"We just find it
maddening that
Hill & Knowlton,
which has an $8 million account with the
nuclear industry, should have such an easy time
working the press," concluded the Columbia
Journalism Review in
an editorial
in its July / August 2006 issue.
The magazine was rightly
bemoaning the tendency of news outlets to present
former Greenpeace activist
Patrick Moore
and former EPA chief
Christine Todd Whitman
as environmentalists who support nuclear
power, without noting that both are paid
spokespeople for a group bankrolled by the
Nuclear Energy Institute
(NEI). NEI represents nuclear power plant operators,
plant designers, fuel suppliers and other sectors of
the nuclear power industry. Hill & Knowlton is NEI's
public relations firm, though it's not the only firm
working to build support for nuclear power.
Thanks in part to an
ongoing, multifaceted PR push -- along with very
real concerns about energy prices, rising energy
demand, aging infrastructure, sustainability and
global warming
-- nuclear power is attracting serious
attention from reporters and policymakers alike. The
question is whether a vital public debate over
energy choices is being skewed by deep-pocketed
interests with a dog in the fight.
The dangers of such
distortions are especially acute at the state and
local levels. That's where efforts to extend the
licenses of existing nuclear power plants, to
maintain or expand nuclear waste storage facilities,
and to site new proposed nuclear power plants, are
made or broken. And that's where pro-nuclear
campaigners appear to be focusing, adopting the
mantle and tactics of community groups while
steadfastly refusing to provide details on their
operations.
Persistence Pays
Off
All manner of
businesses promote themselves every day, but the
nuclear power industry's need for good PR is
tremendous. No new nuclear plants have been ordered
in the United States since 1979, the year of the
Three Mile Island meltdown. The Yucca Mountain
national repository for nuclear waste -- originally
scheduled to open in 1998 -- is now slated to begin
accepting waste in
March 2017.
Experienced nuclear engineers are
becoming scarce; nearly 30 percent of the industry's
workforce "will be eligible to retire within five
years," the Scripps Howard News Service
reported
in April 2006. And even with what one
Forbes columnist
described as
"all this corporate welfare," potential "investors
remain wary of construction risks" for new nuclear
power plants,
explained
an energy sector analyst.
The industry's future
is so precarious that Exelon Nuclear's head of
project development warned attendees of the Electric
Power 2005 conference, "Inaction is synonymous with
being phased out." That's why years of effort -- not
to mention millions of dollars -- have been invested
in nuclear power's PR rebirth as "clean, green and
safe."
The nuclear power
industry has been promoting itself as part of the
solution to global warming for a decade. Industry
representatives appeared en masse at a 1998
climate change conference in Buenos Aires, according
to environmental consultant Alan Tate. "They
inundated the international negotiators, including
with what appeared to be a number of
front groups
like Students for Nuclear Power,"
he told
reporter Liz Minchin. By 2005, nuclear
industry spokespeople were "giving much more
polished performances at climate meetings and
negotiations."
Entergy's
Vermont Yankee nuclear power station
Entergy,
which owns and operates 10 U.S. nuclear power
plants, has worked with the PR giant
Burson-Marsteller
for at least five years. In April 2002, Entergy's
communications director
told
O'Dwyer's PR Daily that the firm
had been hired "mainly for the Indian Point issues"
-- the security and environmental concerns raised by
the company's
Indian Point
nuclear power plant,
located outside New York City -- "but its work now
includes handling the overall image of the company."
In 2003, Entergy created the "Coalition Against
Shutting Down Vermont's Electricity Options" and
spent $200,000
to oppose
a citizen campaign to close the company's Vermont
Yankee nuclear plant in 2012.
And then there's NEI,
which exists to do PR and lobbying for the nuclear
industry. In 2004, NEI was embarrassed when the Austin Chronicle outed one of its PR firms,
Potomac
Communications Group,
for ghostwriting pro-nuclear op/ed columns. The
paper described the
op/ed campaign
as "a decades-long, centrally
orchestrated plan to defraud the nation's newspaper
readers by misrepresenting the
propaganda
of one hired atomic gun as the learned
musings of disparate academics and other
nuclear-industry 'experts.'"
In January 2006, NEI
signed an $8 million contract with Hill & Knowlton.
