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How FTI Drove Misleading Propaganda for Big Oil
As part of its services to the industry, FTI
monitored environmental activists online, and
in one instance an employee created a fake Facebook
persona — an imaginary, middle-aged Texas woman with a dog — to help
keep tabs on protesters. FTI employees also staffed two news and information sites, Energy In Depth and Western Wire, writing pro-industry articles on fracking, climate lawsuits and other hot-button issues. Former employees familiar with Energy In Depth said the site’s content had direction from Exxon Mobil, one of the major clients of the FTI division that worked on these oil and gas campaigns. The Energy In Depth website notes its affiliation with an energy trade group that Exxon is a member of, though not Exxon’s role in directing content that the site published. This article is based on interviews with a dozen former
FTI employees, including former managing directors, a review of hundreds of
internal FTI documents and an examination of the digital trail of domain-name
registrations and other details left by the creation of the websites. Matthew Bashalany, an FTI spokesman, disputed the idea that FTI worked behind the scenes for these groups. “We hide behind no one,” he said. “We summarily reject as false, misleading and defamatory the general narrative and specific claims,” he said. “We hold ourselves to the highest professional and ethical standards of conduct; when and where shortfalls are identified in this regard, they are addressed appropriately.” An Exxon spokesman,
Casey Norton, said he would not comment on the findings because he considered
the reporter to be biased against the fossil fuel
industry. The business of corporate consulting and public relations is vast, and countless companies routinely provide media outreach, public messaging, crisis management and other services. FTI is among them, and it has taken up an important role in helping promote the messages of the fossil fuel industry. Those messages have sometimes run counter to the
scientific consensus that the world must burn less oil and gas to avoid the
worst effects of
global warming. FTI’s work is the latest chapter in a long history of
campaigns by the fossil fuel industry,
political strategists and public relations professionals to influence
climate policy. Founded in 1982 in Annapolis, Md.,
as a firm that provided expert witnesses and
presentations for litigation, FTI has grown into a multinational firm that
employs almost 5,000 people in 28 countries. One of FTI’s largest shareholders, the investment firm
BlackRock, won kudos this year for saying it
would put
environmental
sustainability at the center of its investment approach. Mr. Bashalany, the FTI spokesman, said the firm’s work “in no way contravenes — nor is it misaligned with” BlackRock’s statement. BlackRock declined to comment. ‘Mislead about Greenhouse Gas Emissions’On a clear day in July, a plane soared over America’s biggest oil and gas field with a banner trailing behind it that read: “Thank you essential oil and gas workers.” “We wanted to do something big, and what’s bigger than an airplane with a banner?” Elizabeth Caldwell of Texans for Natural Gas said in a statement. The group, which describes itself as a local organization representing “citizens and officeholders, business owners and students” with more than 400,000 supporters, is funded by oil and gas companies including XTO Energy, an Exxon subsidiary, according to its website. The statement identifies Ms. Caldwell as “a spokeswoman for the grass-roots organization.” She is also a director at FTI, according to her LinkedIn page. (There was nothing unusual about an organization receiving corporate support and public relations help, FTI’s spokesman said.) Acting as Texans for Natural Gas
representatives, FTI employees have launched pro-industry
petitions, produced
videos and reports on the importance
of the Permian Basin oil field, and written opinion pieces for local
newspapers supporting fossil fuels. FTI’s Mr. Bashalany acknowledged the use of the stock photos and said adjustments would be made to avoid confusion. He said the supporters and testimonials were real. Texans for Natural Gas has also shared misleading information about greenhouse gas emissions. In 2018, it issued a study inaccurately claiming that emissions of methane had decreased significantly in the heart of Texas oil country at the height of the fracking boom. To arrive at that conclusion, scientists say, the report
tallied data from the Environmental Protection Agency
that the agency itself states does not represent overall emissions: The numbers,
which are reported by the energy industry
about a limited number of compressor stations and other facilities,
do not include emissions from the area’s
thousands of wells. FTI stood by the report, calling its findings “on track with broader trends in Texas’ oil fields.” Texans for Natural Gas
is just one campaign run with the help of FTI employees.
according to interviews, internal documents and an examination of the digital trail of domain-name registrations and other details left by the creation of the websites. Another such organization, the Marcellus Shale Coalition, said of FTI in a statement: “We are proud to have them as a contract partner, especially when it comes to direct and transparent media support.” ‘Susan,’ the fake Facebook user targets EnvironmentalistsWithin FTI, a group called
StratCom, short for Strategic Communications, focuses on industry
messaging campaigns. The StratCom group
studied environmental protesters on behalf of
the driller Apache Energy.
