Climate 411

Here We Go Again

Claim:

The American Clean Energy and Security Act is “a new tax that will cost every American $1,500-3,000 a year.” Jeb Hensarling (TX-R), 6/26/09

Truth:

How many times do we have to say it? The misquoted, misconstrued $3100 number is wrong. So wrong the author of the MIT report (where the NRCC got their numbers for their calculations) said the math is: “just wrong. It’s wrong in so many ways it’s hard to begin.”

The continued use of this wrong information at this point is nothing less than a deliberate lie to the American people.

Once again, let’s look at more accurate report. The EPA and the CBO both reported a carbon cap would cost less than the cost of a postage stamp per day per family.

It’s time to be honest with the American people.

Posted in News / Comments are closed

Just a Big Old Tax

Claim:

The American Clean Energy and Security Act “would be the biggest tax in American history” – Rep. Pete Sessions, R-TX, 6/26/09

Truth:

Wrong. The Environmental Protection Agency and the Congressional Budget Office each analyzed the American Clean Energy and Security Act separately.

The EPA found a carbon cap would cost the average American household as little as $88-$140 per household per year over the life of the program – or about a dime a day per person.

The CBO got similar results; it found we could get all the benefits of a carbon cap for less than the cost of a postage stamp per day per family. Anyone who thinks that’s the biggest tax increase in America’s history needs to brush up on their history.

The Wall Street Journal mistakenly accused the CBO of not considering the full range of costs to the economy, but all the costs they cite as missing were fully taken into account by the study.

What’s more, neither study looked at the costs of inaction — the astronomical costs of fixing the damage that will be caused by unchecked climate change.

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Why This Is the Pivotal Climate Vote of Our Lives

We are 24 hours away from the most important climate vote of our lives. Everything hangs in the balance.

Either the House passes the American Clean Energy and Security Act and we carry momentum to the Senate. Or, we lose the vote and in all probability any chance of confronting the devastating threats of run-away global warming for the foreseeable future.

In recent weeks, we’ve asked our Action Network to keep the pressure on for passing this landmark bill. In response, our inbox has been flooded with comments and questions about this bill and the urgency for action.

We’ve tried to respond to each question individually but thought at this critical moment it would be helpful to explain why we are working so hard to pass this bill and why now is so important.

Why this bill, and why now?
Our vigorous effort to pass the landmark American Clean Energy and Security Act is based on a number of factors, including:

  • It is a strong bill that will put America on course to cutting global warming emissions by 83% by mid-century. This, along with cuts in other countries, is in the range of what scientists suggest is necessary to stave off the catastrophic threats of run-away global warming.
  • It has broad support from labor, environmental, and community groups, as well as valuable support from the business community and even many electric utilities and energy companies. In order to pass a bill of this magnitude, this broad support is essential.
  • It uses a proven policy approachcap-and-trade — that sets a declining cap on global warming pollution and creates a market that rewards innovation to clean-energy technologies. This same approach has dramatically reduced acid rain pollution at a fraction of the estimated costs.
  • Now is the time. Political momentum has built over many years to bring us to this moment in history, and we cannot squander it. Key political leaders from President Obama to Speaker Pelosi to Reps Waxman and Markey are engaged as never before on passing a good bill right now. If we lose the vote in spite of the political firepower devoted to this, it will set back our efforts for many years, which would be disastrous for the climate. Once lost, political momentum doesn’t easily regenerate.

Some of our online members and activists wonder whether we should be pushing for an even stronger bill or, short of that, whether we’d be better off allowing the EPA to regulate global warming pollution.

Keep the following in mind:

  • EPA has not yet established global warming regulations and it is not yet clear how they would approach the issue.
  • It could take years and many court battles before EPA regulations are set.
  • Nor is it clear how regulations would be handled over time with changing administrations.
  • The bill would replace EPA regulations with a clear policy that locks in emission reductions through mid-century.

This is why President Obama and his team, including EPA administrator Lisa Jackson, are fully behind passing the American Clean Energy and Security Act and favor legislation over regulation.

