Meet the coal lobbyists who call mercury safeguards ‘unfortunate’

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December 21, 2011

After years of delay, the Environmental Protection Agency is finally issuing safeguards that will protect Americans by reducing the amount of mercury pollution and other poisons emitted by coal plants around the country. It’s good news for mothers, children, communities near dirty coal plants, people who eat fish – pretty much everyone, actually, so it’s no surprise that Americans overwhelmingly support rules to reduce mercury pollution from power plants. So who isn’t pleased? Well, lobbyists for the dirtiest utilities like Southern Company seem pretty down about it – Scott Segal, for example, called the upcoming rule “unfortunate.”

You might remember Scott Segal from his appearance on The Daily Show, in a bit about how lobbyists kill legislation. Mr. Segal works for K Street lobby firm Bracewell & Giuliani, where he represents clients like Southern Company, Arch Coal, and Duke Energy, along with his colleague Jeffrey Holmstead. (Holmstead has worked for years against meaningful mercury protections, as a top George W. Bush EPA official and as an industry lobbyist – read our new report: Jeffrey Holmstead: the Coal Industry’s Mercury Lobbyist for much more). They’ve got the tough job of trying to weaken and delay these popular, life-saving rules so their clients can keep dumping mercury into our air and water without restriction.

But Mr. Segal is just a lobbyist, so we should ask which corporate interests he represents when he calls “unfortunate” a rule that will save thousands of lives and prevent tens of thousands of illnesses every year, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. As it turns out, it’s really just a few companies that have pushed hard against the mercury safeguards. Most utility companies have prepared for this long-delayed rule, and one analysis found that “Companies representing half of the nation’s coal-fired generating capacityeleven out of the top 15 largest coal fleet owners in the U.S.have indicated that they are well positioned to comply with EPA’s clean air rules because of early investments in their generating fleets.”

To help hide this, Mr. Segal often represents himself as the director of a coal industry front group called the “Electric Reliability Coordinating Council.” For example, a few weeks ago Mr. Segal, writing as the director of ERCC, sent a letter requesting a meeting with the Office of Management and Budget as it was analyzing the Mercury Rule. And when Mr. Segal testified before Congress against the Mercury Rule in April 2011, he also used his preferred title of director of ERCC, instead of, say, a lobbyist for Southern Company.

But what exactly is this “Electric Reliability Coordinating Council” that has spent much of the last year trying to weaken and delay these badly needed mercury safeguards? ERCC’s website describes the group as “a broad-based coalition of energy companies committed to the continued viability of diverse, affordable and reliable electric power supply in the United States.” But nowhere does its website list the member companies in ERCC’s supposedly “broad-based coalition.” When challenged in a debate on the Mercury Rule by John Walke of NRDC to disclose ERCC’s full list of member companies, Mr. Segal declined after naming just four companies: Southern Company, Duke Energy, Progress Energy, and EFH (Energy Future Holdings, which owns Luminant).

It’s no surprise for Southern Company and EFH – those companies have openly attacked the Mercury Rule, and were the second and third worst mercury polluters in 2010, after American Electric Power. But what about Duke Energy? Has it been using this front group to lobby against the Mercury Rule? After we sent Duke CEO Jim Rogers a letter asking if Duke was a member of ERCC, and whether the company supported the ERCC’s efforts to delay and weaken the Mercury Rule, a spokesman for the company told the Charlotte Business Journal that Duke is a member of ERCC, “But, as with many organizations we are affiliated with, we don’t agree with them on every issue.”

So are ERCC’s attacks on the Mercury Rule too extreme even for its coal industry member companies? Or is Duke Energy backing those attacks after all, and misleading the public about what exactly it has been doing with the $1.6 million it spent on lobbying in just the last three month period? Well as it turns out, Mr. Segal got that meeting he requested with the Office of Management and Budget. According to White House records, he was there with Jeffrey Holmstead, three executives from Southern Company – and Duke Energy’s Vice President for Federal Affairs. It seems like Duke Energy has some explaining to do.

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