The Republicans Who Want Trump to Fight Climate Change

The Atlantic

The Republicans Who Want Trump to Fight Climate Change

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Meet the eco-right. Not everyone interested in curbing climate change is tearing their hair out about Donald Trump's election. Though the president-elect seems to be packing his administration with climate deniers and fossil fuel industry veterans, a small, unconventional band of environmentalists sees potential. We hope, says Bob Inglis, that Donald Trump sees an opportunity to complete the sentence this way: Richard Nixon went to China, Bill Clinton signed welfare reform, and Donald Trump did climate change. In the last several years, Inglisa former Congressman from South Carolinahas emerged as a spokesperson of sorts for the eco-right, a suite of think tanks, activists and politicos making the case for a free-market approach to environmentalism, grounded in conservative values. He now serves as the Executive Director of RepublicEn, a small advocacy outfit of self-described energy optimists, keen to dispel rumors that the GOP is the province of climate denialism. Ingliss optimism notwithstanding, climate-change activists have ample reason to fear a Trump administration. The president-elects pick to run the EPA has spent years challenging the agency in court. And his Secretary of State nominee, the former ExxonMobil CEO Rex Tillerson, could green light new cross-border pipelines like the Keystone XL, along with new partnerships between oil companies from Houston to Moscow. A previously squashed $500 billion Arctic oil deal between Exxon and Rosneft, a state-run Russian oil firm, might well be on the table again if Trump lifts Obama-era sanctions against the country. For Inglis and his colleagues at RepublicEN, though, the cabinet picks causing other greens to lose sleep have been welcome additions. If Rex Tillerson led Exxon Mobil away from the disputation of climate science, perhaps he can lead the Administration away from disputation too, Inglis says, and he takes Tillerson's support for a carbon tax as an encouraging sign. When it comes to climate action, Inglis adds, the environmental leftencompassing everyone from Al Gore to anti-fracking activistshave been steering the conversation about climate change for too long. Its time to let ExxonMobil drive, he says. Inglis might seem out of step with the climate movements increasingly anti-corporate bent, defined by efforts like fossil-fuel divestment and the battle against the Dakota Access pipeline. But members of the eco-right see little contradiction between fossil-fuel companies bottom-lines and a low-carbon future. Like other members of the eco-right, Inglis believes that efficient markets are the ultimate problem solver, and he has a general skepticism about all but the most basic of regulations. The essence of [the eco-right] is all about internalizing negative externalities, Inglis says, referencing the hidden expenses of carbons seepage into the atmosphere. He says that polluters are socializing their soot and climate costs. By making them pay and stripping out all energy subsidies, the thinking goes, firms will shift their business models accordingly, weeding out wasteful fuels, making the Paris Agreement and Obamas Clean Power Plan superfluous. Our view of the Clean Power Plan is that its precisely the worst way to deal with climate change, Inglis explains. UN agreements and regulatory pushes, Inglis argues, represent the kind of policies which keep conservatives out of the conversation on climate, because they are both too complicated and too confrontational. I think the path in is mostly through the business community, where unlikely partners could really step forward and say, Theres a free enterprise solution to this. Dont give us regulations. Dont try to tell us how to run our business. Just internalize the negative externality and we will deal with it, he says. The holy grail of Ingliss brand of eco-conservatism is a revenue-neutral, border-adjustable carbon tax. This kind of pricing mechanism offers a more elegant solution to the eco-right than the patchwork of regulations involved in Obamas landmark climate rule, wherein each state arrives at its own plan. Greens across the political spectrum have long backed versions of a carbon tax as part of a broader slate of emissions-cutting policies, some proposals for which would see dividends given out directly to taxpayers or put toward investments in clean energy. Whats unique about the eco-right position on the tax is their view that it should act as the centerpiece of a climate plan, as opposed to one component among many market-based and regulatory measures. In contrast, when Bernie Sanders and his environmental left ilk advocate for pricing carbon, they tend also to favor putting hard limits on polluters ability to spit greenhouse gases into the air. Key, too, to the eco-right is swapping a carbon tax out for otherssay income or corporate taxesrather than adding the revenue to government coffers. You put a tax on things that you want less of, Inglis says, while allowing the price signal to drive carbon-intensive firms toward natural gas and renewable energy. Importers to the U.S. would also be forced to account for the carbon costs of goods produced abroad. Carbon taxes dont have the best track record. Norway set a reasonably high carbon tax way back in 1991, yet the countrys emissions fell by just 2.3 percent from 1990 to 1999. In British Columbia, where a tax was implemented in 2008, modest emissions reductions have been traced back to the fallout from the Great Recession rather than the tax itself. Its not clear how a new tax would affect corporate behavior. Oil majors have been factoring the likelihood of a price on carbon into their long-term financial planning for some time. Exxon first started accounting for a tax in 2007, setting its estimations for a price as high as $80 per ton in some regions. The companys own spokesperson told the Houston Chronicle in 2016 that