« Clinton, Obama and double standards | Main | The do-nothing Congress »

Trade and climate

21 Dec 2007 07:11 pm

An article by Yale's Judith Chevalier in last Sunday's New York Times slipped by me, until Greg Mankiw's blog redirected me to it. The piece discusses an issue that has so far received little attention, but which is likely to loom much larger before long: the trade-policy implications of unilateral (or at any rate, imperfectly co-ordinated) US action on climate change. Suppose the US adopts a cap-and-trade regime for carbon, as promised by Hillary Clinton, or as envisaged by the Lieberman-Warner Climate Security Act (yes, make this a security issue, why not) currently before Congress. Also suppose that China does nothing to curb its carbon emissions. Then Chinese imports, it will be argued, will have an unfair cost advantage in US markets.

One goal of a tradeable permit system is to force consumer prices for goods to reflect the harm that the production of those goods causes the planet. For example, if a television were made using a high-emission process, the factory would have to buy many carbon permits, driving up the TV’s price. A television made in a low-emission factory would require fewer permits, lowering its relative price. Consumers, of course, would have an incentive to choose the TV from the low-emission factory, and all factories would have an incentive to lower emissions.

A problem would arise, however, if a producer needed to buy permits to make televisions in a country with a carbon cap, while no permits were required in a country without a cap. The television from the country without the cap would be cheaper, consumers would prefer it, and there would be no economic incentive to cut emissions. Environmentalists call this the “leakage problem”: just as a balloon squeezed at one end will bulge at the other, emissions caps applied in only some economies will lead to emissions surges in others.

A provision in the current version of the Climate Security Act links responsibility to carbon consumption, not production. This idea derives from a joint proposal by the American Electric Power Company and the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers. The provision requires that importers of goods from countries without carbon caps obtain permits for the emissions resulting from the goods’ production. While this requirement could be used to protect American jobs from foreign competition, if handled equitably, it could provide an elegant solution to the leakage problem.

If the United States adopted a tradable permit system that treated emissions from domestic producers identically to emissions associated with imported goods, then products that are more emissions-intensive, whether domestic or imported, would require more permits and thus be more expensive. Producers in the United States and abroad would have an incentive to reduce greenhouse gases to make their goods more competitive.

Greg points out that the carbon-tax equivalent of this proposal would be border adjustment of tax rates--that is, carbon-based import tariffs and export subsidies. Either approach, as Ms Chevalier puts it, "would face scrutiny under current trade agreements". Given prevailing anti-trade sentiment (no disrespect to  the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers), the risk that this idea might be co-opted as part of a wider retreat from liberal trade is plain. But if the US is going to get serious about carbon abatement, as seems likely if not next year then in 2009, the issue will have to  be confronted.

A supplementary reading on the scale of the challenge. Daniel Gros points out on Vox that the price of coal has fallen sharply relative to the price of oil, which presages (other things equal) a huge expansion in global coal-fired electricity generation--the most carbon-intensive kind.

It is often thought that high oil prices could contribute to lowering CO2 emissions because they make energy more expensive, thus encouraging lower energy consumption. But this view overlooks that a high price of oil relative to coal encourages the substitution of a hydrocarbon with pure carbon, thus increasing the carbon intensity of energy use. The supply of coal is abundant, especially in the new emerging energy giants China and India, and relatively elastic. This implies that the price of coal is likely to stay low, thus encouraging an increase in the carbon intensity of energy use everywhere. Reaching the goal of reducing CO2 emissions will thus be even more difficult than generally assumed if oil (and thus also gas) prices remain at present levels.

The latest World Energy Outlook from the International Energy Agency already forecasts on a business-as-usual scenario an increase in the share of coal in global energy use. But over the last five years business has not been as usual as one half of the increase in global energy consumption has come from coal, prompting acceleration of global CO2 emissions. Sustained high hydrocarbon prices will intensify this trend, making it highly unlikely that the goal to reduce CO2 emissions can be reached.

Comments (3)

U.S. Senate Report: Over 400 Prominent Scientists Disputed Man-Made Global Warming Claims in 2007
http://tinyurl.com/2dv6nz

I recall correctly - smoking went down drastically over the last three decades. Was it merely the tobacco tax - no - it was education and awareness.

A tax or a cap&trade can but do not necessarily have to trigger the fastest possible technology shift. In this case the aim of the game is NOT to raise some government funding efficiently for some strange externalities such as cancer from smoking. NO - this a different species.

We need a technology change in order to survive (pleasantly). It is not about efficient government funding - it is about the fastest road to market.

This is best achieved by a change in spending and not a tax shift!!!

First - either cut subsidies of polluter or at least take them into account when mentioning things like tax and cap. What good is it if the polluters get more subsidies than they are being taxed? How should this lead to the fastest possible technology change?

Second - before any taxation takes place - try to shift spending to sustainable living. Consider the same subsidies that oil, nuclear, livestock and coal and the utilities have enjoyed in the past for the survival of our children. Offer the same amount directly for any clean kWh. E.g 30cent/kWh for 15 years but with a cap on the Terra Watts needed. Once 20-30% of energy are clean - that program has reached its end. Not like the $285 billion in saturated fat subsidies that continue when everybody is a millionaire.

This will have many important and essential side effects. Bio-mass, ethanol, coal etc are not clean. They have emissions and land and water use to account for. Raising costs of oil (due to supply shortage) would indeed balance the emissions cap & trade and tax out. A shift in spending would not. It would also be far easier for trade talks to only have clean kWh subsidized rather than "industries".

I do not have a problem with "punishing" the dirty rich but I see a better case for "rewarding" the clean poor. Especially given this specific end-goal.

As we speak - not a single energy market is free and transparent. Taxing subsidized industries is a strange fruit to swallow.

I am truly surprised that if the spending side is discussed - people talk about government regulated R&D. Why oh why? What is wrong here? Who would want such a statist approach? Why not subsidize every clean kWh and let the market do its working?

Germany has started doing so successfully and the economy has the same hourly productivity and compensation for workers while being 50% more energy efficient than the US.

Why are people afraid of spending shifts and not afraid of tax shifts? Why are people fine to tax the subsidized? Why are people fine to punish but not to reward - especially given the end-goal?

Seriously - there have been smart people discussing this subject. The Economist, Greg Mankiw, CATO, Reason, etc etc... why has nobody mentioned a spending shift??? PLEASE EXPLAIN??? Is it that the farm bill has proven that special interest groups in the US control spending 100%? So everybody of these supposedly smart economist agrees to look for the lost keys where there is light? Why is everybody pretending that only "tax" is linked to markets and not also the "stuff" that the oil and nuclear industries have been receiving for decades?

I could continue to ask this question for ages - as I have done in the past.

It reminds me of the poverty discussion. Yes - it helps the poor tremendously that we punish the rich... nooot!!!!

Dr Coles

You are absolutely right - there is no man-made environmental challenge!

You might also enjoy the following.

Christian Right Lobbies To Overturn Second Law Of Thermodynamics


Bush Acknowledges Existence Of Carbon Dioxide

Post a comment

By using this service you agree not to post material that is obscene, harassing, defamatory, or otherwise objectionable. Although The Atlantic does not monitor comments posted to this site (and has no obligation to), it reserves the right to delete, edit, or move any material that it deems to be in violation of this rule.


Copyright © 2007 by The Atlantic Monthly Group. All rights reserved.