against 39 individuals tied to the case.
Criminal proceedings have been initiated against 102 individuals tied to the Viet A Technology case. In June, police detained former health minister Nguyen Thanh Long, former Hanoi mayor Chu Ngoc Anh, and a former deputy minister of science and technology for alleged ties to bribery and abuse of power in investigations involving the test kit maker.
Mr Trong has warned that corruption could put the party’s legitimacy at risk as the public grows more intolerant of graft – echoing President Xi Jinping in neighbouring China. In one of the biggest cases to date, former Vietnam politburo member Dinh La Thang was sentenced in 2018 to 18 years in prison for violating state regulations.
Vietnam, a country of roughly 100 million people, also has much to gain economically if it can bolster its image as place to do business.
During a corruption standing committee meeting on Nov 18, Mr Trong pointed to slow progress in handling some major graft cases and called for stronger actions to be taken, according to his speech posted on the government’s website.
In 2022, the authorities initiated criminal investigations of 4,646 individuals in 2,474 cases for alleged violations tied to corruption, abuse of power and economic wrongdoings. Since early 2021, the Politburo and the party have disciplined 67 officials under the management of the Politburo and the Secretariat, including five ministers and former ministers, 13 provincial chairmen and former chairmen and 20 lower-level officers.
In April, police detained Deputy Foreign Affairs Minister To Anh Dung over alleged bribery while he organised repatriation flights for Vietnamese abroad during the pandemic. BLOOMBERG
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Digging into Honeywell UOP’s Bribery Schemes in Brazil and Algeria (Part II of III)
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The facts surrounding Honeywell’s bribery schemes in Brazil and Algeria are fairly straightforward. In Brazil, the facts underscore the significant risks of bribery when companies participate in large, valuable project competitions. Global companies face significant risks when competing and seek every advantage to win a project competition.
Brazil
In 2008 and 2009, Petrobras developed the Premium Refinery project to design and construct two grassroots refineries to process heavy oil in Maranhão and Cerá, Brazil. The project had three bidding phases: technical ranking, design competition and commercial valuation. Honeywell was interested in the project as an important foothold in the Brazil oil industry.
In July 2009, Petrobras invited Honeywell UOP and a number of competitors to participate in the first phase. The companies submitted technical proposals for the project. UOP and two other companies received the highest technical scores and all three companies were permitted to participate in the second phase.
In April 2010, Honeywell searched for a sales intermediary to assist in the Premium project bid. Honeywell executives believed they needed higher-level contacts at Petrobras to win the contract. Honeywell’s account manager recommended a Brazil agent because the agent stated he had access to Petrobras’s downstream director responsible for the Premium project.
Honeywell officials submitted an internal request for approval to retain the agent and specifically represented that the agent would receive a 3 percent commission (or $12 million) if successful. The request falsely represented that the Honeywell officials knew the agent for two years and omitted the fact the agent would interact with Petrobras officials.
In May and August 2010, the agent and Honeywell’s Petrobras account manager met with a Brazilian lobbyist with close ties to Petrobras’s downstream director. Honeywell’s account manager offered the Brazilian lobbyist and Petrobras’s downstream director a portion of the sales commission (3 percent) in exchange for helping Honeywell win the Premium contract.
In a subsequent meeting, Honeywell’s account manager met with the Petrobras downstream director and the lobbyist at a shopping mall in Rio de Janeiro and they agreed that the Petrobras director would assist Honeywell win the contract in exchange for a percentage of the commission.
Honeywell secured the lead in the design context and the bidders prepared to submit their commercial proposals. Honeywell’s account manager updated his supervisors on meetings he conducted with the Petrobras director, the lobbyist and the sales agent in which he and the agent sought information on what to bid to win the commercial phase. The Honeywell account manager and his supervisors referred to Petrobras’s director as the “King” and the lobbyist as the “King’s assistant.”
Honeywell submitted a commercial bid of $425 million. A Petrobras lower level official rejected the bid as too high. Honeywell sought to get the “King” to intervene and get the “decisions up to his level in order to control.” Inb August 2010 Honeywell’s regional director pressured his supervisors to execute the sales agent agreement stating, “I want to get this back to [the sales agent] as soon as possible, because we are pushing the king to step up and intercede.” That same day, Honeywell submitted a revised commercial bid of $348 million to Petrobras based on specific guidance provided by the Petrobras director. Petrobras accepted the bid and Honeywell won the contract.
Honeywell paid the sales agent a total of $10.4 million in commissions from a U.S. bank account. The payments were made without receipt of an invoice from the sale agent. The payment requests lacked basic relevant information. Later, the sales agent wanted his commission payments routed to a Swiss bank account in a different name associated with the sales agent’s new company.
Algeria
In November 2004, Honeywell Belgium contracted with Sonatrach, Algeria’s state-owned oil company to modernize the instrumentation and control systems at a refinery in Oran, Algeria. In 2008, Honeywell renegotiated the contract. One year later, Honeywell and Sonatrach had a dispute concerning the contract and all work ceased on the project. Sonatrach believed that Honeywell Belgium should pay liquidated damages for the delay. Sonatrach’s downstream director was a key decision maker in the resolution of the dispute.
