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Press Worries About a Fracking Ban’s ‘Risk’ to Democrats—Not Fracking’s Threat to Planet Joshua Cho ([link removed])
Election Focus 2020 In last week’s vice presidential debate between Sen. Kamala Harris and Vice President Mike Pence, Harris reiterated Democratic nominee Joe Biden ([link removed]) ’s rejection of a fracking ban, despite her earlier call for one when she was a presidential candidate (CBS News, 10/7/20 ([link removed]) ):
"I will repeat, and the American people know, that Joe Biden will not ban fracking. That is a fact," Harris said.
Harris emphasized that Biden “believes” in science; claimed that he “understands that the West Coast of our country is burning ([link removed]) ” and “sees what is happening on the Gulf states, which are being battered by storms ([link removed]) ”; and that he has “seen and talked with the farmers in Iowa, whose entire crops have been destroyed because of floods.”
One can —only wonder whether Biden or Harris truly “believe” in science when they pretend a fracking ban and a host of other strong climate measures are not urgent necessities required immediately. In 2018, the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change announced that carbon pollution needed to be cut by 45% by 2030 in order to keep the planet below the critical 1.5°C warming threshold to prevent irreversible planetary devastation (Guardian, 10/8/18 ([link removed]) ). As time goes on, more reports inform us that pollution and the climate crisis are actually even worse than we thought (e.g., Vox, 8/12/20 ([link removed]) ; New York Times, 10/23/19 ([link removed]) , 12/4/19
([link removed]) ).
Yet whenever there are discussions about enacting a national fracking ban, corporate media seem to prioritize the supposed short-term potential “risks” to Democrats’ electoral prospects, or potential economic downturns, over the long-term prospects for human civilization’s survival.
NYT: In Crucial Pennsylvania, Democrats Worry a Fracking Ban Could Sink Them
The New York Times (1/27/20 ([link removed]) ) quoted absurd claims that a fracking ban would mean "hundreds of thousands" of Pennsylvanians would be "unemployed overnight." In reality, about 26,000 people work in all of Pennsylvania's oil and gas sector (Pittsburgh City Paper, 9/4/20 ([link removed]) ).
When there was discussion of Sen. Bernie Sanders and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s bill for a nationwide fracking ban earlier this year, the New York Times’ “In Crucial Pennsylvania, Democrats Worry a Fracking Ban Could Sink Them” (1/27/20 ([link removed]) ) cited a few state Democratic politicians claiming that any presidential candidate who supports a national fracking ban would risk losing Pennsylvania in the general election. The Times trivialized the issue by reducing it to a “political bet,” with the highest stakes being the mere loss of a Democratic presidency, as opposed to dooming humanity to climate apartheid (FAIR.org, 7/30/19 ([link removed]) ) and ultimately losing human life as we know it to natural disasters (FAIR.org, 6/11/19 ([link removed]) , 9/5/19
([link removed]) , 1/3/20 ([link removed]) , 9/18/20 ([link removed]) ). The Times’ Lisa Friedman and Shane Goldmacher wrote:
A pledge to ban all hydraulic fracturing, better known as fracking, could jeopardize any presidential candidate’s chances of winning this most critical of battleground states — and thus the presidency itself… In some ways, the fracking ban is indicative of the entire political bet undergirding the candidacies of Mr. Sanders and Ms. Warren that the 2020 campaign will not be won by appeals to the narrow interests of traditional swing voters but through the mass mobilization of an energized electorate.
NPR: Proposals To Ban Fracking Could Hurt Democrats In Key States
NPR (2/11/20 ([link removed]) ) cited without rebuttal claims from the US Chamber of Commerce that a fracking ban would eliminate 17% of all US jobs.
NPR’s “Proposals to Ban Fracking Could Hurt Democrats in Key States” (2/11/20 ([link removed]) ) likewise made dubious pronouncements on the opinions of swing-state voters the focal point of the story, as opposed to what actions are required to resolve the climate crisis:
Climate change is a top issue in the Democratic presidential primaries and some candidates have taken relatively aggressive policy stands, including vows to ban hydraulic fracturing. But some Democrats worry ([link removed]) that could push moderate voters in key swing states to reelect President Trump next November… In a swing state like Pennsylvania, a major gas producer, fracking and energy are key issues. Even a small segment of voters swayed one way or another could change the election.
After the primaries, it’s clear that corporate media believe it’s their duty to function as Biden’s de facto campaign manager by explaining to voters what Biden’s position on a fracking ban actually is, as well as advising Biden to reject a fracking ban because, they claim, that would be an electoral disaster. Soon after the debate, Quartz (10/8/20 ([link removed]) ) explained that Biden and Harris don’t support a fracking ban, because it “tempts political suicide in swing states like Pennsylvania and Ohio where fossil fuels still rule.” Why an electoral disaster ought to be prioritized over civilizational disaster is never explained.
LA Times: Joe Biden’s Pennsylvania hurdle: Voters who fear a California-style energy plan
The LA Times (9/23/20 ([link removed]) ) stressed the need for Biden to appease "voters whose economic well-being depends on extracting natural gas," while acknowledging more than halfway through the story that "statewide, voters are evenly split on a fracking ban."
