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New documents show the extent of misinformation — and the risk it posed to staff
Bloomberg

Last year’s deadly hurricane season was steeped in misinformation. While some of the impacts were well-documented, with high-profile figures including Elon Musk and then-presidential candidate Donald Trump spreading false claims, new documents reveal the strain they put on the agency and the risks FEMA staff faced as a result. 

Today’s newsletter pulls back the curtain on the threats and their impacts, including “swatting” calls, posts about executing FEMA’s then-chief and the agency’s spokesperson stopping public interviews because she feared for her safety. You can read and share a full version of this story on Bloomberg.com.

Plus, read the latest on Australia’s new climate plan and take a listen to this week’s Zero podcast on art for the end of the fossil fuel era. Sign up to attend our Climate Week NYC event. And as always, please subscribe for unlimited access to climate and energy news. 

A hurricane of misinformation

By Zahra HirjiDavey Alba, and Jason Leopold

As a major storm rushed toward Florida last October, the head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency at the time faced a different kind of threat. Police had shown up in force to a rental property she owned as a result of a prank call, in a potentially dangerous attack known as “swatting.”

As back-to-back Hurricanes Helene and Milton sparked a torrent of online conspiracies, FEMA officials faced harassment and death threats, according to hundreds of pages of agency emails and other documents obtained via a Freedom of Information Act request by Bloomberg News. The records shed new light on how disaster-related misinformation affects the government's emergency response, sucks up internal resources, and puts staff at risk.

Deanne Criswell, who ran FEMA under President Joe Biden, learned about the swatting situation as she was about to brief TV viewers on Milton, one of the most powerful storms on record to develop in the Gulf of Mexico. “It was a very unsettling feeling,” she said in a recent interview, thinking back on how she juggled her concern for her renters along with preparing Floridians for the storm.

Many of the attacks outlined in the documents have not previously been reported, including the doxxing of at least seven senior FEMA staffers. In those incidents, sensitive personal information, such as home addresses, was published online for the purpose of harassment. The records also reveal challenges the agency faced as it tried to control the situation.

The incidents followed an online wave of disinformation suggesting FEMA was mishandling the response to the hurricanes that pummeled Florida and North Carolina in the lead-up to the presidential election. Among the debunked claims swirling at the time were reports that agency workers had seized property from survivors and confiscated donations.

The offensive diverted agency time and resources to set the record straight and protect personnel. “It made my staff nervous,” said Criswell. “It made people in the community nervous. They didn’t know who to believe. They didn’t know who to trust.”

The threat of misinformation continues to loom over the agency at a time when President Donald Trump and Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem have made steep cuts to its staffing and funding, including pulling back on some of the resources FEMA used last fall to combat threats. In the aftermath of deadly Texas floods in July, for example, conspiracy theories online blamed cloud seeding.

Hurricane Helene made landfall in the middle of the night on Sept. 26 as a Category 4 storm, causing historic flooding far inland and killing at least 250 people. Almost immediately, FEMA staff had to confront false rumors circulating online, including that it had stopped accepting housing assistance applications from survivors and didn’t have enough funds to help them.

FEMA officials and experts attribute the quick spread of disinformation to historic government mistrust in the area, as well as social media platforms ratcheting back moderation. 

Publicly, FEMA officials pushed back against disinformation on social media, on the ground with survivors and in the press. The agency also put up a rumor page to debunk the false information. Behind closed doors, meanwhile, its security team monitored for threats, including by hiring cybersecurity firm ZeroFox to identify problematic posts and get social media platforms to take them down, according to emails between the agency and company.

For example, the agency shared a screenshot taken from a TruthSocial post from Oct. 5 that stated: “Deanne Criswell needs to be executed for crimes against humanity and treason!” An Oct. 6 post on Gab, a social media site favored by the far right, called for the “Mussolini treatment” of various officials. “The only question: Is there enough rope?” read one of the responses.

Jacyln Rothenberg, the agency’s spokesperson at the time, was among the most heavily targeted, leading Homeland Security to loan Customs and Border Protection agents to provide security at her home. “Because the doxxing was so severe and my safety was at risk, I had to stop tweeting,” she said. “I had to stop doing interviews. I had to stop putting myself on the record.”

FEMA staff also found what it called “far-right” users posting possible personal information for numerous officials, including Criswell, Coen and Rothenberg, internal documents show.

The most high-profile incident involved a man allegedly “hunting” FEMA staff in North Carolina’s disaster zone. On Criswell’s orders, she said in an email to other top Biden officials: “All FEMA staff and contractors working to interact with survivors and conducting housing inspections, as well as search and rescue teams stood down following the initial reports.”

Afterwards, FEMA put together a Workplace Protection Task Force involving security, intelligence and communications professionals to manage incoming threats. Protective measures included using specialized software to flag personnel previously targeted online as at risk of more harassment.

But there were limits to how far the government could influence content moderation. At the time, outspoken Republicans led by House Judiciary Committee Chair Jim Jordan were investigating tech companies, alleging that the platforms were censoring conservative viewpoints under federal government pressure.

