Is the Gulf of Mexico disaster a reason to pass climate legislation – or is that legislation largely irrelevant to curbing our oil use? A Greenwire article Tuesday quoted a number of economists arguing that the leading proposals in Congress wouldn’t do much to change our dependence on petroleum.
The only reasonable response is “yes, of course.” Climate proposals such as Kerry-Lieberman, Cantwell-Collins, or Waxman-Markey will have limited effects on oil consumption for two reasons: first, they are market mechanisms; second, they are weak market mechanisms.
To start with the good news, reducing carbon emissions from electric utilities is cheaper than reducing oil use. Any market mechanism is supposed to prompt us to do the cheapest things first; that’s the whole point. There are many ways to make electricity with lower carbon emissions than a coal plant; putting a price on carbon makes those alternatives cheaper relative to coal. There are also many ways to promote energy efficiency, incrementally reducing electricity use.
For most Americans, on the other hand, there is only one way to make transportation, and it runs on oil. In the short run, with all of us driving the cars we now own, there is very little chance to change our gasoline use. In the closing words of one of the best satirical videos about the oil spill, “BP: you’re not mad enough to not drive your car.”
Carbon prices could have a greater effect in the long run, as everyone gradually replaces their cars, taking the new prices into account. This leads to the not-so-good news: the leading legislative proposals all have low ceilings on carbon prices, and release many more emission permits when the price hits the ceiling. The price ceilings vary between bills, generally falling around $30 - $40 per ton of CO2 by 2020.
Every $1 per ton of CO2 released is equivalent to $0.01 per gallon of gasoline. How much more would you think about fuel efficiency when you buy your next car if climate policy makes gasoline cost $0.30 - $0.40 per gallon more than it does today? The low price ceilings simply prevent the climate bills from doing much about oil consumption.
This problem is not unique to the current climate proposals. As Lesley McAllister has shown, many existing cap-and-trade programs have been set up with caps so high that they accomplished little or no emission reduction. In this case, limiting the price of carbon to no more than $30 - $40 per ton of CO2 allows a modest effect on electricity generation, but very little on oil and transportation.
What carbon price would be needed to change our transportation system, and our use of oil? Western European countries, with a quality of life similar to ours, pay as much as $4 per gallon more than we do for gasoline, and have much lower transportation emissions per capita. To get to their level, we could adopt a carbon price of $400 per ton of CO2 – for instance, by setting a very low cap on carbon emissions – and return most of the revenues to households on a per capita basis, as is done in Cantwell-Collins.
In a forthcoming research report (available in July), Elizabeth Stanton and I demonstrate that, even at very high tax rates, an appropriately designed rebate system can lead to net economic gains for every state, and for almost everyone except the richest 10 percent of the population. Moreover, at a high tax level, even when most of the revenues are returned to households, the undistributed remainder is a sizeable amount of money which can be used to finance mass transit, new vehicle technologies, and the transition from coal to clean energy technologies. Price incentives will work better and faster if supported by targeted programs to develop and deploy new, low-carbon technologies.
Yes, the current proposals for climate legislation will have little effect on oil dependence. That’s a reason to do more, not less, than Congress is contemplating.
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Frank Ackerman | June 24, 2010
Is the Gulf of Mexico disaster a reason to pass climate legislation – or is that legislation largely irrelevant to curbing our oil use? A Greenwire article Tuesday quoted a number of economists arguing that the leading proposals in Congress wouldn’t do much to change our dependence on petroleum. The only reasonable response is “yes, […]
Yee Huang | June 23, 2010
a(broad) perspective Across the Atlantic Ocean is another catastrophic, persistent, and pervasive oil disaster, ongoing for the past fifty years with no end in sight. The oil fields in the Niger Delta, occupying the southern tip of Nigeria, are rich with petroleum reserves, natural gas, and other natural resources. What should be a source of immense economic […]
Ben Somberg | June 23, 2010
OSHA’s pending rule on construction crane and derrick safety cleared OIRA review yesterday. The cranes rule has been a long, long time in the making and was featured as a case study in our white paper last year on the Costs of Regulatory Delay. It’s good news that this life-saving rule is finally almost set. […]
Rena Steinzor | June 22, 2010
Across the full spectrum of outside cognoscenti who are focused on the reality that a small office at the White House has final authority over the agencies charged with preventing catastrophes like the BP oil spill and the Big Branch mine disaster, one threshold assumption is sacrosanct. This tiny Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, now […]
Ben Somberg | June 22, 2010
Hydraulic fracturing (fracking) is getting more and more attention. Here’s some of the reporting out this week. The documentary Gasland premiered Monday on HBO. Here’s the Daily Show interview and the Science Friday interview. Vanity Fair: A Colossal Fracking Mess Scranton Times-Tribune: Little oversight, looming problems for Pa. gas industry, Impact of natural gas drilling […]
Amy Sinden | June 21, 2010
With characteristic audacity, the Wall Street Journal editorial page today is arguing against the precautionary approach to environmental policy that undergirds our system of environmental laws, even as the oil continues to gush into the Gulf of Mexico. Instead, they want to shift the burden of proof and only allow regulators to restrain corporate greed when […]
Ben Somberg | June 18, 2010
The latest from ProPublica and the Sarasota Herald-Tribune: At least a half-dozen homebuilders, installers and environmental consultants knew as early as 2006 that foul smells were coming from drywall imported from China – but they didn’t share their early concerns with the public, even when homeowners began complaining about the drywall in 2008.
Matthew Freeman | June 18, 2010
CPR President Rena Steinzor has an op-ed in this morning’s Baltimore Sun on the various regulatory failures at work in the BP oil spill. She writes that important questions need to be answered “about how the federal regulatory system allowed BP and other oil companies to drill in waters so deep without effective fail-safes,” and continues: In […]
John Echeverria | June 17, 2010
If further proof were needed that appointments to the Supreme Court matter, it was provided today by the Court’s decision in Stop the Beach Renourishment, Inc. v. Florida Department of Environmental Protection. The so-called conservative wing of the Court came one vote short of issuing a decision that would have revolutionized the law of property […]