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Smith
Faculty Opinion Article
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October
15, 2007
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By Dr. Peter Morici, Professor
of International Business
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Crafting a U.S.
Response to Global Warming
The United States appears poised to
act soon on global warming. Hopefully,
Congress will craft policies that
motivate a truly international solution
rather than make the problem worse, hurt
the economy, and create windfall profits
for some regulated industries.
Most Americans are convinced that the
buildup of green house gases (GHG) in
the atmosphere is responsible for
warming Arctic seas, shrinking mountain
ice caps, and 90 degree October heat in
New York.
CO2 emissions account for more than
four fifths of GHG and a larger share of
what government policies may curtail.
Various proposals in Congress would
establish a national cap on CO2
emissions, and roll those back over
several decades.
Proposed regimes would allocate
emission permits among business that
process fossil fuels, like petroleum
refineries, and use fuels intensely,
like electric utilities and aluminum.
Businesses may meet their goals by
directly cutting emissions or purchasing
permits from other firms that exceed
their goals or shut down. Dubbed Cap and
Trade, this approach is used in Europe,
where a private market in trading
permits has emerged.
Such an approach would bring the
United States, de facto, into the Kyoto
Protocol. Implemented without U.S.
participation, Kyoto commits virtually
all other industrialized countries to
reducing GHG emissions to 6 to 8 percent
below 1990 levels. Developing countries
are absolved, though industrialized
countries may meet part of their
abatement goals by financing cleanup
projects in them.
Unfortunately, this regime encourages
carbon-intensive manufacturing, like
steel and aluminum, and consuming
industries, like automobiles and
appliances, to leave industrialized
countries for places like China and
India where fossil fuel use is
unregulated and cheaper. This increases
global emissions and reduces global GDP,
because developing countries use fossil
fuels, capital and labor less
efficiently to make the same goods.
This madness is illustrated by the
fact that China, with a GDP less than a
third that of either the European Union
or United States, emits more CO2 than
either economy.
Every two years, Chinese emissions
growth adds another country the size of
Japan. It is hard to imagine that two
years of Chinas growth, which comes to
$650 billion, could replace Japans $5
trillion economy. Yet, that is the kind
of economic accounting cap and trade
requires.
Government allocations of limited
carbon use permits among businesses
would create a new sandbox for
Washington dealmakers, exacerbating the
economic damage.
Utilities already face economic
pressures to curb fossil fuel use, and
through savvy lobbying could garner more
emission permits than they will
ultimately need. Once new CO2-limiting
requirements take effect, utilities
could build more efficient facilities,
pass the capital costs into their rate
structures, and reap windfall profits by
selling excess permits.
Recently, American Electric Power,
one the nations largest operators of
coal-fired electrical plants and
staunchest advocates of Cap and Trade
for CO2 abatement, signed a consent
decree with nine states, 13
environmental groups and the
Environmental Protection Agency to
dramatically reduce emissions of acid
rain causing SO2 under the Clean Air
Act.
The decree prohibits AEP from
purchasing emission credits through the
existing Cap and Trade regime, using
credits it has already earned, or
generating new credits for sale through
compliance with the decree.
It is illuminating that given the
chance, environmentalists constrained
AEP from using Cap and Trade for SO2
emissions, a concept AEP champions for
CO2.
The international community has
determined that global warming can be
arrested by rolling back CO2 emissions,
and the United States should do its
share.
However, without participation by
China and other developing counties,
Kyoto will not solve global warming. By
encouraging energy using industries to
move to the developing world, it will
only exacerbate the problem and make the
world poorer in the bargain.
The United States should implement a
regime that encourages participation and
sacrifice by all nations, and does
minimum damage to the global and U.S.
economies.
It could adopt emissions standards
for energy-intensive activities like
electrical generation, aluminum, and
steel and for carbon use in automobiles.
In addition, the United States could
require that products imported and sold
in the United States meet the same
production standards.
Extending the regime to imports would
encourage governments in developing
countries to meet similar standards to
ensure access for their products in the
rich U.S. market, and would meet the
requirements of the World Trade
Organization if those were applied
equally to domestic and foreign
producers.
That would reduce U.S. CO2 emissions
without encouraging U.S.
energy-intensive industries to migrate
to China and other developing countries
where they make the problem worse not
better.
Peter Morici is a professor at the
University of Maryland School of
Business and former Chief Economist at
the U.S. International Trade Commission.
Peter Morici is a professor at the
University of Maryland School of
Business and former Chief Economist at
the U.S. International Trade Commission.
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