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Take Action on "THE" Climate Bill Now, Take Back our Economy
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The Waxman-Markey bill, a piece of legislation being pushed hard by utility and financial industry lobbyists, lacks progressive energy efficiency plans both in the short and long term. Please take action today as Congress is claiming they're not hearing enough from us. Our elected officials work for us, let us take this opportunity to remind them of that.
From our friend Ted Glick, Policy Director of the Chesapeake Climate Action Network and Co-founder of the United States Climate Emergency Council, here are the facts:
A Common Person’s Guide to the
American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009 By Ted Glick On May 21st, following months of work,
the House Energy and Commerce Committee passed the American Clean Energy and
Security Act of 2009 (ACESA), a 932-page piece of climate legislation. There
have been mixed reactions from environmental and climate groups, but most groups
are in agreement that it needs to be strengthened going forward. For some groups
the problems they see with the bill have led to their public withdrawal of
support. These groups include Greenpeace USA, Public
Citizen and Friends of the Earth. The Chesapeake Climate Action Network also
does not support the bill in current form. Below is a summary analysis of the main
features of the bill. -Cap and Trade System: The bill would
establish a “cap-and-trade” system which sets mandatory and declining limits on
greenhouse gas emissions over the next 40 years. By 2050 it projects reductions
of 83% from 2005 levels for the United States. It does this primarily
through the establishment of 1) a “cap” on emissions and the annual issuance by
the government of permits to emit greenhouse gases, both of which—the cap and
the emissions permits--come down steadily year after year, and 2) a tradable
market to buy and sell those permits to emit global warming pollution. That’s
why it’s called a “cap-and-trade” system. -Wide-Open Buying and Selling:
Significantly, this market is open to anyone, not just those entities which emit
greenhouse gases. For example, Wall Street firms whose primary purpose is to
make money for their investors can buy and sell pollution permits. Anyone,
whether Goldman Sachs or John Q. Public, can get into this newly-created market.
From page 430 of the bill: “The privilege of purchasing, holding, selling,
exchanging, transferring, and requesting retirement of emission allowances,
compensatory allowances, or offset credits shall not be restricted to the owners
and operators of covered entities, except as otherwise provided in this title.”
Especially following the sub-prime mortgage/credit/banking crisis, there is
concern among many people, including some on Capitol Hill, about the potential
for this system to be abused by those out to make quick and big
profits. -Goals and Targets: The document states
that one of its prime objectives is to help the world “avoid atmosphere
greenhouse gas concentrations above 450 parts per million carbon dioxide
equivalent; and global surface temperature 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit (2 degrees
Celsius) above the pre-industrial average.” However, a growing number of
scientists, journalists and climate activists believe that we need to reduce
emissions more deeply if we are to have a good chance of avoiding climate
catastrophe. -2020 Targets: It projects a 17%
reduction in greenhouse gases (ghg) from 2005 levels by 2020. This is about 3%
below U.S. ghg levels in 1990; 1990 is the
baseline year used by the nations of the world. There is an additional 10%
reduction of ghg’s projected via investments in the prevention of deforestation
outside the United
States, and there could be a few percent more
reductions through other means. This could add up to about a 20% reduction by
2020 compared to 1990 levels. The world’s international climate negotiators have
called for industrialized countries to reduce their emissions by 25-40% below
1990 levels by 2020. -Upstream, Downstream: It appears that
the cap is a mix of “upstream” and “downstream.” “Upstream” means the earliest point at
which carbon fuels (coal, oil, natural gas) or other global warming pollutants
enter the economy; “downstream” means at a point further along. An “upstream”
cap reduces the number of covered entities and makes it easier to reduce or
eliminate leakages from the system. A summary of the document says that it
“establishes a market-based program for reducing global warming pollution from
electric utilities, oil companies, large industrial sources and other covered
entities that collectively are responsible for 85% of U.S.
global warming emissions.” It describes a “covered entity” as one which emits at
least 25,000 tons of ghg emissions annually. -Offsets: There is a very large
provision made for “offsets.” An “offset” is when a company contributes money
for a renewable energy, energy efficiency or other “clean energy” project
somewhere else instead of reducing its own greenhouse gas emissions. This piece
of legislation allows for up to 2 billion tons worth each year, which is more
than 27% of the U.S.’s total annual ghg emissions.
The offsets would happen in both the U.S. and in other countries; up to ¾
of them could be in other countries. There is much controversy over offsets; a
recent study, for example, reported that between 1/3 and 2/3 of them under the
Clean Development Mechanism of the Kyoto Protocol, an international treaty, were
for projects that likely would have happened anyway. If fossil fuel companies
used all of the offsets, there would likely be no, or very little, actual
reductions of carbon emissions by these companies until the middle of the 20’s.
