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Cap & Dividend: A Clear Winner
Senator Maria Cantwell (D-WA) introduced a bill today that is a much better approach to reducing climate change than the cap and trade bill circulating in the Senate. Her bill, which she co-sponsored with Senator Susan Collins (R-ME), uses cap and dividend to reduce climate emissions and avoids the pitfalls and boom-and-bust cycles inherent in carbon trading. (Peter Barnes proposed this idea in YES! Magazine in 2001).
Why is this a better idea?
First, polluters would pay for the right to pollute; they would buy carbon emissions permits at an auction, instead of getting the majority of them for free. This sends the right market signal-emit carbon, and you'll have to pay.
Carbon permits would be required at the point where fossil fuel energy enters the economy. The number of greenhouse gas emissions allowances is reduced regularly by amounts that businesses can plan for. There are no offsets-these would be real reductions in climate changing emissions.
Second, American families strained by the poor economy would benefit. Each person would get an equal share of the proceeds from the auction. It works like the oil trust funds in Alaska, where each resident gets about $1,300 per year for their share of the state's oil royalties. As long as our economy remains dependent on fossil fuels, prices for energy and energy-intensive products will rise. But the rebate will offset those price increases-Cantwell says it will mean most families are in about the same place financially. Those who buy carbon-free energy, drive energy efficient cars, or buy products produced locally with little fossil fuels will come out ahead, though, while those who drive gas guzzlers will pay more through the higher price of fuel. So it sends the right signal to consumers, too.
Politically, it should go over much better than cap and trade. Who wouldn't like to get a check in the mail each month that represents your share of the carbon auction revenues? Three quarters of the revenues would be distributed equally to all Americans. The other quarter will go to clean energy research and development, for projects that reduce non-CO2 greenhouse gas emissions, and for aid to communities and workers who need special help making the transition to a clean energy economy.
And here's the frosting on the cake. Instead of cap and trade, which would set up a massive Wall Street system of buying and selling carbon, this auction is for energy producers and importers, only-not brokers and speculators.
What's not to like? This is a far better proposal than the cap and trade proposals that has Wall Street salivating. One caveat, though. Carbon reductions proposed in the bill are probably not enough to avert dangerous climate change. But if there is flexibility to step up the reductions as the science get firmer and the public backing grows, this approach could be just right.
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16 Comments so far
Show AllThis makes too much sense. After all with cap and trade the wall street people get to pretend they are helping.
Contact your electeds and tell them to support cap and dividend...much better than cap and trade.
This bill is without question a big step in the right direction. I'm frankly surprised (and very pleased) to see that this idea is actually taking form. I for one am going to support it.
As an aside, I've just started Jim Hansen's new book, "Storms of Our Grandchildren". I'm going to suggest that people take a look at it. It's very, very good.
"Why is this a better idea?
First, polluters would pay for the right to pollute; . . ."
In other words, they'll still be allowed to pollute, correct? The fact that more people may participate in the sharing of funds is irrelevant to solving the problems of pollution.
This proposal is just more wasted whitewash on the ugliest fence in the neighborhood.
q
You beat me to it. It's the *carbon* that's the problem, not who makes money.
This is another example of how completely everyone is in thrall to the private-profit system. People are so enslaved to it that they can't even *think*.
By increasing the cost to pollute, less polluting alternative sources of energy become more competitive.
The point is to make them pay for polluting, instead of letting them do it for free as they've always done when it comes to CO2, then to use the money from that to develop CO2-free sources of energy, so that there will no longer be any carbon-polluting energy sources.
It's kinda hard to throw the switch at coal/oil/nuke plants without anything standing by to take over.
Why do we need so much energy, Z?
Well, for starters, there are millions of people in this country that depend on hospitals and medical devices to keep them alive that need electricity (I am one of them, I need a CPAP machine to sleep). Also, most of the food that people eat is processed in some way, and food processing plants need vast amounts of power. Without energy, our scientists and researchers would not be able to figure out ways to solve global warming, diseases, etc. (try climate modeling without any computers!).
Lastly (and something that I would see as a net benefit to society if it were to end), people are addicted to electronic devices for entertainment. (The Onion has a humorous take on this:http://www.theonion.com/content/news/
report_90_of_waking_hours_spent)
We have become utterly dependent upon nearly unlimited uses of very cheap electrical energy. And a sudden end to that would likely kill millions, both directly and indirectly from rioting and other violence. We need a clean energy grid in place before we shut off the polluting forms of energy, although there are ways to lessen energy use through conservation, increased efficiency measures, etc., that have hardly been tapped yet.
I'd say your last line is the Number One key issue here, Z. We're very wasteful, in the US. Far more so than folk in Europe.
What would happen if, instead of playing these shiny, distracting games with carbon, we were to focus on (a) insulation, (b) reforestation and walking-distance permaculture, (c) dedicated lanes for human- and micro-powered transport (d) publicly-owned personal, group, and goods transportation, (e) fiber-optic internet everywhere, (f) politico-economic devolution, and (g) an end to commuting?
I'd think I had died and gone to heaven? :-)
Many of these are happening at a local level, despite (or in spite) of either a lack of national policy promoting these things, or a national policy dedicates toward the complete opposite. Weatherize DC is a new campaign that as recently launched to insulate and weatherize homes to lower energy costs for heating and cooling. More cities seem to be adopting localized farmer's markets, and there are a couple websites supporting yard sharing (http://hyperlocavore.ning.com/page
/what-is-hyperlocavore-and-yard). More and more cities have bike lanes and bike paths, etc. I just don't think we can count on the federal government to push these policies and solutions anytime soon, so it is up to us and our communities.
We're supposed to be happy with the lesser of two weevils (movie reference), again! In our personal lives, we don't settle for half measures if we can possibly complete the whole job. We don't watch half a film, feed our families half a meal, pay half our bills, etc. We don't simply pat an injured or sick child on the head. We try to do the right thing. We care.
Yes, I know, 'political realities', but why is it always heated debate, high drama, to merely and only occasionally chip away at the huge coprolite* in D.C.? Bleh.
* http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/coprolite
lets try this as a concept:
cap consumers instead of producers.
each consumer gets a ration of carbon utilization.
go over you ration and you either have to stop using carbon or you have to buy credits from someone more carbon thrifty than yourself.
and last but not least, since this is a global system the rationing has to be global. If Americans want to polute more than the people of Africa then they will have to pay Africans for carbon credits !
The UK almost tried a program like that.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/
2008/may/08/renewableenergy.carbonemissions
Auctions could be rigged - and therefore they would. Better to have a fixed selling price.