The Los Angeles Times’ headline “Joe Biden’s Pennsylvania Hurdle: Voters Who Fear a California-Style Energy Plan” (9/23/20 ([link removed]) ) presented swing voters as an obstacle to Biden’s electoral ambitions, as opposed to presenting Biden as an obstacle to stronger environmental protection and meaningful climate action for the country. The LA Times described Biden’s opposition to a fracking ban as a “nuanced position,” and characterized Biden’s climate plans as “robust,” despite his opposition to climate action on the scale of a Green New Deal ([link removed]) . Instead of advising Biden to go after younger voters ([link removed]) who care more about climate action, the LA Times advised Biden to go after swin
g voters who don’t care as much:
Television commentary about the presidential race may focus on the future of the Supreme Court and other national questions, but in the states that will actually decide the election, local issues often matter more. In this corner of America, that means fracking. Voters whose economic well-being depends on extracting natural gas are extremely skeptical of any politician who would inhibit it.… The key for Biden, party strategists believe, is to maintain a carefully balanced approach, even if that frustrates activists on both sides.
However, as journalist David Sirota (Daily Poster, 10/8/20 ([link removed]) ) pointed out, this flimsy basis for rejecting a fracking ban isn’t even true:
There’s just one problem with that storyline: It isn’t substantiated by empirical data. Indeed, the idea that a fracking ban is political poison in Pennsylvania is a fantastical tale fabricated by a national press corps that refuses to let public opinion data get in the way of fossil fuel propaganda and a manufactured narrative.
A January poll ([link removed]) of Pennsylvania voters, from Franklin and Marshall University, found that more voters (49%) believe that the environmental risks of fracking outweigh the economic benefits than the reverse (38%), and that more registered voters support a fracking ban (48%) than oppose it (39%). A local CBS report (1/30/20 ([link removed]) ) noted Franklin and Marshall University’s findings in its headline, showing that “Pennsylvanians Favor Statewide Ban on Fracking.” A later CBS/YouGov poll ([link removed]) in August found 52% of Pennsylvania voters supporting a fracking ban. A slight majority in support of a fracking ban does not make it a political ace, but neither is it “political suicide.”
Environmental activist Bill McKibben (New Yorker, 10/9/19 ([link removed]) ) pointed out that US claims to have reduced carbon emissions during the past 20 years have mainly been accomplished by replacing coal-fired power plants with natural gas-fired power plants. While burning gas produces less carbon dioxide than coal, carbon dioxide isn’t the only greenhouse gas. The second most important contributor is methane, which can warm the planet more than 80 times ([link removed]) as much as the same amount of carbon dioxide over a 20-year period.
“Fracking ([link removed]) ,” more formally known as “hydraulic fracturing,” is a method of extracting natural gas (as well as oil) from the ground with a horizontal drilling process that pumps water, sand and chemicals into the ground to fracture rocks that release fossil fuels. And in the process of fracking, lots of methane leaks out at every stage. The US strategy of reducing carbon emissions without reducing the total amount of greenhouse gases emitted is a form of literal gaslighting that encourages other countries to do the same.
The New York Times (11/8/19 ([link removed]) , 12/16/19 ([link removed]) ) has published a series of excellent investigative reports that used infrared video gear and satellite measurements to capture the invisible methane emissions at “super emitter” fracking sites, where large-scale methane leaks are responsible for a disproportionately high share of methane emissions. The Times (6/21/18 ([link removed]) , 2/19/20 ([link removed]) ) has also reported on findings showing that the US oil and gas industry is responsible for a much larger proportion of methane emissions ([link removed]) than the US government previously thought, with oil and gas production ([link removed]) in general
being more responsible for soaring methane levels than natural sources, like the ocean bed and mud volcanoes.
For example, a 2017 study ([link removed]) of the Barnett Shale Basin in Texas found that super emitters made up 1% of sites, but were responsible for nearly half of all methane emissions, while Robert Howarth, an earth system scientist at Cornell University, estimated that North American gas production is responsible for a third ([link removed]) of the global increase in methane emissions in the past decade. So when US media outlets issue doomsday warnings of mass unemployment from a fracking ban (e.g., CNN, 2/7/20 ([link removed]) ; The Hill, 2/27/20 ([link removed]) ), or pedantic factchecks (e.g., USA Today, 6/19/20 ([link removed]) ; AP,
7/31/20 ([link removed]) ) criticizing Trump for falsely accusing Biden of supporting a fracking ban—when he merely supports banning new oil and gas permits on federal land (which reportedly accounts for less than 10% ([link removed]) of US oil and gas production)--it comes across as lethally obtuse.
FAIR (10/16/19 ([link removed]) ) has pointed out how corporate media cheerleading of the “Shale Revolution” helped lead the US to become the world’s largest oil and gas producer during the Obama years ([link removed]) ; when they bemoaned the loss of fossil fuel emissions during the Covid pandemic (FAIR.org, 4/29/20 ([link removed]) ), corporate journalists seemed more concerned with the profits of advertisers than with the survival of human civilization. Running excuses for presidential candidates ([link removed]) in the pocket ([link removed]) of the fossil fuel industry
([link removed]) is only more evidence of the same.
Environmental and labor activists, economists and scientists have for years ([link removed]) discussed the need for a full employment program ([link removed]) based on green jobs to serve as a just transition for workers who would be displaced by a fracking ban; there is no reason for a fracking ban to be “political suicide” unless corporate journalists are determined to equate that with the death ([link removed]) of the fossil fuel industry ([link removed]) .
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