As to whether we should be supporting a stronger bill, we have to ask, what’s the alternative? What other bill stands a prayer’s chance of winning 218 votes in the House and 60 votes in the Senate? What other bill has the support of President Obama, Speaker Pelosi and Reps. Waxman and Markey? What other bill could you even get out of the relevant committees?

Passing legislation of this magnitude is hard. Look at the efforts to reform health care. An entire generation of Americans has come and gone and that issue is not yet resolved.

If the planet is to avoid the catastrophic threat of run-away global warming, Congress must act now. We just don’t have time to waste.

Sam Parry is the director of EDF’s Action Network.

Posted in Climate Change Legislation / Read 2 Responses

Heritage Memo Answers Age-Old Question: How Much Biased Economics Can Right-Wing Money Buy?

In Criticizing CBO’s Analysis of Climate Legislation, Heritage Foundation Reveals Its Own Ignorance of Economics

The Congressional Budget Office — the nonpartisan Congressional agency charged with reviewing legislation and budgets — recently completed an analysis of the American Clean Energy and Security Act (ACES). CBO estimated the cost of ACES to American households in the year 2020, and found that the number would be just $175 per year — or just two-tenths of a percent (0.2%) of after-tax income.

Not surprisingly, the well-funded supporters of the status quo are trying to discredit the CBO’s work. A case in point is the recent “Web Memo” and accompanying blog post written by the Heritage Foundation, titled “CBO Grossly Underestimates Costs of Cap and Trade.”

Needless to say, Heritage’s arguments fail to hold up under examination. Their analysis once again shows just how much biased economics, empty rhetoric, and gross exaggeration a pile of right-wing money can buy. But it tells us little about climate legislation.

— Heritage claims that the allowance cost numbers don’t add up. FALSE.

It’s Heritage that gets the math wrong. Too lazy to model the actual legislation, Heritage simply multiplied the number of emission allowances available in the 2020 by the CBO’s estimated allowance price, to get $141 billion. That’s larger than CBO’s estimate of total allowance cost, which is $94.1. But the difference is not hard to understand — in fact, CBO explains it quite clearly.

The beauty of a cap-and-trade program is that it gives firms flexibility: the flexibility to reduce emissions by more than necessary, in order to build up a bank of allowances for later use; and the flexibility to buy high-quality offset credits for verified emissions reductions from sources outside the cap. That’s why CBO also includes in its estimate of gross cost the estimated costs of purchasing those offsets — something Heritage completely ignores. The bottom line is that the flexibility of the market lowers the gross cost of compliance.

— Heritage claims that CBO omits “economic damages from restricting energy use.” FALSE.

Heritage seems to be confused by the fact that CBO does not include an explicit GDP forecast. But that doesn’t mean the CBO’s analysis is not comprehensive. In its analysis of ACES, CBO estimates the full range of gross compliance costs to the economy, including the real economic costs of the program — that is, the resource costs associated with cutting pollution and moving to a clean-energy economy. Those costs are fully taken into account in the $175 figure cited above.

CBO’s analysis focuses on household-level costs. That’s because CBO, by custom, always holds economic output constant when it analyzes legislation. Instead of using a “general equilibrium model,” CBO relies on a survey of other models to estimate an allowance price, and then uses detailed data on production and consumption patterns to model how that allowance price would spread throughout the economy as currently structure.

For macroeconomic GDP impacts, we can look to the analysis of the legislation released by EPA. In 2020, EPA’s modeling of GDP impacts in its core policy scenario ranges from a reduction of 0.6% to an increase of 0.1%.

— Heritage claims that CBO’s analysis is an “accounting analysis, not an economic one.” FALSE.

The argument here is basically the same one as in the point above. While it is true that CBO does not employ a dynamic general equilibrium model, it is completely false to suggest that CBO’s analysis is not an economic one. Rather than using its own model, CBO surveys a wide range of dynamic general equilibrium models and comes up with a parameter that estimates the allowance price needed to achieve a given pollution reduction. As explained above, that allowance price is then fed through detailed data on production and consumption to estimate household impacts.

