Boston Herald

CARBON EMISSIONS BILL GAINS STEAM

Tax would encourage renewable energy sources in Mass.

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A bill designed to rev up the state’s reliance on renewable energy by imposing a charge on carbon emissions is gaining steam at the State House.

Under the proposal, the state would set a fee based on each ton of carbon dioxide emissions produced by fossil fuels. The tax would start at $20 per ton and increase $5 a year until it reaches $40 per ton. The money would be collected by the Massachuse­tts Department of Revenue.

Thirty percent of revenue collected under the legislatio­n — about $400 million to $600 million a year — would be funneled into a Green Infrastruc­ture Fund to help state agencies and cities and towns pay for transporta­tion, resiliency and renewable energy projects aimed at reducing carbon pollution.

The proposal also calls for rebating 70% of the money to households and businesses to offset most of the increased fuel costs. Backers say low- to middleinco­me households will likely come out ahead — getting back more in rebates than they pay in any cost increases. The bill would also provide higher rebates for less-populated communitie­s where people drive more.

Businesses that face strong competitiv­e pressures from companies outside the state would also receive higher rebates.

Critics of the proposal say it will increase the annual tax bill for Massachuse­tts households by hundreds of dollars in the first year, while costing the state thousands of private sector jobs.

Skeptics also say that any action taken by Massachuse­tts — with a population of close to 7 million, compared with a global population of more than 7 billion — will have virtually no effect on sea level rise or other global impacts of climate change.

“On the matter of climate change, politician­s have reached a point where they will throw anything they have at the problem without a thought to the economic consequenc­es or, for that matter, the actual effects on climate change,” David Tuerck, president of the conservati­ve-leaning Beacon Hill Institute, said in a statement this week.

Backers of the legislatio­n, including the Boston-based nonprofit Climate Xchange, have argued the changes would bring a net positive economic impact for the state.

The group points to a 2014 report prepared for the state Department of Energy Resources that estimated that a carbon fee or tax could lead to 4,000 to 10,000 more jobs by 2030, primarily because the state would be spending less on importing fuels and energy.

Michael Green, the group’s executive director, said opponents of a carbon tax fail to factor in the cost of taking no action.

“Not only does climate change pose a massive risk to our future, other states and countries are passing us as they build toward a low carbon economy,” Green said in a statement.

The bill has more than 100 co-sponsors in the 200member Legislatur­e. It has yet to come up for a vote in either chamber.

Rep. Jennifer Benson (D-Lunenburg), the bill’s sponsor, did not respond to several requests for comment.

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