7 states unite on global warming
An initiative like this is a push in the right direction for those in our country that would like to see the United States as a signatory of the Kyoto Protocol. Bush will not sign on if we think all we have to do is wait on him to come around. Hopefully the rest of the nation will come around and see that reducing CO2 emissions is necessary.
We will use a market-based system to curtail harmful CO2 [carbon dioxide] emissions, … reduce our dependence on foreign energy, strengthen our economy, and take meaningful steps in the fight against climate change,” New York Gov. George Pataki, who spearheaded the initiative, proclaimed Tuesday.
Others are openly doubtful.
“While the states signing on the dotted line will trumpet this proposal, the economic reality … ought to be a bucket of icy cold New England water,” says Frank Maisano, a utility industry lobbyist with Bracewell & Giuliani in Washington. “Now comes the hard part:” meeting the pact’s emissions targets and hearing from consumers “paying even higher prices.”
At the heart of the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) is a “cap and trade” program that sets a fixed limit on CO2 emissions. The right to emit the gas then becomes a tradable commodity on Jan 1, 2009. Companies that produce less carbon dioxide can sell their credits to others, giving an economic incentive to cut emissions and sell, rather than buy, credits.
The RGGI caps regional CO2 emissions at 121.3 million short tons through 2014, then cuts them to 10 percent below that level by 2018. Some say the pact will cost households an additional $3 to $24 per year on their electric bills, although the RGGI governors expect new technology and energy efficiency to reduce rates.
Each state in the group – Delaware, Connecticut, Maine, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, and Vermont – will get an emissions budget. Massachusetts and Rhode Island backed out of the agreement, though some predict they’ll join later.
Most companies that emit CO2 prefer cap-and-trade to regulatory approaches, which they say can require installing costly technologies, or to carbon taxes paid to the government. Cap-and-trade has been credited with helping cut power-plant emissions of smog-forming nitrous oxides and sulfur dioxide in the 1990s.
The pact between the seven eastern states is a bit of a thumb in the eye to the Bush administration, which has not endorsed using cap-and-trade for CO2 emissions control (only for mercury emissions). In a global climate-change conference in Montreal last month, the administration instead touted research into emissions-control technology.
Some hope the new pact will be a model for other regions and, in the end, build pressure for a uniform, national program.
“This cap-and-trade idea absolutely will become a national program within a few years,” says Jonathan Naimon of Light Green Advisors, a money management firm in Seattle, who has analyzed the effects of a national cap-and-trade program. “Doomsayers who say we will all be … shivering in the cold because of the cost are overstating the case.”
Oregon, Washington, and California are one possible regional combination. Minnesota, Wisconsin, and other states in the upper Midwest tier are another.
“States will be following suit with their own pacts,” Mr. Naimon says, “and large companies like Dupont and Alcoa will inevitably demand a national cap-and-trade approach because they don’t want a patchwork of different regulations.”






One of the things coming up when reducing CO2 is discussed is nuclear power. Atomic energy may or not be a good path to continue along – I don’t know, and I’ve worked at a U.S. nuke plant for years. But one thing I do know is that we’ll do a better job of deciding our energy future if we understand our energy present.
With that in mind, I’ve written “Rad Decision”, a techno-thriller novel about the American nuclear power industry, which is available at no cost on the Net. This book provides an entertaining and accurate portrait of the nuclear industry today and how a nuclear accident would be handled. The real world of nuclear fun is nothing like any media portrayal, good or bad. You’ll find the novel at RadDecision.blogspot.com.
“I’d like to see Rad Decision widely read.” – Stewart Brand, futurist and founder of The Whole Earth Catalog.
Give Rad Decision a peek, you might enjoy it. (And if you do, please pass the word.) http://RadDecision.blogspot.com
Comment by James Aach — December 23, 2005 @ 2:12 pm