Eakinomics: Biden,
Climate-Change Policy, and the Economy
Policies toward clean energy, greenhouse gas emissions, and climate change
are of increasing importance across the electorate. As a reflection of this
importance, presidential candidate Joe Biden has promised to take executive
action on “Day 1.” In her analysis of these proposals, AAF's Ewelina Czapla
notes
that the day one orders include:
- Recommitting to the Paris
Agreement on climate change;
- Developing methane pollution
limits for oil and gas operations;
- “Greening” the federal
government’s facilities and vehicles;
- Modifying the Clean Air
Act’s fuel economy standards to ensure 100 percent of newly sold light
and medium-duty vehicles will be electric;
- Increasing the use of
biofuels;
- Creating efficiency
standards for appliances and buildings;
- Requiring all federal
permitting decisions to include a climate change analysis;
- Requiring climate change
disclosures from publicly traded companies;
- Conserving 30 percent of
America’s lands and waters by 2030;
- Closing the Arctic National
Wildlife Refuge to drilling and establishing more national parks and
monuments;
- Banning new drilling on
public lands; and
- Accounting for climate
costs in royalties and doubling offshore wind by 2030 by developing
renewables on federal lands.
These proposed actions are interesting from two
perspectives. First, as noted by Czapla, “While Biden’s climate ‘year
one’ policies emphasize increased innovation in clean energy and
industrial products and processes, little of that is seen in his ‘day one’
proposals.” Indeed, the list of executive actions includes some
sweeping and costly mandates that have nothing to do with innovation:
banning drilling on public lands, “greening” (by mandate) government fleets,
requiring climate-change disclosures, and requiring a climate-change
analysis for all permitting applications. It is simply internally
inconsistent to argue for innovation as a low-cost way to achieve emissions
reductions and start out with these initiatives.
It is also inconsistent with the Biden campaign's arguments on economic
growth policy. As Eakinomics noted yesterday, the Biden clean energy plan
is advertised as one element of his proposals that will increase the pace
of economic growth. The more that this plan is implemented by
regulatory fiat, the less this assertion of future growth is
true. Now, it is true that Biden intends to have large taxpayer spending as
well. But we have seen this movie before; the Obama years combined “green”
spending in the recovery act with burdensome regulations and produced poor
growth. Nothing looks different this time around.
Climate is an important issue. It should be important enough to merit an
internally consistent policy that is desirable on its merits and not
disingenuously offered as a means to economic growth or some other policy
goal.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment