Environmental Protection Agency chief Scott Pruitt has been described as an “ally,” “puppet,” and “tool and minion” of the fossil fuel industry.
Newly obtained documents reinforce that portrayal.
Exhibit A: emails newly obtained by the Associated Press that show “dozens of meetings between Pruitt, members of his staff, and executives and lobbyists from the coal, oil, and gas industries” during his time as Oklahoma’s state attorney general—a position from which he sued the EPA over a dozen times.
A June 2016 email, for example, shows a push for a meeting “regarding a pending federal tax issue that is related to the state’s position on the Clean Power Plan.” That request came from a board member of the Domestic Energy Producers Alliance, an oil and gas industry group headed by fracking tycoon Harold Hamm, a Pruitt and Trump ally.
The new document dump, which is thousands of pages long, follows a separate batch of emails brought to the public eye in February which showed that Pruitt, during his time as Oklahoma AG, had “a close and friendly relationship” with the fossil fuel sector. Those emails were released after the Oklahoma County Court found that Pruitt withheld the records in violation of the state’s Open Records Act.
Exhibit B is Pruitt’s calendar from Feb. 21 to March 31, 2017—a time period in which he was heading the EPA. It shows numerous meetings between Pruitt and fossil fuel industry heads.
The 35-page document was obtained by E&E News, and “details private meetings that the newly confirmed EPA chief had during his first days at the agency—some of which have not been previously disclosed.”
The calendar shows a scheduled March 22 evening meeting at Trump International Hotel in Washington, D.C. with American Petroleum Institute’s executive committee and board of directors, who are a group of “45 CEOs representing a broad spectrum of the U.S. oil and natural gas industry.”
Also included on the schedule is a March 20 meeting with BP America president John Mingé. There’s also a March 30 meeting scheduled with George Damiris, CEO of petroleum refiner HollyFrontier. The calendar states: “Mr. Damiris would like to discuss the renewable fuel standard and point of obligation issue, as well as the broader EPA policies that impact the company.”
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