Albuquerque Journal

Carbon fee can make the difference

With it we can improve environmen­t and boost economy

- BY SUSAN ATKINSON DURANGO RESIDENT Susan Atkinson is a member of Citizens Climate Lobby, an internatio­nal, non-partisan, grassroots organizati­on committed to creating the political will for a livable world.

Ever tried to lose weight? Old habits of behavior are hard to break, even when doing so is in our best interest. We need a powerful motivation to move us toward even a positive goal. This is the idea behind “Carbon Fee and Dividend.” We all know we need to transition away from our high-carbon lifestyle for the sake of the planet — reducing greenhouse gas emissions is the key to addressing global warming and scientists say this needs to happen, yesterday. So, what can motivate us to change our longtime, gas-guzzling habits? I once had an economics professor say, “If you want to change a person’s behavior, talk to their wallet.” That’s what Carbon Fee and Dividend does, and here’s how it works:

1. A fee is placed on fossil fuels at the source — well, mine, port of entry. This fee starts at $15 per ton of CO2 equivalent emissions and increases each year by $10, so the first year we would see about a 15-cent increase in a gallon of gas.

2. One hundred percent of this net fee is returned to American households on an equal basis. Under this plan about two-thirds of all households would break even or receive more in their dividend checks than they would pay in higher fuel prices due to the fee, thereby protecting middle- and lower-income households.

3. A border tariff adjustment is placed on goods imported from, or exported to, countries who have not placed an equivalent price on carbon. This adjustment would both discourage businesses from relocating to where they can emit more CO2 and encourage other nations to adopt an equivalent price on carbon.

A predictabl­y increasing carbon price will send a clear market signal which will push entreprene­urs and investors toward a green economy. This is where the American gifts of creativity and ingenuity come into play. Venture capitalist­s and banks seeing a predictabl­e price signal will create breakthrou­ghs in innovation that in some cases are unimaginab­le at this point. This is a win-win solution for an urgentlywa­rming climate crisis.

The road to improved energy efficiency and clean renewable energy is paved with new job creation and economic stimulus. Spending $1 million in oil and gas output directly creates less than one job, spending $1 million in coal produces 1.9 jobs. Compare that to building retrofits for energy efficiency, seven jobs per million; mass transit services, 11 jobs; building the smart grid, 4.3; wind, 4.6; solar, 5.4; and biomass power generation, 7.4. The Department of Energy predicts, using conservati­ve estimates, that by 2030 there will be over half a million wind power jobs alone. The green economy already supports more jobs than the fossil fuel economy and has for years. The writing is on the wall: The key to creating American jobs now and in the future is not investment in fossil fuels, it is investment in the green economy.

A Carbon Fee and Dividend proposal could garner bipartisan support in Congress. Conservati­ves prefer free market solutions to drive the market with less government regulation and no additional taxes that grow the size of government. As more conservati­ve leaders embrace a revenueneu­tral carbon fee, more conservati­ve voters will recognize how this aligns with their worldview. This could change the game for Republican policymake­rs: denying climate reality would gradually become less rewarding. Liberals would be wise to agree to roll back some emission regulation­s in favor of accomplish­ing those goals and then some.

Reducing the threat of a warmer climate can save our country the agony and expense of sea level rise, extreme weather events like hurricanes, droughts, wildfires, crop failure, land loss of livestock and human lives. A carbon fee and dividend may be our best chance for a livable world.

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