What
Happened to a Govt Scientist Whose Findings Stood in the Way of Big
Oil's Plans for Arctic Drilling
The
fate of Dr. Charles Monnett and the suppression of his work is a
lesson in corporate strong-arming.
1
September, 2015
In
February 2011, Charles Monnett, an Arctic marine biologist who in
2006 published the first observations of a decline in the polar bear
population of the Arctic due to melting sea ice, was interviewed by
Eric May and Lynn Gibson from the Department of Interior’s Office
of the Inspector General. The conversation was perplexing. May
and Gibson, criminal investigators with the IG, began by suggesting
that Monnett was being investigated for scientific misconduct, but
early on in the conversation they admitted that neither of them had
any training in science and biology.
From
there, the transcript of
the conversation, a document released by Monnett’s legal
representation, Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility
(PEER), becomes murkier. May and Gibson’s line of questioning
shifts several times, making it increasingly unclear what aspects of
misconduct were being investigated. Monnett explains that his
findings, published in Polar
Biology,
were peer-reviewed; May responds by asking how Polar
Biology got
involved. Monnett painstakingly takes May and Gibson through the
calculations and observations underlying his data, but they seem
dissatisfied and change tacks.
What
happened after isn’t murky at all. Soon after the interview, Dr.
Monnett’s hard drive and notebooks were seized. In July 2011,
Monnett found out from his employer, the Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management, Regulation and Enforcement (BOEMRE), that he had been put
been put on administrative leave, barring him from speaking to his
colleagues or continuing his research.
The
investigation had turned in to a virtual witch-hunt—but when the IG
finally released its report toward the end of 2012, its only
allegations were of an administrative nature. Monnett subsequently
filed a whistleblower
complaintagainst
BOEMRE, alleging that the official harassment had impeded him from
doing his job and that the Interior Department was violating its own
scientific integrity policies intended to protect federal scientists
from political interference. In November 2013, Monnett reached a
$100,000 settlement with BOEMRE.
The
tale of Dr. Monnett is now a few years old, but instructive. Both
Monnett and PEER have maintained that Monnett was harassed and
essentially eliminated from the ranks of BOEMRE because he
represented a threat to the financial stakes of oil companies like
Shell hoping to open up the Alaskan Arctic for offshore drilling
projects, and that suppressing scientific research was seen as
necessary for Shell’s permits to go through. At the time, BOEMRE
had been reviewing Shell’s plans to drill in the Arctic. It
approved those permits in 2012, and again, in a highly contentious
decision by the Obama administration, earlier this year.
Now,
years after the debacle, Monnett says he has complex feelings about
the dynamics of the science done in federal agencies, given how
overbearing the oil industry is and its pervasive influence on the
government.
The
Bush administration, Monnett recalls, had “created an environment
where the managers [of BOEMRE] were very hostile and aggressive
towards some of the scientists…which led to a number of people
leaving the agency. These people were being actively attacked by
managers, screamed at in hallways, threatened with all sorts of
actions. Some of them were even being threatened with legal action.
The agency just wasn’t receptive to honest analysis.”
“Because
of pressure from industry and the administration…certain timelines
had to be met, and those timelines weren’t long enough to allow
[scientists] to do complete analysis. Management was dictating the
outcomes…which is against the law in my view.”
The
Bush administration’s agenda from the very beginning was
pro-drilling, and therefore invested in fast-tracking Shell’s
permits for the Arctic. During the administration’s tenure, there
was a mass
exodus of
scientists from BOEMRE—at the time known as the Minerals Management
Service—who were under pressure to overlook the overwhelming
environmental concerns of Arctic oil drilling in their analyses.
But
Monnett’s investigation began in 2011, not during the Bush
administration but during the Obama administration, foretelling
Obama’s climate legacy of paying lip service to climate change
while fast-tracking Shell’s
offshore drilling plans all the same.
