Over at my Web site
I've posted a long, blow-by-blow account of how Colorado Gov.
Bill Ritter and his administration repeatedly enlisted the
William and Flora Hewlett Foundation to pay for his global
warming alarmist agenda (a "new energy economy") and for his
efforts to keep the federal Bureau of Land Management from
leasing for oil and gas exploration on the Roan Plateau. It's
sometimes a dry recitation but there are a ton of documents
linked that I obtained from the governor's office and from the
Colorado Department of Natural Resources.
The quick-'n-dirty summary: Almost immediately after he took
office Ritter had a "Climate Action Plan" he wanted to pursue,
which included two new positions in his administration: a
cabinet-level climate policy adviser to create "a bold and
visionary climate action policy," and a liaison to the Public
Utilities Commission to "develop a climate-wise utility policy."
He asked for, and got, two annual grants from Hewlett for
$200,000 ($400,000 total) to fund the positions. Ritter worked
through Hewlett's environmental program director Hal Harvey -- a
far-left, Obama-supporting (and -contributing) environmental
extremist who founded the Energy Foundation and is president of
the crackpot enviro/population control-advocating New-Land
Foundation -- to pay for his climate people. I guess the state
budget process would not come up with the money fast enough for
Ritter.
Within a few months Ritter had another
environmental cause to fight: obstructing and delaying the Bureau
of Land Management from leasing the rights to oil and natural gas
exploration on the rich Roan Plateau. It had been ten years
already since BLM was given the mandate to lease the Naval Oil
and Shale Reserves, and it was finally ready to start doing so
after years of environmental study and review. But that still
wasn't long enough for Ritter, his eco-cronies, Reps. Mark Udall
and John Salazar, and Sen. Ken Salazar (pictured). All got
involved in trying to further delay BLM.
Part of the strategy was for Ritter's administration to make the
case for much slower "phased leasing" of acreage on the Roan, as
opposed to the BLM's somewhat quicker but still limited and
methodical approach. The governor's Department of Natural
Resources sought out (and found) a cheap economist who would be
willing to put together a vague case that showed phased leasing
was a better idea that would reap better revenues for the state.
And can you guess who they asked to pay for said cheap economist?
Yep -- the Hewlett Foundation, with Hal Harvey more than happy to
help out. In fact, Harvey wanted to help so much that he gave
campaign contributions to both Salazars and Udall as well.
The congressmen worked at the federal level to implement Ritter's
phased leasing goals, with Sen. Salazar's legal counsel begging
for the suspect economic analysis to buttress his case. But the
congressmen's and Ritter's efforts fell short of their goals, as
BLM moved forward with the leasing, which netted nearly $114
million for both the federal and state governments -- "the
highest grossing onshore oil and natural gas lease sale in BLM
history in the lower 48 states."
Nevertheless, it's a sorry tale of how environmental extremists
will fight together to the death for measures that would cripple
access to our own sources of affordable energy.
Cross-posted at Cooler
Heads.
topics:
Environment, Energy