Tech Headlines
- Al Gore Appeals to "Collective Will" to Solve Climate Change
- Ban Wants More Than $100 Billion/Yr for Climate Change
- UN May Not Get Final Climate Change Treaty in Copenhagen
- "Smart Grids" & Monitoring Your Power Use
- Stop Eating Meat to Help Save Planet From Climate Change?
- Rockefellers Fund Global-warming Protests as Earth Cools
| Cap and Trade: A Huge, Regressive Tax | | Print | |
| Written by Warren Mass | ||||||||||||||||
| Friday, 27 March 2009 08:00 | ||||||||||||||||
|
The cap: Each large-scale emitter, or company, will have a limit on the amount of greenhouse gas that it can emit. The firm must have an "emissions permit" for every ton of carbon dioxide it releases into the atmosphere. These permits set an enforceable limit, or cap, on the amount of greenhouse gas pollution that the company is allowed to emit.... The trade: It will be relatively cheaper or easier for some companies to reduce their emissions below their required limit than others. These more efficient companies, who emit less than their allowance, can sell their extra permits to companies that are not able to make reductions as easily.... Companies unable to meet their emissions quotas could purchase allowances from other companies that have acquired more permits than they need to account for their emissions. The cost of buying and selling these credits would be determined by the marketplace. Another explanation appears in an article appearing on the Congressional Budget Office website: "Another approach would be to establish a 'cap-and-trade' program: The government would set gradually tightening limits on emissions, issue rights (or allowances) corresponding to those limits, and then allow firms to trade the allowances." A cap and trade system would introduce a new market fabricated by government to regulate the entire economy of mundane markets. Cap and trade is based on the political invention of scarcity. But the problem of determining the ideal supply of emission permits is much like the Federal Reserve's problem of determining the ideal quantity of government money. In both cases, bureaucrats must appeal to dubious mathematical models and pronounce on questions that remain the subject of raging scientific controversy.... The reality of cap and trade will be a typical political market: an expensive ramshackle compromise of competing forces. Another article, "The Costs of Cap-and-Trade," by Raymond J. Keating, chief economist with the Small Business & Entrepreneurship Council, cited the November 8, 2007 testimony of Anne E. Smith, Ph.D. (a nationally known expert in environmental policy assessment and corporate compliance strategy planning) before the Senate's Committee on Environment and Public Works. In her testimony, Dr. Smith presented the findings of a study done by CRA International assessing the economic costs of the "America's Climate Security Act of 2007" (S. 2191) cosponsored by U.S. Senators Joseph Lieberman (I-Conn.) and John Warner (R-Va.). Among Dr. Smith's findings:
We could cite other sources, but the above sampling makes an excellent case that the economic costs of cap and trade would be substantial. Even so, some would argue that any economic cost is worth enduring, if global warming can be forestalled. However, this argument ignores one critical factor: credible scientific evidence has not been presented to prove that any increase in the average temperature of the Earth is anthropogenic — caused by man's activities.
Set as favorite
Email This
Trackback(0)
Comments (5)
![]()
harbinger
said:
|
|
Cap and Trade, the global UN Tax The whole scam is aimed at political control on a global scale by the UN. What greater control can you have than over people's energy use. There are proposals from the UK to have a personal carbon allowance and have a carbon credit card. If you ran out of credits you would have to buy from someone who had spares, or stay home and get cold. It has never been about science...never. People like Maurice Strong have been running this game since the seventies. He brought Al Gore to the party and he has excelled, making himself a massive fortune in the process. |
|
Flu-Bird
said:
|
More hot air hype All this bunk about HOT AIR its all to do with the unscruplous greens and their nafaruous plans to force us all into a primative way of living after all what ever became of GLOBAL COOLING and the NEW ICE AGE we were suppost to been having in the 1970s i mean even NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC is peddling this green house fruad but they to have lied about many different things and have been cuaght with fake evidence THE BIGGIST HOT AIR IS COMMING FROM AL GORE AND THE GREENS MOUTHS |
|
Eve
said:
|
Death toll from environmentalists The death toll from the environmental groups stands at 200 Million now and counting. 29,000 more people die each year from starvation because of the use of food for biofuels. 2 and a half Million people die each year and have been for the past 40 years because of the ban of DDT. The EPA is a big player here. They banned DDT and opposed every proposed safety measure for New Orleans which resulted in another 3,000 deaths. Now they will kill more by freezing us to death. 1 and a half Million people died in Europe in 2008 from cold because they cannot afford to turn on their heat. The cold related excess deaths in the UK were up 7% in 2008. No word yet on what the death toll was this past winter but it will be higher. These people are monsters and murderers. Do not give a cent to any of them. Do not participate in Earth Day. Call and email your congressman. Tell Obama we will not stand for this. The time for civil disobedience in support of affordable energy is now. |
|
Flu-Bird
said:
|
Green lies The facts are that RACHEAL CARSON lied big time in her book SILENT SPRING and so did PAUL EHRLICH and AL GORE they have lied big time and their lies have cost the lives of many inocent persons |
|




Those unfamiliar with the term "cap and trade" and the tremendous economic burden this program would place on society if implemented may first want to consider a couple definitions. The Center for American Progress, in its report, "Cap and Trade 101," states:
