Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Not every climate policy is a good one

The Transporta­tion Climate Initiative, rightly rejected by Connecticu­t and Rhode Island legislatur­es, was deeply flawed

- By Jonathan Shaer Jonathan Shaer is director of the New England Convenienc­e Store and Energy Marketers Associatio­n.

The furious reaction of environmen­tal advocates who followed the Rhode Island and Connecticu­t legislatur­es’ decision not to take up bills on the Transporta­tion Climate Initiative (TCI) was unsurprisi­ng. After all, rare is the climate policy they won’t support or deem existentia­lly critical. But these state legislatur­es should be commended, not criticized, for recognizin­g the deep flaws of the program and not bowing to the manufactur­ed frenzy.

The truth is not every climate policy is a good one, and TCI is one such policy.

Concocted by the Georgetown Climate Center, a Washington, D.C., think tank, without any industry input and marketed by state environmen­tal department­s as a pro-climate fee on gasoline suppliers, TCI, in reality, is nothing more than a money-raising scheme that forever jettisons legislativ­e oversight on the price and availabili­ty of gasoline and diesel.

TCI would require suppliers of motor fuel to purchase allowance credits for every gallon of motor fuel they sell into participat­ing states. Each year for the next 10 years, allowance credit availabili­ty is reduced by 3%, making gasoline and diesel more scarce.

That means we can expect supply outages if consumptio­n doesn’t fall by at least 3% per year. And wouldn’t you know it, the United States Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion projects only a 6% reduction in consumptio­n, meaning we can expect such outages sooner rather than later.

Supporters of TCI are quick to attack the motor fuel industry, legislativ­e leaders on both sides of the aisle and industry lobbyists whose role it is to educate our elected officials, so they make informed decisions. But because the industry didn’t have a role in the developmen­t of TCI, we are now forced to point out its flaws. And there are quite a few.

One pro-TCI op-ed in the CT Mirror confronted Senate President Martin Looney for “failing future generation­s of Connecticu­t by his complete lack of understand­ing on the science of the climate and buying the Republican talking points that this is a tax.” The piece also said he “should have acted on behalf of the disenfranc­hised instead of protecting the powerful gas lobby.”

Caustic words, but does this person understand how the program actually works? Have they read the overly complex 160-plus page model rule? Do they care to understand the complex and hypercompe­titive fueling industry? Or would they care or be impacted when motor fuel outages occur because of a flawed allowance auction process? Highly doubtful. Fortunatel­y, our elected leaders have a responsibi­lity to suppress emotion, holistical­ly evaluate legislatio­n and determine whether the consequenc­es are worth it.

Everyone should be wary of TCI, because everyone uses motor fuels and most will for the foreseeabl­e future. It’s how we get to work, visit our parents and children, and how most products and services get to us. TCI has not been well-thought out and lacks a shared vision on how best to effectivel­y reduce transporta­tion sector emissions.

No program, particular­ly one that impacts a critical infrastruc­ture product, should require so much spin to gain support. But that is exactly what proponents have been doing for the past year. Fortunatel­y, the instincts of the Rhode Island and Connecticu­t legislatur­es are spot on with their skepticism. We owe them a great deal of gratitude, not grief.

 ?? COURANT FILE PHOTO ?? Traffic jams the northbound lane of Route 161 in East Lyme near the I-95 junction.
COURANT FILE PHOTO Traffic jams the northbound lane of Route 161 in East Lyme near the I-95 junction.

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