The Heritage analysts seem have made the elementary mistake of confusing the CBO’s earlier “scoring” estimate of the legislation — which is an accounting exercise — with the estimate of the costs of climate legislation — which is a full-fledged economic analysis.

The key point here is that CBO’s study does estimate the real economic costs of reducing global warming pollution. And it still finds those costs to be tiny — less than 50 cents a day per household.

— Finally, in its ill-founded attack Heritage continuously refers to its own modeling of the economic impacts of ACES. Their analysis is based on unrealistic assumptions, some of which are completely contrary to the actual provisions in the bill, resulting in an ungrounded analysis that does not accurately model what the effects are likely to be.

Let’s take a look at the facts. The CBO concluded that the net annual economy-wide cost of the cap-and-trade program in 2020 would amount to about $175 per household (which includes all the costs of the policy). What’s more, CBO predicts that households in the lowest income quintile will see an average net benefit of about $40 in 2020.

And the CBO isn’t the only one that predicts low costs for ACES. The EPA, which sets the gold standard in terms of peer-reviewed, transparent analysis, concluded that over the entire life of the legislation, the costs of cutting carbon pollution under ACES would only be about $80 to $111 per year for the average American household. That’s about a dime a day per person.

And remember: all of these cost estimates are only looking at one side of the ledger—they don’t incorporate the benefits of addressing the climate crisis.

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7 American Species Threatened by Global Warming

Canada Lynx
The Canada lynx is at risk because of changes to the snowpack caused by climate change.

With the political debate heating up over the American Clean Energy and Security Act, it’s easy to lose sight of what the fight is about.

Yes, this is about people and jobs and freeing ourselves from foreign oil and creating a clean energy economy for the 21st century. But it’s also about our natural heritage and the wildlife with which we share this planet.

Species from blue whales to butterflies confront growing threats. Their habitats are rapidly changing along with the climate. Global warming is pushing nature to the brink.

That’s why we launched a new campaign, Warming and Wildlife, where we document the story through the prism of seven “ambassador species” from across America already struggling to survive.

Without action, there’s a good chance these species won’t make it — we could lose them in our lifetimes.

Our seven ambassador species are:

The bumper sticker is right: Extinction is forever. But, it doesn’t have to be inevitable, not if we each do our part to cap America’s global warming pollution and unleash the clean energy economy of the 21st century.

Posted in Plants & Animals / Comments are closed

The $3100 Lie That Won't Die

Claim:

“Anyone who thinks you can pay $3,100 to the federal government and thinks you can get that money back completely in services — like I said — he may go to M-I-T but he is an N-U-T.”

— Rep. Louie Gohmert (R-TX) referring to Dr. John Reilly, the MIT economist who coauthored the 2007 “Assessment of U.S. Cap-and-Trade Proposals [pdf].”

Truth:

Thanks to Think Progress’s The Wonk Room for reporting on Rep. Gohmert’s childish antics. Are we really resorting to name-calling when debating something as serious as global warming?

Beyond the question of maturity, Rep. Gohmert is repeating a lie that won’t die. As we point out in this Climate 411 post, the $3100 figure has been thoroughly debunked. There are lies, damn lies and then there’s this $3100 claim.

Rep. Gohmert and anyone else who continues to use this $3100 figure should know the facts.

Here’s what Dr. John Reilly, the author of the MIT study, told Politifact about the NRCC’s $3100 claim: “It’s just wrong. It’s wrong in so many ways it’s hard to begin.”

And, in two recent letters to House Republican Leader John Boehner, Dr. Reilly asked that the NRCC stop using the “misleading” figure, noting that MIT’s estimates are less than one thirtieth of what the NRCC is claiming.

“A correct estimate of that cost … for the average household just in 2015 is about $80 per family, or $65 if more appropriately stated in present value terms discounted at an annual 4% rate,” Dr. Reilly wrote.

Go to Climate 411 for a more detailed response.

Global warming is a serious issue and it should be debated in a serious way. Rep. Gohmert should know better than to resort to lies and name-calling.

Posted in News / Comments are closed