What price, carbon?

Economics of GHG reduction, part bazillion 5

Two troubling things I heard last week:

  1. The on-going question about what our next president will sacrifice in the name of the economy. If the financial crisis has taught us nothing else, it is that federal coffers are not infinite, and something will inevitably give.

  2. At a panel on GHG policy in Washington, congressional staffers for Sen. Byron Dorgan (D-N.D.) and Rep. Jay Inslee (D-Wash.) conceded that the RGGI auction -- and specifically, the $40 million raised for the northeastern states -- will create some need for the feds to "give," once the feds pass auctions of their own.

These are closely related and direct results of an environmental policy that continues to remain hostile to economic responsibility.

We must get over the idea that minimizing the cost per ton of GHG reduction somehow cheapens our environmental credentials. Financial resources are finite, and any decision not to minimize the cost per ton reduced is algebraically equivalent to a decision not to maximize the total tons of GHG reduction.

The responsible end of the environmental spectrum knows this, but the policy environment still doesn't. Both RGGI and Lieberman-Warner have been set up to focus resources only on the most expensive means of GHG reduction, and while their exclusion of more cost-effective sources from participation wasn't intentional, it wasn't responsible either.

(Note: RGGI only allows participation by generators 25 MW and over, with any other CO2 source or sink participating only through offset auctions with the rules of offset engagement left up to the individual states. Lieberman-Warner died, thankfully, but its central precept that GHG reduction will be economically painful remains the dominant policy framework in Washington.)

As a result, we find ourselves in a situation where well-intentioned, but fiscally responsible politicians are going to be under pressure to put off the passage of GHG policy, based on the bogus idea that it will deepen our financial malaise.

But the bigger impact is that we lower our expectations, and write regulations that become self-fulfilling prophesies. This vicious cycle is often overlooked, but needs to be better understood. Let's start with a simple analogy, and then see how this relates to GHG policy.

Dumb analogy

You are the King of Broccoli-land, a nation where everyone eats nothing but broccoli. For years, none of your subjects knew any better, and could not contemplate a world where any other foodstuff was available. However, in recent years, your soils have become depleted in various nutrients from your monoculture plantations. You send your Learned Scientists abroad to study possible solutions, and they come back with fabulous stories of trips to exotic lands far away -- - in particular, Ice Cream Land, a world where no one eats anything but Ice Cream. In this land, they have cattle for milk, chickens for eggs, cocoa, sugar, and vanilla bean plantations. As their land becomes depleted, they rotate in crops of pistachios, strawberries, and chocolate chip cookie dough. Better still, it tastes awesome.

So you decree that your nation will commence a 20-year shift away from Broccoli toward Ice Cream. You will impose a tax on broccoli growth to dissuade broccoli harvest. You will use the proceeds of this tax to provide job re-training to broccoli farmers, to fund Ice Cream research and deployment programs, and to buy fertilizer to replace diminished soils. Just to be (personally) safe you will distribute massive amounts of government wealth to the Broccoli Land Broccoli Company, Ltd., to ease their transition into your low-broccoli future.

Dumb reality

If only the above example had nothing to do with the current situation. Our broccoli king assumed that de-broccolification would be painful, and that all likely solutions to the broccoli problem were known by the Learned Scientists. Having concluded thus, the policy was written to ensure that it would be painful, and that money would flow only to those ideas favored by the Learned Scientists. Years later, history will agree with the King. It really was expensive to shift an economy from broccoli to ice cream -- not because it really was expensive, nor because ice cream is the only solution to the broccoli problem, but because if the regulations are set up to demand expensive ice cream, that's what they will get. Reality was constrained so severely that the public comes to conclude that there were no alternatives. We know better right?

Not really. Because this is exactly what we are doing in our GHG debate. We assume it will be painful, so we take money and throw it at adaptation, R&D, and other public goods. We assume we must buy off the existing polluters, confusing GDP reductions with wealth transfers. And we are writing policies that get what we expect.

The proof? First, because politicians are already talking about making sacrifices due to the financial crisis, and GHG policy is on the list of potential things to be delayed.

But the RGGI issue is more problematic. The RGGI auction took in $40 million for the states, and the feds now see this as $40 million that they can't take, lest they lose the state's support for federal policy. But here's the rub: if the state is collecting money that it counts as revenue, it's not a cap-and-trade! It's a tax by another name. And taxes on carbon provide no more incentive for carbon reduction than taxes on income provide incentives for poverty. (Or, if you prefer, than broccoli taxes and ice cream R&D credits provide incentives for boulangerie construction.)

So where does this leave us?

One, with a policy debate that is increasingly tempting to put off until we put this fiscal crisis behind us. Two, with a set of policy ideas that ensure that GHG reduction will be expensive.

