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Kansas AG Asks DOJ to Probe China-Linked Entity Over Climate-Related Lawsuits
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Kansas Attorney General Kris Kobach answers questions from reporters during a news conference outside his office in Topeka, Kan., on May 1, 2023. (John Hanna/AP Photo)
By Eva Fu and Frank Fang
7/29/2025Updated: 7/30/2025

Kansas Attorney General Kris Kobach is asking the Department of Justice (DOJ) to open an investigation into a San Francisco-based organization with links to China.

In a July 28 letter to Attorney General Pam Bondi, Kobach accused Energy Foundation China (EFC) of being part of an “environmental lawfare campaign” that puts the United States at a “strategic disadvantage.”

“When you handicap or hobble American fossil fuel production, that improves China’s strategic interest in boosting American dependence on alternative energy systems where China controls the supply chains for necessary minerals, batteries, solar panels, and other technology,” Kobach told The Epoch Times.

China has used this chokehold as leverage during the recent trade negotiations and linked rare earths exports to Washington cutting tariff rates.

EFC, despite being a U.S.-registered nonprofit, appears to support actions that align with the Chinese regime’s interests, he said.

EFC’s top management has significant connections to Beijing.

Zou Ji, EFC’s president and CEO, was once a deputy director general of the National Center for Climate Change Strategy and International Cooperation within China’s National Development and Reform Commission, which is the Chinese regime’s top economic planner, according to the organization’s website.

Zhang Huiyong, EFC’s executive director of international cooperation, previously worked at the Foreign Environmental Cooperation Center at China’s Ministry of Ecology and Environment, according to the EFC website.

EFC also maintains one of its two offices in Beijing, in the same building as the Chinese state-owned investment firm CITIC Group.

EFC was the focus of a hearing in June held by the Senate Subcommittee on Federal Courts, Oversight, Agency Action, and Federal Rights, where Kobach testified.

At that hearing, an aide for subcommittee chairman Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) held up a board that showed a red arrow with the words “climate lawfare.”

“On paper, Energy Foundation China’s goals may sound benign—support for clean coal, electric vehicles, and global decarbonization,” Cruz said. “But that raises the obvious question: If this is truly about reducing emissions, why isn’t China investing that money in reducing its own pollution? China is the No. 1 polluter on planet Earth. Communist China emits more carbon than the United States and Europe combined.

“The answer is simple: because this is not about climate. It is about global energy dominance.”

Meanwhile, Democratic witness David Arkush of Public Citizen suggested at the hearing that the idea of China undermining U.S. energy is a conspiracy theory “straight out of the 1950s.”

Part of the challenge in tracking China’s involvement is the lack of disclosure requirements around third-party litigation funding from foreign sources, Kobach said.

A June report by State Armor, an advocacy organization focused on China-related security threats, analyzed EFC’s spending and found that it has given millions of dollars to U.S.-based groups that push for a transition away from fossil fuels, including through lawsuits.

“China wins in multiple respects if these lawsuits succeed, because you would have a weakening of the American ability to produce energy, plus you would have greater dependence upon China for the production of energy in the future,” Kobach said.

He said the Senate hearing had shown how “China’s ongoing asymmetric campaign against the United States extends to our nation’s courtrooms and state legislatures.”

EFC has “left its fingerprints,” he said, but there could be other entities working on behalf of the CCP without having China in their names, and the DOJ has the resources to look into the matter.

“Multiple federal laws are designed to stop inappropriate foreign influence, misdirection, and economic sabotage like this,” Kobach stated in the letter.

Michael Lucci, founder and CEO of State Armor, applauded Kobach for calling for an investigation into EFC.

“Every day communist China is waging a war on American energy to make us more reliant [on] technology that is built and controlled by the CCP,” Lucci said in a statement. “While environmentalists call this ‘green energy,’ in reality it’s largely ’red tech' controlled by Communist China and chock full of kill switches to disable our energy grid.”

He said EFC “should be permanently shut down.”

EFC did not respond to a request for comment.

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Eva Fu
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Eva Fu is an award-winning, New York-based journalist for The Epoch Times focusing on U.S. politics, U.S.-China relations, religious freedom, and human rights. Contact Eva at eva.fu@epochtimes.com
Frank Fang is a Taiwan-based reporter. He covers U.S., China, and Taiwan news. He holds a master's degree in materials science from Tsinghua University in Taiwan.

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