The objectives included developing "a national
coalition that would 'activate and expand on'
existing nuclear energy supporters, engaging
employees, shareholders, academics, health experts,
and environmental organizations," and "'pre-empting
and offsetting' criticism from opponents,"
wrote
the Holmes Report. With the firm's
help, NEI launched what is possibly its greatest PR
triumph, almost exactly two years after the op/ed
controversy.
Building the
Nuclear CASE
The Clean and Safe
Energy Coalition (CASEnergy) held its inaugural
press conference on April 24, 2006, just two days
before the 20th anniversary of the Chernobyl nuclear
power plant disaster. CASEnergy is fully funded by
NEI, and supported by Hill & Knowlton, along with
the polling firm
Penn Schoen &
Berland.
CASEnergy is not the
first business-funded coalition to support nuclear
power. In May 2001, the
U.S. Chamber of Commerce
formed the
Alliance for Energy & Economic
Growth,
"to support proposals that boost [energy]
supply, promote investment in the energy
infrastructure, encourage alternative energy sources
and efficiency without mandates, and fund programs
to help low-income energy consumers." The
pro-nuclear alliance, whose steering committee
includes NEI, hired former Congresswoman and Vice
Presidential candidate Geraldine Ferraro
to lobby
for the Yucca Mountain waste repository.
But the alliance never received the attention that
CASEnergy is now enjoying.
That's due in large
part to the choice of Patrick Moore, a media-savvy
and polarizing figure, as CASEnergy's co-chair and
most public spokesperson. As he explained at the
group's launch, Moore's role is to "speak and write
to press the group's agenda, as well as to
coordinate efforts," reported Nucleonics Week.
His past work with Greenpeace has proved an
irresistible hook for many reporters, even though
his association with that group ended in 1986. Moore
has now spent more time working as a PR consultant
to the logging, mining, biotech, nuclear and other
industries (since at least 1991, or 16 years) than
he did as an environmental activist (from 1971 to
1986, or 15 years).
"Part of the
thinking, surely, was that the press would peg
[Moore and fellow co-chair Christie Whitman] as
dedicated environmentalists who have turned into
pro-nuke cheerleaders," reasoned the Columbia
Journalism Review. The magazine added, "in some
stories, columns and editorials, the San
Francisco Chronicle, the Boston Herald,
the Baltimore Sun, the Richmond
Times-Dispatch, the Rocky Mountain News,
The New York Times, and CBS News all referred
to Moore as either a Greenpeace founder or an
environmentalist, without mentioning that he is also
a paid spokesman for the nuclear industry."
Both NEI and Moore
decline to say how much he's paid; Whitman won't
answer that question either. Presumably, the nuclear
industry feels it's getting its money's worth. A
Nexis news database search on March 1, 2007
identified 302 news items about nuclear power that
cite Moore, since April 2006. Only 37 of those
pieces -- 12 percent of the total -- mention his
financial relationship with NEI.
Industry
representatives don't just showcase Moore to
reporters. In response to a safety question at a
public debate on nuclear power in Madison, Wis., on
December 7, 2006, NEI's
Lisa Stiles-Shell
said, "Patrick Moore, the former co-founder of
Greenpeace -- he's now very in favor of nuclear
power -- often brings up an example of the
Bhopal incident
in India, 1986 -- a huge chemical
accident. ... It was a disaster. But the response
was not, 'We have to close down the chemical
industry.' The response was, 'We have to make the
chemical industry safer.' And that's exactly what
nuclear has done, after Chernobyl and after Three
Mile Island." She did not disclose Moore's paid
position with NEI. When I asked about it,
Stiles-Shell responded, "You can't change his mind
with money."
Current Greenpeace
leaders and other environmental activists have
repeatedly distanced themselves from Moore and
questioned his claims. Greenpeace advisor Harvey
Wasserman
recently wrote,
"Moore exaggerates his role in Greenpeace and his
credentials as a scientist to serve as a public
relations hack." But these protestations have mostly
been ignored. When they are raised, Moore dismisses
them as further proof of the irrationality of his
former colleagues.
Taking It to the
States
What debate there has
been about Moore's nuclear advocacy has focused on
media coverage and national-level issues. Meanwhile,
"a large part of CASEnergy's work" has proceeded "at
the state and local level," as Nucleonics Week
reported in April 2006. "The group is planning four
or five 'state-level launches,'" added the trade
publication, quoting a low-profile CASEnergy
spokesman -- and Hill & Knowlton senior
vice-president of corporate communications --
Don Meyer.
