NewsKamala Harris takes a hard line on big oil and climate change

Kamala Harris takes a hard line on big oil and climate change

Kamala Harris, as a prosecutor, oversaw work at Refugio State Beach and the surrounding areas affected by the oil spill in June 2015.
Kamala Harris, as a prosecutor, oversaw work at Refugio State Beach and the surrounding areas affected by the oil spill in June 2015.
Images source: © Getty Images | HUM Images

6:22 AM EDT, July 22, 2024

Kamala Harris is perceived as more critical of oil corporations than Joe Biden. She has taken a much more restrictive approach to fracking and offshore oil drilling. While serving as California's Attorney General, she filed lawsuits against oil giants known as "Big Oil."

Kamala Harris, the current Vice President of the United States, is known for her critical approach toward oil corporations. Bloomberg notes that her stance is more decisive than President Joe Biden's.

In the past, as Attorney General of California, Harris took several actions against "Big Oil," including filing lawsuits against pipeline companies for oil spills. She also investigated ExxonMobil Corp., accusing the company of misleading the public on climate change.

In 2019, Harris publicly called for a ban on hydraulic fracturing, a practice used in the oil industry to extract oil and gas from dense rock formations. As Bloomberg notes, Biden never supported this move, but Harris was particularly critical of offshore oil drilling.

She sought to limit new drilling off the coast of California and, as the state's Attorney General, took the matter to court, challenging federal government permits issued for fracking in Pacific waters.

A tough prosecutor

During her six-year tenure as Attorney General of California, Harris was known for her combative stance against companies that violated state laws, as highlighted by Bloomberg. She often confronted oil companies, a fact she emphasized during her 2019 presidential campaign.

Harris filed numerous lawsuits against oil companies and public utilities for environmental contamination. In 2016, her office secured a settlement of $14 million with BP Plc affiliates over allegations that they failed to prevent gasoline leaks from underground storage tanks at nearly 800 gas stations in California.

During her term, California secured other multimillion-dollar settlements with companies like Phillips 66, ConocoPhillips, Chevron USA, and Chevron Stations Inc. to resolve similar allegations involving leaking underground gasoline tanks. After about 140,000 gallons of oil spilled from a ruptured pipeline, Harris's office filed criminal charges against Plains American Pipeline LP, based in Houston.

Green new deal

In the Senate, Harris co-sponsored legislation promoting the principles of the Green New Deal, which called for a 10-year national mobilization to eliminate emissions, transition to zero-emission energy, and overhaul the national transportation systems, recalls Bloomberg.

Although the Inflation Reduction Act passed by Biden is the country's most radical climate law, it does not reach the scope of the Green New Deal, which some progressive Democrats advocate for.

Harris has also focused on environmental justice as California's Attorney General and while representing the state in the U.S. Senate.

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