This would be the case even if ghg emissions permits were
auctioned. -Free Pollution Permits: A huge
percentage of the permits to emit ghg’s will be given away rather than sold via
an auction. Only 15% of the permits will be auctioned for roughly the first 15
years or so of the program, despite President Obama’s strong support for a 100%
auction during his campaign and for the first couple of months of his
presidency. Coal companies are the big winners; “local distribution companies,”
which are overwhelmingly coal-related, and “merchant coal” companies receive 35%
of the permits, also known as “allowances” (as in an allowance to emit global
warming pollution). The 30% to “local distribution companies” represents 90% of
total electric utility emissions. This system will remain in place until 2030,
with a five-year phase out between 2026 and 2030. Other global warming polluters
who receive free allowances are local natural gas distribution companies (9% of
the permits), “energy-intensive, trade-exposed industries” like steel, paper,
aluminum and cement (15%), oil refiners (2%), and coal companies to “cover the
costs of installing and operating carbon capture and sequestration
technologies”(2% from 2014-2017 and 5% after that). This adds up to about 65% of
the allowances being given for free to carbon polluters, 50% to the fossil fuel
industry directly. -Consumer Protection?: Interestingly,
most of these free allowances to carbon polluters are described as “consumer
protection” even though no consumer organizations were advocating for this plan.
The advocates for it were representatives like Congressman Rick Boucher of
Virginia who
received over $176,000 from the coal industry for the 2007-2008 Congressional
election cycle. Since the passage of this bill out of committee Boucher has said
publicly that that the legislation will “create the opportunity for increasing
coal production.” The legislation assumes that coal companies and other large
corporations can be trusted, or regulated, to pass along to consumers the
savings they will gain from the free permits they will be given. And remember
that they can sell these emissions permits, or allowances, on the cap-and-trade,
carbon/ghg market that is being set up. -More on Consumer Protection: A
statement by Public Citizen on this bill contained this sentence: “The
committee’s plan to distribute allowances to coal utilities will set up a legal
fight in all 50 state utility regulatory commissions over how exactly the money
will be returned to families and how much utilities can skim off the top—a fight
that anti-poverty and consumer groups lack adequate resources to wage, given the
army of lawyers utilities hire and the millions in campaign contributions that
they make.” -Coal Wins: Coal companies are big
winners under this legislation. They receive 35% of emissions permits for free
via Local Distribution Companies and merchant coal. They also receive 5% of the
funds raised by the overall legislation by 2018, following a 2% allocation from
2014-2017, which will cover the costs of installing and operating carbon capture
and sequestration (ccs) technologies. CCS is a technology that 1) barely exists,
2) is roughly a decade from perhaps being commercially viable on a large scale,
3) surrounded by serious safety questions as far as leakage into underground
drinking water, earthquake-caused massive releases, etc. It involves the pumping
of billions of tons of liquefied carbon dioxide into the earth, or under the
sea. New coal plants built from 2009-2020 would be required to capture 50% of
their carbon emissions but not until 2025. Plants built after 2020 must capture
65%. It is certain that, a dozen or so years from now, if these provisions are
not changed, the coal industry will be expending tens of millions of dollar in
advertisements, campaign contributions and lobbying to extend those deadlines if
it turns out that extensive carbon capture and sequestration is not possible.
-Other Free Allowances: In addition to
the free emissions permits (allowances) given to polluting industries, others
receiving free allowances that can then be sold on the cap-and-trade market
are: 1.5% of them to states for
programs to benefit users of home heating oil and propane; approximately
7-8%/year through the 20’s to states for renewables and energy efficiency
programs; approximately 2%/year through 2025 to the automobile industry for
electric vehicles and other advanced technology and deployment; 1% for “Clean
Energy Innovation Centers;” 5% to prevent tropical deforestation; 2% for
domestic adaptation and 2% for international adaptation to the negative impacts
of a changing climate; and ½ of a percent for worker assistance and job
training. These figures are generally for the first 10 years of the program;
most are increased after that first 10 year period. -Penalties: There is a penalty
established for any covered entity that does not have sufficient emissions
credits to cover its actual emissions. The penalty is “twice the fair market
value of emissions allowances established for emissions occurring in the
calendar year for which emission allowances were due.” It is possible, given the
ups and downs of markets and product prices, that there could be years when
fossil fuel companies can make more money by using more carbon-based fuels than
they have permits for and then paying the penalty. -National Academy of Sciences Review: Provision is made
for an overall review of the entire program and how well it is working by the
National Academy of Sciences. This is a good thing, but not so good is that this
is projected as happening every four years. Given the accelerating pace of
climate change, as indicated most dramatically by what is happening with Arctic
sea ice, a more frequent assessment by NAS seems called for. After the NAS
assessment, the President is charged with submitting legislation to Congress
based on NAS recommendations as far as any acceleration or adjustments to the
overall program. -Renewables and Efficiency: There is a
renewable electricity/energy efficiency requirement for states of 20% by 2020, a
minimum of 12% renewables and 8% efficiency. This is a reduction from a roughly
40%-by-2025 proposed renewables/efficiency standard in the initial draft
discussion document put out by Henry Waxman, chair of the committee, on March
31<sup>st</sup>. The Energy Information Administration, a government agency, has
estimated that as a result of existing state laws and other factors, there could
be more renewable energy generated without this federal renewable energy
provision than with it. If this provision is passed it would supercede existing
state renewable energy and efficiency laws which exist in about half the states.
