We should recognize that a global emission trading scheme will only sabotage real efforts to reduce emissions. It's a scheme designed by neocons and polluting industries, who aren't interested in reducing emissions, but who seek to exploit the situation in order to sell nuclear plants to developing countries, which will have to be paid for with emission credits that will in turn let polluters in developed countries off the hook. The neocons see this as an opportunity to send troops abroad to supervise operation of plants and shipments of uranium, nuclear waste, etc. It's a recipe for dictatorship and for global economic, social and environmental disaster.
Global commitment, local action
Instead, we should reach a international agreement that makes more sense, and we should reach this agreement soon, at the latest in Copenhagen in 2009. This agreement should merely set binding annual reduction targets that each country should meet. This agreement should let decisions how to achieve those targets be taken locally, while preparing for trade sanctions against those who fail to reach their targets.
It should be left to local communities to each decide on the technicalities of how to reduce their emissions. After all, conditions differ from place to place; some technologies will work better in one area than in another area. There are many ways to, say, produce clean and safe energy; wind turbines may be attractive in some areas, solar energy may become more prominent elsewhere, while yet another area may predominantly exploit geothermal power; many areas may also prefer to import electricity. Similarly, hydrogen may well become the dominant way to power ships, while cars will predominantly drive on battery power in future.
What policies work best?
Meanwhile, we should be discussing what are the most effective policy instruments to both discourage sales of products that cause emissions and encourage sales of better alternatives.
Feebates are most effective
A framework of feebates is in my view most effective, each with fees imposed on a specific type of product and with proceeds in each case used to fund rebates on local supply of better alternatives. Such a feebate policy only needs to insist that alternatives are clean and safe - market mechanisms can best sort out what works best where.
A framework of feebates is the most effective way to facilitate reductions, because feebates have a double impact, in that they impose a fee on whatever needs to be discouraged, while then using the proceeds of these fees to fund rebates on better alternatives. Market mechanisms can best sort out which products deserve to get rebates.
Different areas can implement feebates in different ways. This flexibility makes feebates attractive for areas with unique circumstances that make a universal policy less applicable. Feebates can target whatever product causes most emissions in the respective area and establish a shift to the better alternatives available in each area.
Feebates are budget-neutral - proceeds of fees can accumulate in a trust, thus creating a pool of money from where rebates can be paid on a first-come-first-go basis. If needed, the trust can take out loans to ensure early payment of rebates.
Implementing FeeBates
Feebates are most effective when applied locally, i.e. by using the proceeds of fees collected in an area to support the better alternatives that are supplied in that same area. That way, most money will be used to make changes where they are needed most.
Instead of prescribing a specific technology, a feebate policy should simply encourage better alternatives, e.g. by insisting that alternatives should be clean, safe and otherwise acceptable to the community. A good feebate policy will optimize market mechanisms and respect consumer choice, which will further increase the overall effectiveness of the policy and minimize bureaucratic overhead.
Fees are best calculated as a percentage added to the price of a product. Similarly, rebates are best calculated as a percentage of the sales price. This also increases the effectiveness of the policy by minimizing bureaucratic administrative overhead.
Fees can be initially low, say 10% of the sales price. Especially when alternatives still have little marketshare, such a 10% fee will create a huge pool of money from where rebates can be funded. Rebates can then be high, say 50% or even more, to facilitate a gradual but swift shift to better alternatives. Once the shift takes place, percentages could change, i.e. fees could be increased, while rebates could decrease. This way, the feebate will phase itself out as the shift eventuates.
Proposed FeeBatesOver the years, I have proposed a number of feebates, including:
- a 10% fee on sales of new gasoline cars, with rebates on local sales of zero emission vehicles;
- a 10% fee on sales of fossil fuel, with rebates on purchase and installation of local facilities that produce energy in safe and clean ways;
- a 10% fee on sales of building and construction work that uses polluting concrete (i.e. that contributes to global warming), with rebates on local purchases of clean concrete;
- a 10% fee on sales of fertilizers, with rebates on local sales of agrichar (or biochar); and
- a 10% fee on sales of meat, with rebates and vouchers on vegan-organic meals served in local restaurants.
Sam Carana


Comments: 28
The solution is found at www.nopom.info or you can read Invisible Hand here on gather.
I'm going to continue to disagree with you on "feebates". If the economy were more stable and everyone had a reasonable income it would be great but the costs would disproportionately affect those who had the least dollars to spend. Lower income persons cannot afford these addidional costs.
There's no additional cost for those who choose better alternatives, Debra. Instead, they will receive rebates, which proportionally benefits lower incomes more.
As I said, Klaus, such decisions should be taken locally. But remember that shifting from oil to solar and wind energy will be better for the trade balance, will create many domestic jobs, will be more healthy, as well as help the environment. This shift is exactly what we need to get out of the financial crisis.
And we won't be fighting "resource wars" in the mideast - or anywhere else (Russia, anyone?).
Google CEO, Eric Schmidt said in an interview with NPR, "The next wars are all going to be about oil, aren't they? Why don't we remove that from the equation? And as a byproduct, really make a dent in this climate-change issue."
Also, Thomas Freidman, suggests that as we become less depend on mideast oil, and those economies begin to decline due to nearly exclusive dependence on oil exports, those countries are going to have to invest in their people, thereby diminishing the influence of terrorism.
So the payback on such investments (feebates, even at 10%) are far reaching and profound. You have to look at them in a very broad context.
Thanks!
bottom line
bottom line
bottom line.
FINE!
Find the "bottom line", and hit them there. If the almighty dollar rules, then let them pay, through the nose, and this time -- for Heaven's sake -- do not allow their lobbyists to slip in legislation/loopholes to pass the costs along to the taxpayer OR to enable them to do anything to slip out of getting HIT HARD on that bottom line, like offshore accounts -- WHATEVER they do to get out of paying.
As I said, it is high time to stop pussyfooting around with this. When are Americans going to stop getting tired of being brutalized and whipped, and do something about what is happening to them?
This will only result in an increase in the cost of energy as people would have to pay for the speculators that would drive up the cost of carbon emissions. It would do nothing to limit greenhouse gases.
This is a snake's nest.
I agree, Gary, trading emission credits is too prone to reward polluters and speculators. The most effective way to reduce emissions is by imposing fees on polluting products and use the proceeds to fund local alternatives that are clean and safe.
Here in Canberra, Australia, stamp duty for new light vehicles now differs depending on their rating, based on carbon dioxide emissions and air pollution. Vehicles with a good environmental performance receive a duty discount, while vehicles with the best rating pay no stamp duty at all. Vehicles with below average environmental performance will now pay more. For more details, see Green Vehicle Stamp Duty.
Many, even Obama, are proposing a cap and trade scheme. On the other hand, when a carbon tax was approved in Quebec more than a year ago, it was supported by a company like Exxon, who said carbon taxes were preferable to emissions-trading systems like the one adopted by the European Union, according to a Bloomberg report.
I guess we'll have to wait until the elections are over, before the debate on this will start for real.
There are also the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) in the northeastern states and the Midwestern Greenhouse Gas Reduction Accord in the mid-western states of the United States.
I'm sure you're aware, Gilbert, that the Kyoto Protocol is set to expire in 2012. A new global agreement is now being negotiated to go well beyond 2012. I'm convinced that an agreement as suggested in the article is the most effective way to reduce emissions.
Emissions trading will NOT reduce emissions, instead it will maximise emissions, as traders will try and see that every single emission credit gets used somewhere. It's the cap that is supposed to reduce emissions, but if the cap is set too high or not policed well, there will be little or no overall reductions in emissions. The cost of administering, policing and enforcing such caps is often ignored. Politicians will start bickering about who gets allocated more emissions, without taking efforts to encourage industries to develop better alternatives.
It makes more sense to impose feebates, i.e. fees on specific items (e.g. gas guzzlers, fossil fuel), while using the proceeds to fund rebates on better alternatives in that area. Such feebate policies are far more effective in achieving the desired shift to safe and clean technologies.
Local application of feebates allows each area to choose the type of feebates that are most appropriate for the area. Feebates can be more easily accommodated within the existing local system, whereas cap-and-trade is an administrative and political nightmare that is doomed to be less effective in reducing emissions.