curbing warming to a 1.6 degree targetwell below two degrees, per the Paris Agreements textwould drive the cost of carbon up to $2000 per ton, far beyond the level set out in any proposal currently on the table. A failed carbon tax measure in Washington state, for example, would have started the tax at just $10 per ton in 2017, and gradually scaled up to $100 by mid-century. Among the countries already taxing carbon, Australias fee is the equivalent of $23 per metric ton. Chiles will be set at just $5 per ton when it takes effect in 2018, and apply to just 55 percent of emissions. Sweden has one of the highest carbon prices at $150 per ton. It doesn't apply, however, to the countrys electric power providers, and major industries pay about half of the standard tax. Exxons Alan Jeffers affirmed the companys commitment to a revenue-neutral carbon tax in an email to The Atlantic. Among the state and federal proposals the company had studied, Jeffers wrote, The most significant common shortcoming is their failure to pre-empt existing greenhouse gas regulations. The pre-emption issue is important because a properly-designed carbon tax that replaces the existing regime of emissions regulations would be a beneficial policy rationalization. In simpler terms, an Exxon-friendly carbon tax shouldnt just avoid regulations. It should dismantle them, and place as little strain as possible on the companys operations. Exxon has gone so far as to back the Paris Agreement and its ambitious warming target. Even so, regulatory caps on warmingand strict ones at thatmay be the only path to meeting them. A recent study from Oil Change International estimates that nearly 70 percent of already-developed coal, oil and natural gas reservesnot counting the ones fossil-fuel firms are keen to start mininghave to stay buried in perpetuity for a reasonable chance of limiting warming to 2 degrees celsius, the guardrail of acceptable warming that the international community agreed to in Paris. To do that, the historical record seems to favor regulatory action over price signals alone. In contrast to British Columbias 5.3 percent reduction post-tax, Ontarios climate plan was able to scale down emissions by nearly twenty percent over a similar time frame. In large part, they did it by phasing out and then banning coal-fired power plants. Asked if climate policy might need to pose a threat to oil industry profits at some point, Inglis suggested that threat would come instead from Tesla, Elon Musks luxury electric car company. Inglis reasons that if fossil fuels truly are inefficient, the better product will win out on an open market. But its not clear that Tesla will win in the mass market any time soon. The Model 3, the companys first mass market car, intended to be more affordable than its others, will be released next year and start at $35,000. More than 56 percent of American families, meanwhile, have less than $1000 in the bank. Eli Lehrer is another member of the eco-right looking to harness the power of the free market to save the planet. Back in 2012, Lehrer helped lead an exodus of insurance wonks out of the conservative and notoriously climate change-skeptical Heartland Institute. The final straw for him at Heartland was their sponsorship of a series of billboards likening those who believe in climate change to the likes of Charles Manson and Osama bin Laden. As an insurance analyst trained to assess risk, Lehrer could no longer square his research interests with his employers aggressive stance against climate science. He now heads R Street, another think tank produced out of the spin-off. Even if a carbon tax fails to bring down emissions, he says, its still good tax policy. In 2016, the GOPs climate politics are more complicated than they might look at first glance, with growing divides between voters and elected officials. Along with Inglis and Lehrer, 54 percent of Republicans now believe that the climate is changing and that humankind has played a hand in it. By contrast, just 14 of the 247 Republicans in the House of Representatives signed on to the Gibson Resolution, stating the urgency of climate change and the bodys commitment to addressing it. As Lehrer notes, even if Republicans base is starting to believe in climate change, it is still a long way off from becoming a top line issue. For Republicans, in fact, climate change was this years least important issue, according to Gallup. In spite of the polling, Lehrer sees state-level efforts at a carbon tax as very likely in the next four to eight years. If there is to be progress in bringing down emissions under Trump at the federal level, though, Lehrer predicts it will come via policies that have very little to do with the climate outright. Some of the things that the administration seems to have said it will do seem to be pretty good from a climate change perspective, Lehrer says, in particular...increased natural gas development, support for nuclear power and pipelines. Natural gas development, he and the American Petroleum Institute argue, has been key to bringing down emissions in the United States. Yet while natural gas emits relatively little CO2, scientists say that frackings low carbon cost is overshadowed by the amount of methane the process spews into the atmosphere. (As a greenhouse gas, methane is about twenty times as potent as carbon dioxide.) As for pipelines, Lehrer contends they are a safer and more carbon-efficient means of transporting fossil fuels, as compared to train lines. Still, building pipelines in the first place requires that there be fresh batches of oil to flow through them, which means more greenhouse gases. Can I predict what hes going to do? No, I dont think anybody can, Lehrer wrote of the president-elect in an email to The Atlantic . I would not be totally surprised if he were to give some speech announcing that [climate change] was a major crisis, announcing a new Manhattan Project to deal with it. And Id be equally unsurprised if he reiterated his comment that its a hoax perpetrated by the Chinese.