The Flood Comes & We Pay

Storm after storm, town after town, we pay the price for a crisis we didn’t cause.

We drain our basements.
We toss out waterlogged furniture.
We wait for FEMA checks that never cover what was lost.
We rebuild — and wait for the next one.

This is the reality of climate change in New Jersey.
But more than that, it’s the result of a system built by fossil fuel companies
who knew this would happen
, and kept drilling anyway. They lied. They cashed in.
And now, we're left to pick up the pieces.

They Knew. They Lied.
And They're Still Lying.

They knew what would happen.

In 1977, Exxon’s top scientists told company executives the truth: burning fossil fuels would raise global temperatures by 2–3°C.
Their internal models accurately predicted the climate chaos we’re now living through—more floods, rising seas, deadly heat, and stronger storms.

They didn’t warn the public.
They
buried the science.

Then they spent decades
lying about it.

Instead of changing course, companies like ExxonMobil, Chevron, Shell, and BP launched a multi-decade campaign to spread doubt, delay action, and confuse the public. They:

Funded think tanks and PR firms to call climate science a “hoax”

Created the Global Climate Coalition to lobby against U.S. climate policy

Bought ads attacking the Kyoto Protocol, calling emissions cuts “economic suicide”

Pressured presidents and Congress to reject international treaties

Ran weekly opinion ads in newspapers to make global warming sound “uncertain”

And while they sold the lie that “everyone’s responsible,” they knew the truth:
100 fossil fuel companies are responsible for over 70% of global emissions.

We didn’t choose this economy.

We didn’t choose to live in a system where every car runs on gas, every home is heated by oil or methane, and public transit and electric grids were left to crumble. That wasn’t a democratic decision — it was the fossil fuel business model.

They forced dependence. They built the trap.
Then they
cashed in.
Now they want to avoid paying for the damage?
No way.

And it’s still happening
— right now, under Trump.

We are living through a second wave of climate denial, and this time it’s coming straight from the White House. Since returning to office in 2025, the Trump administration has launched a full-scale attack on climate policy:

  • - Re-withdrew from the Paris Agreement on Day One

  • - Ordered agencies to stop using the term "greenhouse gases" in all federal documents

  • - Scrubbed climate language from EPA and FEMA websites

  • - Blocked climate science from being used in federal environmental reviews

  • - Gutted the “social cost of carbon” from federal regulations — the very tool used to measure climate harm

Trump’s Secretary of Energy, a fossil fuel loyalist with ties to the fracking industry, has defunded renewable energy research and reinstated methane venting from oil fields.
Lee Zeldin, now a senior climate and energy advisor, has openly stated that fossil fuels are “the backbone of American freedom,” and has pushed to remove climate risk from all infrastructure planning.

This isn’t just history. It’s happening again — in real time.
They’re burying the science, denying the crisis, and trying to kill laws like the Climate Superfund before they gain traction.

They lied then.
They’re lying now.
And unless we act, they’ll keep making money while we pay the price.

The Climate Superfund Act

What if we made the companies who caused this, pay to fix it?

That’s the idea behind New Jersey’s Climate Superfund Act. It’s modeled after the toxic waste Superfund law. Simple principle: if you make a mess, you clean it up.

Fossil fuel companies emitted over a billion tons of greenhouse gases. They knew exactly what those emissions would do. Now, they owe us. This bill would require them to pay into a dedicated fund—between $2 billion and $5 billion—to help us rebuild storm-damaged infrastructure, invest in flood protection, and adapt our communities.

No, it doesn’t raise taxes. No, it doesn’t affect small businesses.

Yes, the oil lobby is fighting it hard.

Who’s Fighting Against It Now?

The Climate Superfund Act is being opposed by the same power players that have blocked climate action for decades: fossil fuel companies, petrochemical lobbyists, and their trade groups.

The American Chemistry Council, the oligarchs, and gas utilities are all lining up against this bill because they know it works—and because it threatens their ability to profit without consequence.
In Trenton, one of their top enforcers is Ray Cantor of the New Jersey Business and Industry Association. He’s been leading the opposition, calling the bill “unfair” to industry while saying nothing about the communities still paying for the damage. These are the same interests that bankroll misinformation campaigns, push weak climate policy, and quietly rewrite legislation behind closed doors.

They’re not confused about the science—they just don’t want to pay. And unless we push harder than they lobby, they’ll win.

TAKE ACTION

〰️

TAKE ACTION 〰️

This bill won’t pass unless we act. Fossil fuel companies are already working behind the scenes to stop it—and the only way we win is if legislators hear from us directly.

Use the action tool to contact your legislators.
You can take action more than once—and you should.
Every email, every message, every call makes it harder for them to ignore what’s at stake.

Once you’ve taken action, share the link with your community. Post it. Forward it. Bring others in. The more voices they hear, the stronger we become.
Let’s make sure they know:
New Jersey won’t keep footing the bill for Big Oil.

Make Polluters Pay - Pass the Climate Superfund Act

Take Action

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