Both of these outcomes are environmentally dangerous. And the environmental community deserves some of the blame, which I will address in my next post.

Sean Casten is President & CEO of Recycled Energy Development, LLC, a company devoted to profitably reducing greenhouse emissions.

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  1. Earl Killian Posted 7:43 am
    06 Oct 2008

    EPA estimates $2000 billion in net benefitsTo illustrate Sean's point, consider that the EPA's estimate of obeying the Supreme Court's order in Massachusetts v. EPA to enforce the Clean Air Act.  The EPA found there could be $2000 billion (i.e. $2 trillion) in "net benefit to society".
    To make that even more interesting, remember that the EPA's $2 trillion estimate was based upon a 2030 gasoline price projection between $2.22 and $3.20, which seems laughable now.
    The question is why the Bush White House refuses to obey a Supreme Court order to enforce the law?  Oh, I forgot, they think laws don't apply to the White House.

  2. vakibs's avatar

    vakibs Posted 8:11 am
    06 Oct 2008

    Sean, let's have a moratorium on brocoliIf you don't grow enough ice-cream and insist on de-brocolification, you will have people dying of hunger.
    Just make enough icecream and let people choose.
    That's as far as your analogy will take us.
    Cap & Trade is not an answer to the climate change question. What we need is a significant commitment to avoid all carbon. In other words, a moratorium on coal plants. The icecreams will automatically sprout when people know that coal will be shut down, and when they know that their investments will not go waste. Nobody will ever die of hunger, that way.
    This is not me speaking, these are the exact words of Dr James Hansen.
    So what price on carbon ? INFINITY, that's what I say. Let's make a commitment that this price will be operational 10 years from now.

    Let's think in terms of eco-dollars.
  3. Sean Casten's avatar

    Sean Casten Posted 8:24 am
    06 Oct 2008

    VakibsI think you oversimplify.  Carbon-free is a nice sound-bite, but no one - not even Hansen - has a credible path to get there.  If you're using electricity, driving your car, enjoying the benefits of steel, silicon, magnesium, plastic and other products of a carbon-intensive society, you can't argue that you can get rid of carbon without first figuring out how you're going to live without those commodities.  (And bear in mind that it's hard to build the backbone of a renewable infrastructure without carbon either, since that infrastructure also requires silicon, steel and plastics.)
    This isn't to suggest a fatalistic, throw up your hands and bow down before King Coal worldview.  Simply that it is irresponsible for anyone to suggest that the goal is easy, or that the path is certain.  What is certain is that we have to move, and a dogmatic No More Carbon mandate will cripple us.  So how do we get there as quickly and as cheaply as possible, while still acknowledging our lack of omniscience?  That question is an easy one: by putting a price on carbon emissions, allowing anyone who can lower carbon emissions to access that price and then getting out of the way.
    Just as our Broccoli Kingdom could have benefitted from lots of non-broccoli paths other than Ice Cream, our Carbon Kingdom would benefit from a lot more paths than CCS, wind, solar and ethanol.   The world is greater than is dreamt of in our philosophies - so let's not constrain ourselves only to those philosophies we can dream of.
    That said, I'm with you on the broccoli moratorium.  It is one place where Bush I and I are in complete agreement!
  4. rsmith02 Posted 3:37 am
    07 Oct 2008

    RGGI not so bad?RGGI makes power generators pay for their carbon emissions and the states have limited latitude as to how they can spend the money.  It does not go into legislative general funds as far as I'm aware.
    Most states are using it to deploy low-carbon technologies, primarily in the form of consumer energy efficiency programs and renewable energy subsidies.
    CT- 70% proceeds for efficiency, 20%+ for renewable energy

    DE- up to 65% efficiency

    ME- up to 100% efficiency

    MD- up to 100% efficiency

    MA- 80% for efficiency

    VT- 100% for efficiency
    You get the idea.
  5. Biodiversivist's avatar

    Biodiversivist Posted 10:26 am
    08 Oct 2008

    The root of the problemJay Inslee (D-Wash.) conceded that the RGGI auction -- and specifically, the $40 million raised for the northeastern states -- will create some need for the feds to "give," once the feds pass auctions of their own.
    may just be that our politicians are not that competent, or at least not competent enough to hire and listen to competent advisers.
    Inslee thought he had a winner when he praised biodiesel up and down in his book and one biodiesel refinery in particular, which now appears to be going bankrupt. In the book he also danced on the grave of a politician who supposedly lost his office for being critical of biodiesel.
    That refinery may also be taking about ten million dollars worth of Seattle employees' retirement funds with it (picked as a winner by Seattle's mayor).
    Politicians cannot be picking our winners for us. They aren't smart enough to do that.

    In the end, it all comes down to biodiversity. Poison Darts--Protecting the biodiversity of our world

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