"Much of [CASEnergy's]
work will be aimed at increasing public backing and
winning support at the 'very local level' for plant
siting and licensing," Environment & Energy News
wrote the same month, also quoting Meyer. In
September 2006, National Journal reported
that CASEnergy "will hit the road this fall with
town hall meetings, local press events, and such in
New Hampshire, Iowa, Illinois, and Michigan."
And hit the road they
have.
Patrick Moore
In October, Patrick
Moore headlined a CASEnergy event in Cedar Rapids,
Iowa. He was joined by local officials and
representatives of business and labor groups at the
Duane Arnold Energy Center, the state's only nuclear
power plant. Moore "called on Iowans to join the
CASEnergy Coalition," according to the group's
press release,
which referred to the event as "Iowa's CASEnergy
kick-off."
Some "15 members of
the Iowa House of Representatives Democratic caucus
back the [CASEnergy] coalition," reported the Cedar
Rapids Gazette. One legislator told the paper
that "the coalition doesn't necessarily expect its
efforts to yield another nuclear plant in Iowa," but
the state's "first-in-the-nation presidential
caucuses put the group in a position to influence a
change in national energy policy." That's
surprising, as federal policy already provides
billions of dollars in
nuclear industry subsidies,
including for new nuclear power plants.
Moore was in Detroit
the following month, calling on "Michigan residents
to join the CASEnergy Coalition." That event
was billed
as CASEnergy's "Michigan kick-off" and
also included a state legislator and representatives
of local business and labor groups. Crain's
Detroit Business noted that the pro-nuclear
event came as the state's public service commission
was readying its comprehensive energy plan for the
governor.
Patrick Moore has
been much busier than these -- the
only events
listed on the CASEnergy website -- suggest. He's
brought his pro-nuclear road show to at least 10
other U.S. cities since last April. (See
related SourceWatch article.)
And CASEnergy isn't the only industry-funded group
talking up nuclear power around the country.
In November 2006,
Moore traveled to Yonkers, N.Y., to
support extending
the Indian Point nuclear power plant's
license until 2035. Also appearing at the
pre-Thanksgiving event were Entergy staffers,
Rudy Giuliani
(whose
Giuliani Partners
firm
works for
Entergy), and members of the
New York Affordable Reliable
Electricity Alliance (NY
AREA). In January 2007, Moore was in Montpelier and
Brattleboro, Vt., to speak with the
Vermont Energy Partnership.
In February, he returned to New York, to address NY
AREA's "2007
Energy Day at Albany."
One Big, Happy,
ProActive Family
The New York and
Vermont pro-nuclear groups have more in common than
Moore's attention. Both list Entergy, which operates
nuclear plants in both states, as a member. And both
groups' websites were registered by the same
Virginia-based PR firm,
ProActive Communications.
ProActive has
provided other services for NY AREA, including
designing the group's website, logo and newsletter,
as well as a presentation template and DVD packaging
(for
a video
titled, "The Power Behind a Growing New
York"), according to the
firm's
website.
In November, NY AREA promoted a
video news release
featuring Moore that credits "ProActive production
services," along with the broadcast PR firm
MultiVu,
in its opening frames. (See video below. Around the
same time, NY AREA also had an
audio news release
with Moore, but only MultiVu is listed on the "story
summary.")
ProActive
Communications provided a similar range of website
and design services -- and a very similar look -- to
a third pro-nuclear group, the Boston-based
Massachusetts
Affordable Reliable Electricity Alliance
(Mass AREA), again according to the
firm's website. Mass AREA's members also include
Entergy, which runs the Pilgrim Nuclear Power
Station in Plymouth, Mass.
ProActive founder and
president Mark Serrano refused to comment on his
firm's work for Mass AREA, NY AREA or the Vermont
Energy Partnership. After asking me to submit
questions by email, he responded that my questions
"relate to assumed business relationships.
Discussing these matters with you or anyone else is
not appropriate."
Yet the role of
ProActive Communications and of Entergy is clear.