On
Monday morning, President Obama arrived in
Alaska to shed “a spotlight on what Alaskans in particular have
come to know: climate change is one of the biggest threats we face,
it is driven by human activity, and it is disrupting Americans’
lives right now.” The trip, mere weeks after the
final approvalfor
Shell’s summer plans to drill in the Chukchi Sea, is likely to be
seen in retrospect as illustrative of the schizophrenic energy policy
the Obama administration has long espoused.
The
Limits of Academic Freedom
Scientific
suppression and the loss of many scientists to BOEMRE during the Bush
administration have been well-documented, but
as Dr. Monnett’s case reveals, something similar, if not worse, has
been underfoot during the current administration. As the case of
Professor Rick Steiner demonstrates, the influence of oil goes well
beyond federal agencies in Alaska.
A
tenured professor of marine conservation at the University of Alaska,
Steiner spent a large part of his career in the Arctic and then
Anchorage, Alaska. Steiner had been a vocal opponent of offshore oil
drilling since the Exxon Valdez oil spill in 1989 and a staunch
defender of marine conservation—positions that got him in to
trouble multiple times during his career.
In
December 2007, soon after Monnett’s polar bear paper was published,
there was a federal proposed rule to list polar bears under the
Endangered Species Act. At the time, Gov. Sarah Palin publicly stated
that Alaska state marine mammal biologists (ADFG) disagreed with the
rule, but Steiner was unsatisfied. After much resistance from the
ADFG, he obtained the state review through a federal Freedom of
Information Act request. The review, underscoring the dishonesty of
the Palin administration, showed that marine mammal scientists
overwhelmingly agreed that polar bears should be classified as
endangered. This move, and many others, put Steiner on the radar as a
staunch advocate of marine conservation and opponent of the pervasive
influence of the oil industry in Alaska.
In
2008, when the federal government began to consider an expansion of
oil development projects in Alaska, Steiner continued to raise major
environmental concerns. Written records released by PEER chart out
what happened next: the University of Alaska and the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration terminated the grant funding for
Steiner’s research work. The documents demonstrate
how pressure from NOAA led university officials to cut Steiner’s
funding: federal officials wrote that they “had an issue with
Steiner” and that his environmental advocacy could “cause
problems nationally” for the agency. PEER called this
one of the first instances where a university and federal agency
admitted to removing a faculty member’s funding because of their
environmental positions.
Steiner
filed multiple internal grievance claims which were all rejected by
the university, and in February 2010, Dr. Steiner resigned from the
university faculty on principle. Soon after, he was told by a friend
who had been in a meeting with university officials that oil
executives had met with university officials, telling them point
blank that as long as Steiner continued to oppose the oil industry,
the university would not get a dime of its money. The University of
Alaska, like many public institutions in Alaska, is funded largely by
oil revenues.
Like
Monnett, Steiner says his experience taught him the limits to
academic and scientific freedom in a place like Alaska. “It is a
systemic problem far beyond BOEMRE,” he explains. “It’s in all
the agencies, the universities. It’s state and federal and a broad
systemic problem in Alaska.
“[TheuUniversity]
felt I was being too much of an advocate for marine conservation
which is in contradiction to their professed goal of being in favor
of academic freedom.”
And
indeed, the brazen nature of the university’s statements on
Steiner’s case is deeply shocking. In the recommendation to cut
Steiner’s funding, Dean Wiesenburg of the University of
Alaska noted that
Steiner “regularly takes strong public positions on issues of
public debate.” Steiner, he said, “has chosen to be a maverick
and work independently.”
To
Steiner, what this means is clear. “There is an unwritten orthodoxy
in Alaska,” he explains, “that dissenting opinions regarding
unsustainable economic and political paradigms here need to be
suppressed and silenced. Everybody knows that. There’s a very
strong political dynamic where agencies and public institutions like
the university are captured by the oil industry because it pays 95%
of the state budget. Federal agencies bend over backwards for the oil
industry and tend to marginalize voices that threaten that dynamic.
If you criticize oil, you will have hell to pay.”
