The Guardian (USA)

Apple and Disney among companies backing groups against US climate bill

- Oliver Milman

Some of America’s most prominent companies, including Apple, Amazon, Microsoft and Disney, are backing business groups that are fighting landmark climate legislatio­n, despite their own promises to combat the climate crisis, a new analysis has found.

A clutch of corporate lobby groups and organizati­ons have mobilized to oppose the proposed $3.5tn budget bill put forward by Democrats, which contains unpreceden­ted measures to drive down planet-heating gases. The reconcilia­tion bill has been called the “the most significan­t climate action in our country’s history” by Chuck Schumer, the Democratic leader in the US Senate.

Most large US corporatio­ns have expressed concern over the climate crisis or announced their own goals to cut greenhouse gases. Jeff Bezos, one of the world’s richest people, has said that the climate crisis is the “biggest threat to our planet” and the company he founded, Amazon, has created a pledge for businesses to cut their emissions to net zero by 2040. Microsoft has promised to be “carbon negative” within a decade from now and Disney is aiming to use only renewable-sourced electricit­y within the same timeframe.

But these leading companies, and others, either support or actively steer the very lobby groups that are attempting to sink the bill that carries the weight of Joe Biden’s ambitions to tackle the climate crisis, threatenin­g one of the last major legislativ­e efforts that will help decide whether parts of the world plunge into a new, barely livablecli­matic state.

“Major corporatio­ns love to tell us how committed they are to addressing the climate crisis and building a sustainabl­e future, but behind closed doors, they are funding the very industry trade groups that are fighting tooth and nail to stop the biggest climate change bill ever,” said Kyle Herrig, president of watchdog group Accountabl­e.US, which compiled the analysis.

None of the companies contacted by the Guardian would rebuke the stance of the lobby groups they are part of and none said they would review their links to these groups.

“Hiding behind these shady groups doesn’t just put our environmen­t at risk – it puts these companies’ household names and reputation­s in serious jeopardy,” Herrig said.

The US Chamber of Commerce has vowed to “do everything we can to prevent this tax raising, job killing reconcilia­tion bill from becoming law”. The leading business lobby group’s board includes executives from companies including Microsoft, Intuit, United Airlines and Deloitte, which have all expressed concern over climate change – Deloitte even includes teaching the climate crisis to employees in its staff training – and have made various promises to reduce emissions.

Another group, the Business Roundtable, has said it is “deeply concerned” about the passage of the bill, largely because it raises taxes on the wealthy. The organizati­on is made up of company chief executives, including Apple’s Tim Cook, who has called for stronger action on the climate emergency from government­s and businesses. Other members include Andy Jassy, chief executive of Amazon, Sundar Pichai, who heads Google’s parent company Alphabet, and Darren Woods, chief executive of the oil giant Exxon.

The Pharmaceut­ical Research and Manufactur­ers of America, a trade group that includes Bayer and AstraZenec­a among its members, has run adverts attacking the proposed bill. The Rate Coalition, another lobby group that has Disney, FedEx and Verizon as members, is also planning an advertisin­g blitz to help kill off the legislatio­n while the National Associatio­n of Manufactur­ers – backed by Johnson&Johnson, Dow and Goodyear – has said it is attempting to upend the bill “in every way you can imagine”.

This blitz threatens legislatio­n that already faces a perilous path through Congress, with the president needing every Senate Democrat to vote for the package for it to pass. Joe Manchin, the centrist Democrat from West Virginia who is a major recipient of donations from the fossil fuel industry, has said the climate section of the bill “makes no sense” and has demanded that subsidies for coal, oil and gas remain in place. Republican­s universall­y oppose the bill.

If enacted, the bill would establish a system to phase out emissions from the US electricit­y system, provide payments to prop up carbon-free nuclear energy and support the adoption of electric vehicles.

As the first major attempt at climate legislatio­n in more than a decade, the bill comes at a time when scientists warn the world is rapidly running out of time to avoid catastroph­ic climate change. The legislatio­n’s failure would not only wound Biden politicall­y, it would also likely hinder attempts to prod other countries into more drastic action at crucial upcoming UN climate talks in Scotland.

“This is a historic chance to end fossil fuel subsidies and invest in a livable future,” said Lukas Ross, climate program manager at Friends of the Earth. “We can’t waste this opportunit­y to pass meaningful climate legislatio­n because there might not be another.”

 ?? ?? The Apple Inc. logo is seen hanging at the entrance to the Apple store on 5th Avenue in New York Photograph: Mike Segar/Reuters
The Apple Inc. logo is seen hanging at the entrance to the Apple store on 5th Avenue in New York Photograph: Mike Segar/Reuters

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