Democratic Rep. Cori Bush of Missouri used her time to highlight the role the fossil fuel industry has played in causing disproportionate harm toward historically marginalized communities.
“Is an oil refinery more likely to be situated in a Black community or White community?” Bush asked Big Oil executives. “It’s Black,” she answered after a delay in response from witnesses.
According to a 2017 report from the NAACP and the Clean Air Task Force, which Bush cited, Black Americans are 75% more likely than other Americans to live in what’s called “fenceline communities,” which are areas located near industrial facilities and hazardous waste sites.
Researchers also found that Black people breathe 56% more pollution than they cause, while White people breathe 17% less pollution than they generate.
For instance, the Black communities situated along Louisiana’s “Cancer Alley,” the 85-mile stretch between New Orleans and Baton Rouge that’s home to more than 150 chemical plants and oil refineries, have for decades blamed the fossil fuel industry for causing the growing rate of cancer and respiratory illnesses in the area.
According to the Environmental Protection Agency’s 2019 environmental justice data, eight of the nation’s top 14 block groups — census areas that typically contain 600 to 3,000 people — with the country’s estimated highest cancer risks are in St. John Parish in “Cancer Alley.”
“For years, you all have continued to promote fossil fuels despite knowing that promoting means promoting environmental racism and violence in Black and brown communities,” Bush told the fossil fuel executives. “You want to continue promoting and selling fossil fuels that are killing millions of people.”
“This is a striking example of White supremacy,” she added. “Your profit driven choices threaten my life and my family, my neighbors and our communities every single day.”