“There
aren’t very many dissenters. The whole point of making an example
of me and Charles [Monnett] was to suppress people from doing that in
the future. People have learned that if they want to keep their job
and their pay check, and their pension and their benefits, they need
to keep their head down.”
A
Handy Guide to Scientific Suppression
The
cases of Charles Monnett and Rick Steiner have dire implications for
how we view Shell’s offshore drilling plans in the Chukchi Sea this
summer, and the lengths to which they went to acquire the permits.
Much of this can only be guessed at. Steiner talks about the
prevailing culture where federal agencies and universities begin to
eliminate scientists who do not conform to the pro-oil agenda by not
granting promotions or incentive awards, or giving them inadequate
annual performance reviews. Another tactic, he says, is overwhelming
staff scientists with trivial tasks, pulling them off projects for
which they are qualified.
Jeff
Ruch, executive director of PEER, an organization that seeks to
protect scientist whistleblowers, can add to this list. “The range
of things we see,” he says, “range from attempts to terminate,
suspend, crippling internal investigations. In one case involving a
lab director, the funding for his graduate students was jeopardized
so he lost a lot of his research capacity. Preventing publications
has no limits—in one case, a scientist was raising issues and her
email privileges were taken away. We were left scratching our heads
wondering how that could have happened.”
One
possible remedy is scientific integrity policies that protect
whistleblowers, but as Ruch explains, they are far from satisfactory.
“Industry puts pressure on government agencies, and government
agencies are the instrument of retaliation,” he explains. “For
the most part, scientists have few legal protections. These
scientists are not covered by whistleblower laws, because they’re
not disclosing violations of law, fraud, or abuse. They’re
disclosing suppression of research, or watering down of methodologies
or the omission of key findings.”
“The
law generally treats these as a matter of opinion and in these cases,
the chain of command generally wins over the staff scientist.”
In
his experience, Ruch says “scientific integrity policies operate
within the Department of the Interior—those were weakened in
December to make it even more difficult to sustain a complaint. Up
until that time, there had been 2 instances out of 14 where the
scientist involved faced multiple suspensions and the responsible
managers escaped punishment altogether. It’s difficult to advise
scientists in good conscience to file complaints under their own name
because they’re unlikely to resolve in anything good.”
Early
in 2009, Obama released a
presidential directive to develop policies that restore scientific
integrity to federal actions, including providing federal scientists
better whistleblower protections. At the time, this was hailed as a
huge leap in the right direction.
Ruch
feels not much has changed. “The agencies in the Interior have
largely ignored the presidential directive,” he explains. “Some
policies claim protections but have no mechanisms by which that
protection is implemented, which makes it empty protection.”
Environmental
groups argue that this scientific suppression, and overlooking the
enormous environmental risks, has been key to the Obama
administration’s approval of Shell’s permits this year. Much of
the information detailing the safety and reliability of Shell’s
operations has not been released to the public, despite multiple FOIA
requests by groups like Greenpeace and PEER. A recent FOIA request by
PEER, directed at the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement
(BSEE), seeks to release information on how Shell’s plans for
certified by third-party observers, as well as information on the
deployment of capping stack and containment domes in the event of an
oil spill. BSEE has not responded. PEER has now filed a
lawsuit in a federal district court to bring these details to light.
As
President Obama continues his trip in Alaska to highlight the dangers
of climate change amid overwhelming opposition from environmental and
indigenous groups, it begs big questions about the administration’s
overarching legacy with federal scientists and the oil industry. Ruch
feels strongly about this: “In terms of the actions inside these
agencies, there has been no discernible difference between those
under George Bush, who was an oil man, and Barack Obama, a
constitutional law professor who when his own Commission on the
Deepwater Horizon spill met with him, one of the very first questions
he asked was about Arctic drilling.”
“It
has been clear that Arctic drilling is part of the ‘all-the-above’
energy strategy and the same sort of suppression and the same suite
of issues have never really been analyzed.”
For
an administration pretending to conduct a dramatic push toward
mitigating climate change, that is a shameful record.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.