The Commercial Appeal

Paid campaigner­s for clean air learn it was for natural gas

- Miranda Green and Sammy Roth

LOS ANGELES – Diesel truck pollution from the busiest port complex in the United States has fouled the air in nearby neighborho­ods in Southern California for decades. So when port officials asked for feedback on cleaning up that pollution, hundreds of people weighed in.

Los Angeles and Long Beach officials hoped residents would help them decide whether to require zero-pollution electric trucks or instead promote vehicles powered by natural gas, a fossil fuel.

What officials didn’t know was that some of the locals who urged support for natural gas trucks were being paid by a firm hired by the natural gas industry.

A joint investigat­ion by The Los Angeles Times and the news outlet Floodlight in partnershi­p with the Guardian found that in 2017 at least 20 locals were organized by Method Campaign Services to push for “near-zero-emission” trucks at the ports. Their comments at public meetings and press conference­s bolstered successful industry lobbying for trucks that run on natural gas, which is less polluting than diesel but still contribute­s to lung-damaging emissions and climate change.

San Pedro resident Sholeh Bousheri, who was hired by Method to speak at public hearings, was one of several paid campaigner­s who said they only learned later that their work was part of a natural gas industry effort.

Bousheri said Method led her to believe she’d be “standing up for sustainabi­lity” as part of an environmen­tal campaign. She said she pieced together the gas industry’s role when she was paid to hand out pamphlets featuring the logo of Southern California Gas Co., the nation’s largest gas utility.

“It didn’t make me feel comfortabl­e. I took a whole ethical step back,” she said. “I was like, ‘Wait, what’s going on?’ Is this something I want to support with you? Is it moral?”

Method was being paid at the time by Clean Energy Fuels Corp., which owns natural gas fueling stations and like Southern California Gas has resisted the state’s transition away from fossil fuel infrastruc­ture. Clean Energy paid at least $10,000 to Method in 2017, according to financial disclosure­s.

The total amount spent is unclear, because California only requires public officials to list sources of income of $10,000 or more, not how much money they received. The financial disclosure­s were filed by Method founder Brian Vanriper’s spouse, Samantha Millman, a member of L.A.’S City Planning Commission.

Vanriper declined to answer detailed questions about his firm’s work, saying in an email that it would be “inappropri­ate for me to discuss any client’s strategy” and directing questions to Clean Energy Fuels.

Greg Roche, Clean Energy’s vice president for sustainabi­lity, acknowledg­ed in an interview that Method did “community outreach” as part of the gas industry campaign but said he didn’t know anything about the firm paying local residents. Clean Energy declined to respond to emailed follow-up questions about whether it directed Method’s activities.

The Times and Floodlight didn’t find evidence that Socalgas paid Method or knew about its hiring of local residents. The gas utility didn’t answer questions about whether it had any involvemen­t in Method’s work.

The gas industry ultimately won the debate at the ports. Citing community support as a factor, officials approved a plan that opened the door to natural gas trucks.

As economics and public opinion shift against planet-warming fuels, America’s natural gas industry has found itself on the defensive. Companies and trade groups have persuaded several states to pass laws blocking local government­s from banning gas in new housing, and argued that gas should be included in the “clean electricit­y standard” proposed by President Biden.

Sometimes the industry turns to more sympatheti­c messengers to make its arguments.

The American Gas Associatio­n, for instance, has paid Instagram influencers to post about how much they love cooking on gas stoves. In New Orleans, a public relations firm working on behalf of Entergy Corp. paid actors to show up at a meeting and urge officials to approve a gas-fired power plant. Entergy claimed it didn’t know about the arrangemen­t.

Natural gas companies say they’re trying to preserve consumer choice and promote access to an affordable and widely used fuel. Gas is the largest power source in California and nationwide, and it’s often burned for electricit­y when solar and wind farms aren’t generating. More U.S. homes are heated by natural gas than any other fuel.

But gas is also a major driver of the climate crisis, which has brought a growing death toll and economic devastatio­n from worsening wildfires, droughts, floods and heat waves.

Critics say the gas industry works to thwart climate action with “astroturf” campaigns meant to create the appearance of grassroots support. Robert Brulle, a visiting professor at Brown University who researches climate denial and misinforma­tion, said the campaign at the ports is an example of why astroturfing can be so effective.

“It’s turning economic power into political power in a way that systematic­ally distorts public dialogue,” he said.

State data show that the largely Latino, low-income neighborho­ods surroundin­g the ports – including San Pedro, Wilmington and parts of Long Beach – have some of the highest “pollution burdens” in California, a measure that includes diesel particulat­es and ozone in the air. Much of that pollution comes from trucks that move cargo north along the 710 Freeway. The neighborho­ods also have some of the state’s highest asthma rates.