Starting in 2010, Honeywell Belgium retained a Monaco sales agent, who was subjected to due diligence review and approved. Honeywell used the sales agent to help resolve the liquidated damages dispute. Honeywell then used the sales agent to pass through various payments to a group of people who helped Honeywell secure a contract with Sonatrach. The Monaco sales agent understood this to mean the payment as possibly a bribe.
Later, in 2011, a Honeywell sales manager engaged a consultant to help resolve the problems Honeywell was having with Sonatrach. The consultant made two separate payments to the Sonatrach official, $50,000 and $25,000, respectively, from a Swiss bank account.
Sonatrach and Honeywell Belgium continued to disagree about the contract in Algeria. Sonatrach threatened to transfer the contract to another company. After making the first $50,000 payment to the Sonatrach official, Honeywell and Sonatrach agreed to modify the contract and resolve their dispute.
Two weeks later, the Monaco sales agent and a Honeywell subsidiary entered into a fictitious sales consultancy agreement where the agent would purportedly promote sales in Algeria for a 2 to 4.5 percent commission (capped at $500,000 per year). Despite not achieving any of the contractual milestones, the Monaco sales agent was paid $300,000.
The Monaco sales agent was paid to reimburse the consultant who made the two bribery payments to the Sonatrach director. The Monaco sales agent sent an invoice to Honeywell for a lump sum fee of $300,000 relating to the refinery project. Honeywell approved the invoice payment. The sales agent, in turn, repaid the consultant the $75,000 through a series of intermediary transfers involving multiple U.S. correspondent banks located in New York.
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Republicans Fume Over Cost of a Speakerless House
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GOP wants to investigate Hunter Biden, Mayorkas, and the IRS. First they have to agree on a speaker.
Joseph Simonson • January 4, 2023 6:00 pm
Subpoenaing Hunter Biden, impeaching Department of Homeland Security secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, and stopping President Joe Biden’s plan to hire thousands of IRS agents. These big ticket items were supposed to be priorities in the House agenda, but after taking power following two years of full Democratic control of the government, Republicans’ plans could be delayed for weeks, months, or indefinitely, as the party fails to find a speaker of the House.
The chaos in the Capitol is stirring ire among House Republicans, the vast majority of whom support Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R., Calif.) for the role. Republican members who spoke with the Washington Free Beacon said they were powerless to do just about anything, such as fulfilling basic constituent services or setting staff up with emails.
“If we had elected Kevin McCarthy speaker we would have already voted to defund the 87,000 new IRS agents, new border security measures, and a select committee on China,” Rep. Michael Waltz (R., Fla.) told the Free Beacon. “We would also be sending notices to the Biden administration that we’re coming for answers on the FBI, Department of Justice, the Afghanistan withdrawal, and conflicts of interest surrounding the Biden family.”
Without a House speaker, the legislative body grinds to a halt. No members can be sworn in, introduce legislation, or issue subpoenas. For all intents and purposes, the United States currently doesn’t have a House of Representatives. But the failure to find a House speaker carries political consequences as well. The longer the fight drags on, the longer Biden, who is expected to run for reelection in 2024, goes without virtually any real oversight in the form of hearings and subpoenas.
Congress has proven itself effective at inflicting damage on a president or future candidate, as evidenced by investigations into Hillary Clinton and former president Donald Trump. Clinton faced over a year of scrutiny from House Republicans for her role in the Benghazi attacks as secretary of state and her use of a private email server to conduct professional business, which only ended after she lost her second bid for president in 2016. Democrats spent nearly four years investigating Trump over every facet of his administration, resulting in two impeachments and a failed reelection campaign.
Democrats, who told voters on the campaign trail that a Republican majority would mean few bills would get passed as they investigate Hunter Biden, and Republicans agree that oversight would be a chief priority in the new Congress. One senior staffer close to the Republican Oversight Committee said members had a day-by-day plan on various Biden administration officials they planned to subpoena. That project, which was to be publicly announced on Tuesday, is now on hold.
“The people who are voting against Kevin McCarthy in the Republican conference are aiding Joe Biden, aiding [House Minority Leader] Hakeem Jeffries, and aiding [Senate Majority Leader] Chuck Schumer. Because they are the reason we are not getting about the business we set out to do,” said Rep. Mike Lawler (R., N.Y.) on Fox News on Wednesday. “When it comes to Jim Jordan’s oversight on [the Judiciary Committee], guess what? Can’t do it, because of these folks. When it comes to securing our border, guess what? Can’t do it, because of these folks. When it comes to reining in wasteful spending under the Biden administration, guess what? Can’t do it, because of these folks.”
The Republican Party’s inability to find a speaker does not look like it will be resolved any time soon. One individual close to the negotiations, who identifies as a neutral party and spoke on the condition of anonymity, said the anti-McCarthy voting bloc’s demands are untenable.
“What [Rep. Matt] Gaetz is asking for isn’t really possible if you want a functioning House,” the individual said. “McCarthy has to give everything away to make these people happy.”
The anti-McCarthy group of Republicans has made a number of demands, some publicly and others in backroom negotiations. Those demands include a vote on a number of bills including a balanced budget amendment and term limits. Rule change demands include requiring a two-thirds majority vote for all earmarks, committee spots, and a pledge from the Congressional Leadership Fund, a Republican super PAC, not to meddle in primaries.
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