API targets climate legislation with Facebook ad blitz

By Scott Waldman | 09/30/2021 06:30 AM EDT

Two lobbying groups for the oil and gas industry have bombarded Facebook with hundreds of ads opposing climate legislation in Congress that have been viewed 23 million times.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, wearing a suit and tie, gives testimony in the Senate in 2018.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg is seen testifying in the Senate in 2018. Fossil fuel trade groups attracted 25 million Facebook viewers to ads opposing climate legislation. Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Updated 1:55 p.m., Sept. 30, 2021.

Two lobbying groups for the oil and gas industry have bombarded Facebook with hundreds of ads opposing climate legislation in Congress that have been viewed 23 million times.

The American Petroleum Institute and the American Gas Association have spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on the ads to attack climate provisions in the $3.5 trillion reconciliation package proposed by Democrats, according to a report released today by InfluenceMap, a London-based nonprofit that tracks climate lobbying.

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Since Aug. 8, API spent $423,000 on ads that have been viewed 21 million times, the analysis found. The American Gas Association has spent $18,000 since Aug. 11 on similar ads that were viewed 2.2 million times.

“These industry groups are pulling out all the stops — from advertising to public messaging — to oppose the reconciliation bill,” said Kendra Haven, InfluenceMap’s U.S. program manager. “This level of strategic activity, particularly through targeted advertising campaigns, exposes the value of their positive-sounding, top-line statements on climate.”

API set a record for itself on Aug. 8 by spending $10,800 on Facebook ads in a single day. Its previous record of $10,300 was set in July 2020 just after Joe Biden announced his climate platform on the campaign trail.

An API spokesperson said the ad spending was part of its “energy literacy advocacy.”

“API is working with policymakers on both sides of the aisle to address the climate challenge through industry action and effective government policies and our energy literacy advocacy is a fraction of the robust investments our companies make towards breakthrough innovation, research and best practices to further reduce emissions and tackle the climate challenge,” API Senior Vice President of Communications Megan Bloomgren said in a statement.

After Biden announced a $2 trillion climate plan last year, API, Exxon Mobil Corp. and other fossil fuel companies and trade groups launched a $10 million ad blitz on Facebook. The ads were seen by tens of millions of users in election swing states. They promoted the message that natural gas was an important part of any climate policy.

In the latest ad campaign, API’s “Energy Citizen” page published 286 ads that encouraged users to press their congressional representatives to reject the reconciliation bill or to thank them for rejecting the “energy tax,” InfluenceMap found. API encouraged Facebook users to call the office of Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) to thank him for opposing climate provisions. The Energy Citizen ads attracted 6 million views, InfluenceMap found.

The American Gas Association encouraged ad viewers to reject the Biden administration’s plan to impose methane emissions pricing.