The 2017 battle over limiting air pollution in these areas became a significant opportunit­y for the gas industry to spur investment in its products.

The California Natural Gas Vehicle Coalition, whose backers include Clean Energy Fuels and Socalgas, said its plan would cut asthma-inducing pollution and climate emissions much faster than a separate proposal being considered by port officials. The benefits would be even greater, supporters said, if trucks could be fueled with renewable gas, which is sourced from non-fossil origins such as dairies and landfills but still generates emissions.

On the other side, climate and environmen­tal justice activists pushed for electric trucks that would take advantage of solar and wind energy on the power grid. Several local groups that advocate for low-income communitie­s and people of color argued that trucks fueled by natural gas would still create too much pollution.

Despite that opposition, several dozen people identifyin­g as nearby residents urged support for near-zero trucks while echoing gas industry talking points, according to an analysis conducted by the Climate Investigat­ions Center, a watchdog group.

The Times and Floodlight couldn’t confirm that all of those residents were part of an organized campaign. But one of them shared an email from a Method employee that included an attachment listing 19 people the company had scheduled to attend harbor commission meetings.

Nearly all of them ultimately spoke, as did Bousheri, almost uniformly identifyin­g themselves as local residents and taking positions aligned with the gas industry’s ACT Now Plan, which stood for Advanced Clean Trucks.

Bousheri was one of four port-area residents interviewe­d for this article who said they were paid by Method to attend and speak at public meetings. A recent college graduate, Bousheri found the job posting on Indeed.com and said she earned $20 an hour.

Three other local residents who spoke at meetings also said they were paid $20 an hour by Method. Two said they found the job advertised online as an “environmen­tal fellowship.”

Another paid campaigner, Danielle Marquez, wasn’t hired by Method but said the ACT Now campaign gave her $20 Visa gift cards when she attended events and spoke at public meetings. She called the gift cards a “perk” that she put toward gasoline money.

A Latina single mother of four who used to live in San Pedro, Marquez said she attended a public speaking training organized by the industry campaign where she was coached to make her comments “personal.” She brought her children with her to hearings.

Marquez didn’t know until she was contacted for this article that she had worked on behalf of the natural gas industry. But she wasn’t surprised. She said fossil fuel companies “are running rampant and exploiting people (and) our communitie­s and polluting the environmen­t.”

“Their voices are now louder than the people who live there, and it’s just truly tragic,” Marquez said. “There is no amount of money they can give us that will fix it.”

Ana Leon, who was a college student in Long Beach at the time, said she wasn’t surprised to learn years later that her work for Method was part of a natural gas industry campaign.

“I don’t feel angry necessaril­y. But I do feel disappoint­ed,” Leon said. “At the same time, in hindsight ... I know this sounds bad, but it’s like, at least I got paid.”

Heavy-duty trucks are one of several battlegrou­nds between climate advocates pushing for an all-electric future and natural gas companies who insist they have a role to play in reducing emissions. The more money that’s funneled into electric technologi­es, the smaller the market for companies such as Clean Energy Fuels looking to cash in on gas.

“They need to hook as many people into natural gas trucks as possible in the next couple of years, because I think they really do see electrification as a threat to their ability to sell product,” said Adrian Martinez, an attorney with the nonprofit law firm Earthjusti­ce who has worked with community groups pushing for electric trucks at the ports.

Clean Energy has described environmen­tal rules designed to limit vehicle emissions as a “risk factor” for its business, saying in a recent financial report that the adoption of natural gas in heavy-duty trucking has been slower than anticipate­d.

Clean Energy, alongside Socalgas, is one of two leading members of the California Natural Gas Vehicle Coalition, which is suing California’s Air Resources Board over a regulation supporting zero-emission trucks.

Like many natural gas firms facing demands for climate action, the two companies have argued their products can reduce air pollution and slow global warming by displacing dirtier fuels such as coal and diesel.

They’ve both made investment­s in non-fossil gas, with Clean Energy saying 74% of the gas sold at its fueling stations nationwide is now renewable, including all the fuel it supplies at the L.A. and Long Beach ports.

Roche, from Clean Energy, said people who live near the ports want cleaner air as soon as possible and shouldn’t have to wait for battery-powered trucks to get cheap enough for mass adoption. If port officials were to demand electric vehicles exclusivel­y, he said, they would be “kicking the can down the road to 2035.”

“We’re very affordable and competitiv­e compared to the status quo and can be deployed today,” Roche said.

Climate and environmen­tal justice activists counter that there are several heavy-duty electric trucks available now, and more on the way.

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