ProActive lists among its specialties "coalition
programs," "grassroots mobilizations," and
"editorial [media] outreach." ProActive's program
director, James Knubel, joined the PR firm after
serving as senior vice-president for Entergy Nuclear
Northeast. ProActive's Serrano does double duty as
NY AREA's president, while ProActive communications
director
Paul Steidler
also serves as NY AREA's media contact. Steidler
joined the PR firm after leading the education
reform project at the
Alexis de Tocqueville
Institution,
an industry-funded
think tank.
(Steidler's name and bio were removed from the
ProActive website shortly after I contacted the
firm.)
NY AREA didn't
respond to an interview request. Entergy
spokesperson Jim Steets confirmed that the company
was "instrumental in the founding of New York AREA,"
but said he didn't know "how much of New York AREA's
funding comes from Entergy." He added, "There's no
question that there's a strong association" between
Entergy and NY AREA, but as "membership has grown,
we've become just another dues-paying member." NY
AREA is comprised of "independent-minded people,
with interests of their own," he stressed.
Steets described
ProActive Communications' work for NY AREA as: "If
there are events or messages, things that we should
attend or that people who agree with us might want
to attend, ProActive is helpful in organizing the
grassroots campaign that would demonstrate that
there are people who subscribe to this [NY AREA's]
mission. They're skilled in grassroots organizing
and advocacy, very similar to what the groups who
oppose us do."
Phillip Musegaas, a
staff attorney at Riverkeeper, a New York-based
environmental group that opposes the Indian Point
plant, disagrees. NY AREA and similar groups "do the
public a disservice by the fact that they're
subsidized by Entergy," he said. "We're
straighforward with our campaign, on the other
side." Musegaas added, "Exelon, Entergy and other
large companies have a lot of money to spend on PR.
They do that directly with Burston-Marsteller and
Giuliani Parnters, and less directly with these
local groups."
Mass AREA
communications director Joyce McMahon explained that
her group is "not tied to NY AREA" and is "not just
about nuclear issues." She verified that ProActive
Communications does consulting work for Mass AREA,
but declined to describe that work. McMahon also
confirmed that Entergy helps fund Mass AREA, but
said the group's other members also contribute, each
giving an amount relative to its size.
Vermont Energy
Partnership executive director Amanda Ibey also
stressed that her group isn't focused solely on
nuclear power. In an email, she wrote, "We have
prepared a number of issue briefs on such topics as
hydro power, energy efficiency, nuclear power,
LICAP
[incentives to keep New England-based generators],
transmission infrastructure, and wind power." Ibey
described the group as "member-funded" and would not
comment on its relationship with ProActive
Communications. She did explain that Patrick Moore
"is paid by the group" as an adviser, but the "terms
are proprietary. We do not work with the Clean and
Safe Energy Coalition."
An Industry-Driven
Grassroots
Are Vermont Energy
Partnership, Mass AREA and NY AREA Entergy-funded
astroturf,
or fake grassroots groups? Each publicly lists its
membership, including Entergy, on its website. And
each counts among its members local businesses,
unions and individuals that presumably don't stand
to benefit directly from policies favorable to
nuclear power.
Of course, all
businesses, groups and individuals have the right to
organize and express their views. But the negative
impact of this nuclear industry-driven PR is already
clear. Plans to build new nuclear power plants are
inching forward, while serious questions and
concerns -- not to mention alternative energy
policies -- receive little attention. On March 8,
the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission
issued its first
site approval
for a new nuclear plant in over 30 years. Exelon now
has 20 years to apply for a license to build a new
reactor in Clinton, Ill.
Entergy and NEI spend
millions of dollars doing media outreach, under
their own names. Both spend millions more to lobby
federal officials. From 1998 to 2004, Entergy spent
$13.5 million
and NEI spent
$9.7 million
on federal lobbying, according to the
Center for Public Integrity's LobbyWatch database.
But both, while using
solely their own names, failed to garner significant
public support. So both formed "coalitions" and
"alliances," designed to deliver essentially the
same pro-nuclear message. Unlike the funders behind
classic front groups, NEI and Entergy admit their
role in CASEnergy or NY AREA, Mass AREA and Vermont
Energy Partnership, respectively. But that
disclosure is done in a whisper, with a nod and
wink, and sloppy reporting takes care of the rest.
The end result is the
same -- instead of a fully informed and vigorous
public debate on complex energy issues, the United
States is having a lopsided discussion. And the
nuclear power industry isn't just dominating it; it
has several seats at the table.