One FTI document prepared for Apache, dated Jan. 25, 2017, included a link to a list of groceries and camp supplies compiled by organizers, which the document said provided a hint of the proposed camp’s size. The fictitious Facebook profile — of a Texas woman named Susan McDonald who likes ice cream, the movie “Annie” and her local farmers’ market — was also intended to help FTI keep tabs on activists, former FTI employees said. The “friends” list on the fake profile, which remained present on Facebook as of Wednesday, includes one current and one former FTI employee. Mr. Bashalany of FTI said, “A Facebook profile was created by a former employee to monitor social media anonymously. This was wrong, and it is against our policy.” Apache declined to comment on the substance of the reporting. StratCom employees
also studied and developed strategies designed to influence public discourse,
according to five former employees. A successful effort, the document advised, might use several commenters, “each with an assigned role.” Mr. Bashalany said senior managers were never aware of the document and it “never informed any activities or approaches to social or digital media engagement of any kind.” Other campaigns used common techniques, buying social media ads to target people with interests in Alaska and energy and steer them toward the Arctic Energy Center, an industry-funded site that promoted drilling in the waters off Alaska and in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. Exxon was a
backer of the Arctic
Energy Center, according to documents and people who worked on the
project. The Arctic Energy Center’s website has since been taken down. Attacking NY Mayor and Championing FrackingIn 2018, as New York City moved to sue Exxon Mobil and other fossil fuel companies, claiming that the companies had defrauded shareholders by downplaying climate change, a team within FTI’s StratCom group prepared a pushback. The task at hand was to produce an article and tweets for Energy In Depth, the pro-industry site. The target: Mayor Bill de Blasio of New York, who was under fire at the time for his SUV use. According to an internal planning calendar, one tweet should show “Bill de Blasio in a giant SUV, wearing shirt that says WAR ON FOSSIL FUELS, or maybe a speech bubble with WAR ON FOSSIL FUELS!” New York lost that court battle. According to its website, Energy
In Depth is a project of the Independent
Petroleum Association of America, a trade organization representing
hundreds of mostly smaller oil and gas producers. In a statement, an Independent Petroleum Association of America senior vice president, Jeff Eshelman, said “support for Energy In Depth comes from a wide segment of industry.” Mr. Bashalany, the FTI spokesman, said, “Any contention that it is supported in whole or even substantially in part by one company is categorically false.” He said FTI staff members reach out to companies, academics and others for input, “not the other way around.” Energy In Depth,
along with the other industry-funded site that FTI helps run,
Western Wire, has been central to the fossil
fuel industry’s championing of
fracking. ‘Big Oil attacks Divestment’In spring 2018, Nell Minow noticed a
tweet from a new group, one she had never heard
of, seeming to support small investors. “I thought, ‘Great, a shareholder group! I need to know about them,’” she said. “Then I started looking into them and thought, this is really fishy.” Though the group, Main Street
Investors, described itself as representing small investors, it was
started by a number of industry organizations, including the
National Association of Manufacturers. Working for the National
Association of Manufacturers, FTI produced a study arguing
that activist shareholders tend not to help
shareholder value. FTI also worked with the
Independent Petroleum Association of America, the industry group
associated with Energy In Depth, to start
DivestmentFacts.com, which
warns that divesting from fossil fuels — a
growing trend among university endowments
and pension funds — could cost those
institutions millions of dollars. FTI monitored Ms. Minow after she publicly said
Main Street Investors was using “inflammatory
language, unsupported assertions, and out-and-out falsehoods” to
spread its message. FTI’s Mr. Bashalany said that no attempt had been made to hide any of the report authors’ affiliation. He said neither FTI through its Compass Lexecon subsidiary nor its clients “had any influence whatsoever over the form or direction” of the reports. FTI staff conducted “some basic biographic research” of Ms. Minow, he said, “but that’s it — we did nothing else.” This month, the Independent Petroleum Association of America, the oil and gas lobby group, announced it had launched a major initiative to support oil and gas companies looking into adopting environmental, social and governance strategies. In its announcement, the group stressed the importance of efforts that were “authentic and effective.” Its partner in the endeavor is FTI.
SOURCE NYT Hiroko Tabuchi is an investigative reporter on the climate desk. She was part of the Times team that received the 2013 Pulitzer for explanatory reporting. |