Read the full story, including how the current political climate is muddying the waters further. Subscribe to get the latest news on the federal government’s disaster response plan.

Suing to save FEMA funds

20
The number of states that sued FEMA in July for terminating the Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities grant program, which funds adaptation measures such as elevating structures in floodplains or retrofitting hospitals against fierce storms. Litigation is ongoing.

To respond or prepare

“Voters reward response funding. Voters  don’t respond to preparedness funding, even though they [get] more benefit in the long run.”
Jeff Schlegelmilch
Director. Nation Center for Disaster Preparedness at Columbia University
Trump and Noem want to eliminate FEMA, but experts say there are better ways to improve the agency's ability to respond to and prevent disasters.

Join us for Climate Week NYC

One World Trade Center near the Oculus transportation hub. Photographer: Yuki Iwamura/Bloomberg

On Thursday, Sept. 25, Bloomberg Green will host a solutions-focused look into a new era of climate action during Climate Week NYC. Following the 80th United Nations General Assembly, we’ll hear how top leaders in business, finance and government are approaching climate issues during times of geopolitical uncertainty. Learn more here.

A climate plan Down Under

By Keira Wright and Ben Westcott

Australia pledged to cut greenhouse gas emissions within a range of 62% to 70% by 2035, as one of the world’s largest fossil fuel exporters aims to deliver on pledges to accelerate climate action.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese announced earlier today his government would seek to lower pollution based on levels in 2005 at a press conference in Sydney. The proposed cuts come as the nation also moves ahead with expansions in its coal and natural gas sectors.

“This is a responsible target, backed by the science, backed by a practical plan to get there and built on proven technology,” Albanese said, adding that the target would balance protecting both the environment and Australia’s economy.

The government said in a statement that the target range was designed to balance a deliverable outcome with “leaving room for new technologies to take things up a gear.”

Anthony Albanese, Australia’s prime minister. Photographer: Hilary Wardhaugh/Bloomberg

Australia plans to achieve the cuts through a continued roll-out of renewables, fresh transmission infrastructure and boosting clean fuel usage, the statement said. The center-left Labor government will create a new A$5 billion ($3.3 billion) sleeve within the National Reconstruction Fund aimed at emissions reduction for heavy industry and new renewable technologies.

The country will also review efficiency standards for new passenger vehicles next year, and aims to spend A$40 million to improve electric-vehicle charging infrastructure.

Albanese’s government has sought to dispel the nation’s reputation as an international climate laggard, legislating Australia’s first emissions cut target of 43% on 2005 levels by 2030 shortly after coming to power. The government is hoping to showcase its credentials as it competes with Turkey to host next year’s flagship United Nations climate change talks.

The proposed reductions compare to BloombergNEF’s assessment that Australia needs to slash emissions by 71% by 2035 to be aligned with a credible pathway to net zero by mid-century. The government released two climate-related reports earlier this week showing the nation at risk of losing A$40 billion ($27 billion) a year due to climate change.

“This target range is short of what is required to keep communities in Australia and the Pacific safe,” said Wesley Morgan, research associate for the Institute for Climate Risk & Response at the University of New South Wales. “Australia will need to focus on the upper end of this target range, and will also need to signal plans to phase out fossil fuel production.”

Read the full version of this story on Bloomberg.com

More from Green

By Olivia Rudgard

Global water supplies are becoming less reliable, leading to dangerous floods, droughts and threats to agriculture, the United Nation’s weather agency said in a new report.

A record hot year driven by climate change contributed to unpredictable river flows and rainfall in 2024, according to the World Meteorological Organization’s fourth annual report on water resources. Last year almost two-thirds of global river basins had water levels either significantly above or significantly below normal values.

“The water cycle is increasingly difficult to predict,” said Stefan Uhlenbrook, the WMO’s director of hydrology and an author of the report. “It is more erratic.”

Evacuations from a flooded village in Punjab state, India, in August. Photographer: Shammi Mehra/Getty Images

Exxon Mobil is shelving €100 million ($118 million) of investments in chemical recycling in Antwerp and Rotterdam due to what the energy giant says are overly restrictive rules on plastics in the EU.

The European Commission is taking steps to ensure that regulations meant to support sustainable investing don’t clash with the bloc’s efforts to pump capital into its defense industry.

The global banking sector failed to make any progress in financing the clean energy transition last year, with leading banks spending just 89 cents on low-carbon energy companies and projects such as wind, solar and grids for every dollar they allocated to fossil fuels, according to an analysis by BloombergNEF.

Big Oil’s monumental moment

Kuwaiti artist Monira Al Qadiri stands with her works titled Alien Technology, which are made up of sculptures depicting enlarged oil drill bits in iridescent colors. Photographer: Markus Tretter/Markus Tretter

Monira Al Qadiri says she is pre-empting the end of oil and building monuments to it. As one of the most important contemporary artists of the Middle East, her work — spanning sculptures, films and performances — throws new light on humanity’s deep interdependent relationship with fossil fuels. This week on Zero, Akshat Rathi asks Al Qadiri how art can help make sense of the current moment.

Listen now, and subscribe on AppleSpotify or