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May 30, 2013 03:35 PM UTC

The Team of Oil & Gas Lobbyists Behind Gov. Hickenlooper’s Agenda

  • 4 Comments
  • by: ClubTwitty

Reprinted with permission from the Checks & Balances Project: My friends at the Checks and Balances Project wandered away without their codes and keys…they asked me to share this with the readers of ColoradoPols.com

 

http://shareasimage.com/service/quotes/pro/05-30-13/his-relationship-to-the-oil-gas-industry-is-strong-3.pngIt should come as no surprise that in the 2013 legislative session alone, the oil and gas industry spent $1.06 million defending Gov. Hickenlooper’s pro-Big Oil agenda. As a Chesapeake lobbyist wrote in a January 2013 memo that the lobby firm accidentally emailed to state legislators, “[Gov. Hickenlooper’s] relationship to the oil & gas industry is strong and he has been a national leader speaking out against the anti-fracturing forces that have invaded Colorado.”

Gov. Hickenlooper has had a team of oil and gas lobbyists supporting his administration’s work to gut or kill legislation at the state capitol. In fact, a Colorado Ethics Watch report released this week found that oil and gas lobbyists outnumbered oil and gas inspectors by a 28-to-17 margin during Fiscal Year 2012-2013. That investment has paid off big for Gov. Hickenlooper and the oil and gas industry during the 2013 legislative session.

Gov. Hickenlooper gutted a bill that would have set mandatory minimum fines for oil and gas companies that pollute rivers and water. After the bill died, his administration announced it would not fine Williams Company for polluting Parachute Creek, a tributary of the Colorado River, with cancer-causing benzene so long as it adhered to a consent order. His administration actually opposed an effort to add more oil and gas inspectors out in the field and opposed a bill which would have brought more balance to the commission that oversees oil and gas drilling and fracking operations in the state. With huge sums of lobbying cash behind him, it is no wonder that Gov. Hickenlooper has been able to keep Colorado weak on polluter crime when it comes to oil and gas. o&g lobby v. inspectors

The report released this week by Colorado Ethics Watch found that the oil and gas industry has spent a whopping $4.7 million on lobbyists from Fiscal Years 2008-09 through 2011-12 – more than any other industry in Colorado except the health care industry.

For those tracking Chesapeake closely, the company spent $130k on lobbying efforts over the last four years. Other top oil and gas lobbying spenders since 2009 include Pioneer Natural Resources at $640k, Shell at $571k, Encana at $415k, Bill Barrett Corporation at $376k, Marathon at $293k, Williams Energy at $285k, ExxonMobil at $272k, Anadarko at $260k, Black Hills at $224k, and, of course, the Colorado Oil and Gas Association at $402k.

Comments

4 thoughts on “The Team of Oil & Gas Lobbyists Behind Gov. Hickenlooper’s Agenda

  1. "anti-fracturing forces that have invaded Colorado" : Who's invaded whom?

    Chesapeake–headquarters, Oklahoma City, OK

    Bioneer Natural Resources–headquarters, Irving, TX

    Schell (USA)–headquarters, Houston, TX

    Encana–headquarters, Calgary, Alberta, Canada

    Marathon–headquarters, Houston, TX

    Anadarko–headquarters, Woodland, TX

    Black Hills Energy–headquarters, Rapid City, SD

    Exxon Mobil–headquarters, Irving, TX

  2. Here's the answer for you.  Apparently the towns, schools, farms, rivers, wildlife, and homes 'pre-invaded' corporations' gas deposits.

     

     

  3. There used to be some, small, independent companies that provided neighborly attitudes and practices back in the pre-Cheney/Bush era. They have been long since consumed by the above.

    I had a CEO for Houston based, Pressco Energy, tell me (us) at a hearing in Parachute, that their technology and attention to detail was so well-developed that it couldn't fail. This was the company who began drilling near the Rulison Blast Zone, site of the 1969 nuclear fracking experiment that failed (something about radioactive gas…) conducted there by the DOE.

    Six months and nine NOAVs (Notice of Alleged Violation) later, Pressco sold their interests to a company who employed, among others, sub-contractors from China.

    Very reassuring.

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