Eakinomics:
Changing the Climate on Climate Change
Climate change is real and serious. But somehow the perception produced
by the likes of Greta Thunberg, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, and
the Green New Deal is that addressing it is hopeless. Despair is
unwarranted, however. It will be addressed just as soon and effectively
as there is a business reason to do so.
In the end, climate policy is all about innovation — the research,
development, and commercialization of clean energy technologies on a
global scale. What produced the innovations and technical advances that
made the United States and western economies the most affluent and
powerful in the history of the globe? What raised billions of people out
of poverty in China, India, and elsewhere in Asia? What is the hope for
prosperity across the developing world? I promise you it was not a
regulation, resolution, or revolution. It was the economic incentives
embedded in markets and trading. Those same incentives are the hope for
the climate.
Bill Gates made news yesterday
when a solar energy startup he backed — Heliogen — announced a
breakthrough that generates the extreme heat required to make cement,
steel, and other industrial produces. According to CNN, “‘We are rolling
out technology that can beat the price of fossil fuels and also not make
the CO2 emissions,’ Bill Gross, Heliogen’s founder and CEO, told CNN
Business. ‘And that’s really the holy grail.’” See, the “holy grail” is
the ability to take the sales, market, and profits of the fossil fuel
companies and, in doing so, create a cleaner energy portfolio.
Now, you might think that this is just one example (and one that is not
yet fully a reality) that cannot occur on a widespread
basis — that the U.S. business sector cannot innovate and adapt
to mitigate emissions. Think again. A historical example was recently
featured in the movie Ford
v Ferrari, in which Henry Ford II points out that 3 of every
5 bombers flown by the United States in World War II rolled off Ford
production lines. Ford says to Carroll Shelby, “You think
Roosevelt beat Hitler?” The industrial might of the United States beat
Hitler.
There is a role for government policy to set better incentives. One
example is a carbon tax that would generate financial returns to low- or
no-carbon technologies. And there should be good incentives for research
and development and investment so that those technologies are quickly put
into place. At this juncture I do not know what will be done. But I am
quite sure it can be done.
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