Concerns have also been expressed about the exemption of nuclear power and coal
with carbon capture and storage from the baseline against which renewable energy
increases are measured. A more positive feature is that the bill does call for
the development by several federal departments of plans for the siting of
offshore renewable energy facilities, a potentially huge source of clean
energy. -Hybrids and Electric Cars: The document
calls for various kinds of infrastructure support for the development of plug-in
hybrids and electric vehicles, such as plug-in hybrid charging stations,
retooling factories to manufacture electric vehicles and purchase of
batteries. -Energy Efficiency: There is a broad
program of support for energy efficiency standards and investments across the
economy and society. This seems to be one of the strongest aspects of the
overall piece of legislation. Building codes are improved 30% by 2010 and 50% by
2016. $500-$3000 per household is
provided for families which weatherize their homes to reduce energy use at least
20%. Similar financial support is also provided for weatherization of commercial
buildings. Up to $10,000 per house is provided for installation of renewable
energy technology. Natural gas utilities must use 1/3 of the value of their free
permits for energy efficiency programs. -EPA Restrictions: There are serious
restrictions on the power of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to do its
job. According to an analysis by the Sierra Club, the bill “eliminates EPA
authority under the Clean Air Act to set performance standards for CO2 from
sources covered under the cap, including coal-fired power plants. The bill does
set modest standards for new coal plants. Additionally, the bill eliminates the
existing requirement that new and modified sources of ghg’s undergo a
case-by-case review process that requires stringent ghg limits.” The bill
prohibits any greenhouse gas from being listed as a “criteria pollutant” or a
“hazardous air pollutant.” These are all very problematic
provisions. -Green Jobs and Worker Assistance: There
is little in the bill that is directly about green jobs or worker assistance.
There is an increase in funding for the Green Jobs Act from $125 million to $150
million. 1/2 of a percent of the funds from the program for the first 10 years
will go to help workers displaced as a result of the transition away from fossil
fuels. -Smart Grid: The bill enacts various
measures to strengthen the development of a “smart grid,” which means the
modernization of our electricity and transmission system so that it can better
use digital information and technology, better integrate small-scale renewable
energy, incorporate “demand response” and energy efficiency mechanisms, and in
other ways strengthen the capacity of the electrical grid to be more energy
efficient, consumer-friendly and effective. -Mass Transportation: This is very
little in this legislation that is directly supportive of mass transportation.
It does require states and localities with more than 200,000 people to establish
goals for reducing ghg’s in the transportation area, with little clarity about
the financing available for this work or accountability
mechanisms. -State Powers: The bill bars states that
have already passed such legislation to implement or enforce a cap on greenhouse
gas emissions between 2012 to 2017, but it does allow regulation of emissions by
other means during this period. -Adaptation: Funding for both domestic
and international adaptation to the negative impacts of a changing climate is
provided for. For the first 10 years 2% of the funds raised from the program
will go for international adaptation and the transfer of clean energy technology
to developing countries. Another 2% for the first 10 years will go to domestic
adaptation, including in the areas of public health, state programs,
safeguarding wildlife habitats, protecting endangered species and preserving
freshwater and coastal ecosystems. A number of environmental groups believe
these percentages are too weak, particularly for international adaptation and
technology transfer. There is no question but that there are
positive things in this piece of legislation. There are also many negative
things, some of which environmental, climate, labor and other groups will
attempt to correct as this bill moves through various House committees and onto
the House floor. There are alternative approaches to the
cap-and-trade model. One of them which the Chesapeake Climate Action Network
supports is what is known as cap-and-dividend (http://www.capanddividend.org). The other main
one is a carbon tax and dividend approach (http://www.carbontax.org).
In Solidarity,
Rachel Dawn
--
MS Candidate 2010, Specializing in Sustainability Management & Government Relations
Senator Elect, University Student Senate
Milano, The New School for Management and Urban Policy
Co-Founder, Net Impact New School University
Program/Policy Consultant, New York Restoration Project
201.707.6558
“A
nation that continues year after year to spend more on military defense
than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual
death.”-Martin Luther King, Jr.
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