USA TODAY International Edition

Opposing View: We don’t need a government- centric approach

- Nicolas Loris Nicolas Loris is the deputy director of The Heritage Foundation’s Roe Institute for Economic Policy Studies.

Climate change is real, and manmade emissions are indeed having an impact. However, many of the subsidies and regulation­s being proposed are costly and ineffective, benefiting the well- connected rather than the planet.

Take President Joe Biden’s expected moratorium on new oil and natural gas leases and drilling permits on federal lands. Western and Gulf Coast states, which rely on energy developmen­t for their economic life, would suffer. The decision would result in less supply, fewer jobs and less revenue coming into these states — money used to fund everything from public schools to conservati­on efforts.

Worse, all the economic costs of the moratorium would buy a change in the Earth’s temperatur­e that’s practicall­y unnoticeab­le. A climate model developed at the National Center for Atmospheri­c Research shows that eliminatin­g all fossil fuel production on federal lands would avert 0.08 degrees Celsius of warming by 2100.

Further, policies that restrict or prohibit natural resource extraction in the United States will not stop or substantia­lly change the global consumptio­n of these resources. Instead, production will shift to places where the standards are not as rigorous, increasing emissions in the process.

This administra­tion’s recent energy actions represent a broader concern with a government- centric approach. They will result in higher prices and are fraught with unintended consequenc­es.

In fact, even if the United States were to achieve a net- zero emissions target at the sacrifice of higher energy bills and a weaker economy, the climate benefit would be minimal, as America constitute­s a relatively small percentage of global emissions.

The Paris Agreement does little to change this, as major emitting developing countries have free reign to emit well into the future without meaningful­ly changing their behavior.

A more effective way for the government to lead is to get out of the way. Reforms should focus on breaking down barriers to innovation, providing timelier permitting for new, cleaner energy projects and reducing trade barriers that stunt the adoption of more efficient technologi­es. We need economic freedom, not more restrictio­ns.

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