By Doug Bandow on 7.1.05 @ 12:05AM
The Governator melts down on global warming.
"We're all Keynesians now," declared President Richard M. Nixon
when he surrendered his fiscal policies to liberal orthodoxy. Gov.
Arnold Schwarzenegger did much the same with his recent executive
order calling for draconian cuts in the emission of "greenhouse
gases" linked to global warming. "The debate is over," he
claimed.
The issue of global warming, though presented as a matter of
scientific certainty, is actually highly controverted. Although the
planet almost certainly is warming, how much of that is due to
humanity -- which contributes only about .3 percent of total
greenhouse gas emissions -- remains in dispute.
So does the likely magnitude of warming, as well as the ultimate
impact on the climate. Over the last decade predictions of the
temperature rise over the coming century have fallen greatly, with
the most realistic estimates lagging behind the increase during the
"little climate optimum," the Medieval period roughly 2.5 degrees
centigrade warmer than today.
Indeed, moderate warming at night and in the northern
hemispheres, when and where most of the recent warming has
occurred, is a positive development for humanity. Such a
temperature rise lowers morbidity and mortality rates and lengthens
growing seasons.
Moreover, most of Schwarzenegger's claimed consequences of
global warming simply aren't true. Joel Schwartz, a visiting fellow
at the American Enterprise Institute, notes that warmer
temperatures won't increase heat-related mortality, which has
fallen by 75 percent since the 1960s.
Nor is the phenomenon related to asthma, as Schwarzenegger
claimed. And higher temperatures are more likely to reduce than
increase other air pollutants.
NEVERTHELESS, ASSUMING THAT global warming is a problem to be
solved, the so-called Kyoto treaty, signed in December 1997, is not
a good answer. By its own terms it would merely mean that the
temperature predicted to occur in 2100 (any estimate a century off
is essentially meaningless) would actually arrive in 2106.
Kyoto's original objective, to hold energy consumption at 1990
levels, is well-nigh unattainable, at least at acceptable cost. And
since the Kyoto pact did not cover developing states, most
importantly rapidly growing China and India, today's industrialized
states would have to cut their energy consumption even more.
Even a dozen European nations that once championed Kyoto now
concede that they will fall short. Notes Frances B. Smith of the
group Consumer Alert, "People cannot simply turn up their air
conditioner thermostats to 72 degrees from 70, or replace 75 watt
light bulbs with 60 watt bulbs. Instead, the proposed Kyoto accord
will require drastic reductions in energy use in every aspect of
people's every day lives."
And that won't be easy. "Energy is the lifeblood of industrial
civilization," observed Case Western University Law School
Professor Jonathan Adler. Radical reductions in energy consumption
mean radical reductions in economic activity.
Among the steps proposed to force down U.S. energy consumption
are an emissions cap on greenhouse gases, especially carbon
dioxide; a "carbon tax" on fossil fuel consumption; an increase in
fuel economy (CAFE) standards on autos; new building codes and
appliance energy standards; a national deposit on beverage
containers; regulations encouraging high density home construction
and discouraging driving; and a variety of subsidies for
alternative energy sources and fuel efficient cars. Since fossil
fuels remain the world's most plentiful and cost-efficient energy
source, none of these steps would be cheap.
Total economic output would take a huge hit. Over the last
decade or so estimates have ranged up to $350 billion annually. In
the mid-1990s this represented an economic loss of up to $1,500 per
person. Eugene Trisko of the United Mineworkers of America warned
that "most credible estimates of the costs of reducing carbon
emissions in the U.S. show cumulative GDP losses of up to $1
trillion to $3 trillion over a 15 or 20 year period."
Another cost measure is job loss. Estimates vary, but the
projected magnitude is consistent. For instance, an early study by
Wilbur Steger and Frederick Rueter for CONSAD Research Corporation
predicted that between 240,000 and 360,000 jobs would be lost in
the first three to five years after Kyoto's implementation, "and
would be accompanied by adverse economic conditions, including high
inflation, resembling the energy price shocks of the 1970s."
Within a few more years lost employment could rise above 1.6
million, with several more million jobs at risk in "vulnerable
industries." Their work matches the results of a study by the
consulting firm DRI, Inc., which predicted 1.7 million lost jobs. A
Clinton administration study foresaw an employment loss of
900,000.
THE MORE STRINGENT THE STANDARDS, the bigger the impact. Steger and
Rueter considered proposals to reduce rather than stabilize energy
usage (at the time based on 1990 levels). They warned: "We are
looking at magnitudes of short-to-medium-term output, employment
and value added effects that are double, triple, or possible even
five times greater." The economic cost of large, arbitrary cuts in
energy consumption would be enormous.
Another measure is energy price. Although the results depend
upon the exact measures adopted, the Department of Energy projected
a 50 percent hike in electricity rates. Another estimate foresaw a
60 cent a gallon increase in gasoline prices and a 50 percent jump
in home fuel costs.
Price increases would ripple through the economy, from food to
airline travel to heating to services to government operations.
Higher energy prices and new regulations would cause other,
indirect harms. Frances Smith points out that "numerous studies
have shown the relationship between income and health." Sucking
hundreds of billions of dollars out of the economy through higher
energy prices would reduce money for other uses, ranging from
health care to safe housing.
Moreover, some energy-saving measures are positively dangerous.
For instance, CAFE standards push people into smaller cars, which
lose when involved in car accidents with larger autos and trucks.
Raising the standard to 40 mph would, according to a Harvard
University-Brookings Institution study, cause an additional 3,800
to 5,800 accident deaths every year.
CALIFORNIA, THE NATION'S MOST populous state, would bear a large
share of Kyoto's burden. The Golden State leads the country in
energy consumption. Dramatically cutting back on energy consumption
would leave California as the biggest loser.
But Schwarzenegger doesn't want to just reduce energy use. He
hopes to largely eliminate the consumption of traditional fuels.
Joel Schwartz figures that Schwarzenegger's energy plan would cut
energy use by 11 percent in 2010, 25 percent in 2020, and 87
percent in 2050.
Extrapolating from a federal study of national energy controls,
Schwartz estimates that an 11 percent reduction would cost about
$40 billion. He warns: "While reducing GHG [greenhouse gas]
emissions to 1990s levels would impose hardship, attempting to
reduce GHGs 80 percent below 1990 levels would amount to destroying
California in order to save it."
With the facts against him, Schwarzenegger repairs to the usual
political redoubt of "protecting" the children: "We have no choice
but to meet this challenge. We must leave a better world for our
children and their children."
If it cost nothing to reduce use of fossil fuels, we could let
sentimentalism rule and ignore serious doubts about the dangers
posed by global warming. But wrecking the economy would be a high
price to pay to deal with a phenomenon of uncertain magnitude that
might end up being transitory and even positive.
Gov. Schwarzenegger was elected governor after promising to
combat job-destroying regulation. Now he is proposing controls far
more stringent than anything advanced by local Democrats. Alas, the
more Republican politicians claim to represent the future, the more
they look like their opponents.
topics:
Health Care, Global Warming, Law, Energy