Thursday, January 24, 2013

Overcoming Stephen Harper and the Sophisticated Objection

Loosing the Gordion Knot

We hear it all the time, especially from our Conservative government.   Yes, climate change is a real threat, and, yes, something must be done about it, but unilateral action by any country won't work and will, instead, impose unjustifiable costs to the economy.  At the end of the day they use it to justify doing nothing.

Writing in Bloomberg, Cass Sunstein, former administrator of the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, lays out the case for the United States to act unilaterally.

Unilateral action by the U.S. would do nothing about the global stock and little about the global flow. China is now the biggest greenhouse-gas emitter on earth, and in developing nations, emissions are growing at an extraordinary rate. The Sophisticated Objection is that if the U.S.acts on its own, it will impose costs on the American people without seriously addressing the climate problem. What’s the point?

It’s a legitimate question, and there are three good answers. 

The first is that if international action is to occur, the U.S. has to help to lead it, through deeds as well as words. In recent years, international negotiations have stalled. That is partly because, as those who offer the Sophisticated Objection emphasize, developing nations (above all China) have been reluctant to make serious commitments to reduce their greenhouse-gas emissions. But another reason for the lack of progress is that nations haven’t yet been convinced that the U.S. is itself willing to make such commitments. True, action by the U.S. can’t guarantee an international accord. But it may be a necessary condition for such an accord, and it would certainly increase the likelihood that other nations will act as well.

The second answer to those who oppose unilateral action has to do with the need for technological innovation. The critics rightly point out that making significant reductions in greenhouse-gas emissions won’t be cheap. One reason is that many nations, including the U.S., remain dependent on fossil fuels, which are major contributors to these emissions. If the world is to make serious progress in combating climate change, we will have to innovate to develop energy sources that are clean and less expensive. Regulation will likely spur such innovation.

In protecting the ozone layer, regulatory requirements did exactly that, leading to unexpectedly cheap substitutes for ozone-depleting chemicals. True, climate change is far more challenging, but there is no question that regulation would accelerate current efforts to develop cleaner energy sources. 

The third argument against the Sophisticated Objection is that it plays down the benefits of purely unilateral action. In 2009, a technical working group of the U.S. government, building on established scientific models, came up with economic values for “the social cost of carbon,” meaning the cost of a ton of carbon dioxide emissions. In calculating the benefits and costs of regulations designed to reduce carbon dioxide emissions, many federal agencies have been using the working group’s central number, which is $22.80 in 2013 dollars.

...No sensible person thinks that the U.S. should spend billions of dollars to achieve small greenhouse gas reductions. Some imaginable initiatives should be rejected because they would cost too much and deliver too little. At the same time, the U.S. should not overlook opportunities to produce significant emissions reductions at justifiable expense. Recent regulations have easily passed that test. Future initiatives should be embraced when they do so as well.

Those who make the Sophisticated Objection are correct to emphasize that to limit the risks of climate change, many nations will be required to act. But unilateral action should not be avoided for that reason. On the contrary, pragmatic steps by the planet’s most important nation are likely to help spur action by others -- and to lead to technological advances that will ultimately be in the interest of the world as a whole.





2 comments:

  1. The Gordian knot untied:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5nfmZfEV_wA

    ReplyDelete
  2. Alexander cheated but a political sword is needed to untie or cut the Harpinion knot and send Harpo back to Calgary.

    ReplyDelete