By Paul Chesser on 8.25.09 @ 6:07AM
But not taking the temperature. The Southern Governors
Association on cap and trade.
It's hard to imagine the Southern
Governors Association would come up with a cap-and-tax plan
when only half their members showed up at their annual meeting
over the weekend, but Gov. Tim Kaine of Virginia did his best to
sow harmony around the idea.
In his role as chairman of SGA,
according to the Virginian-Pilot, the Old Dominion
Democrat got to choose the topic of this year's conference.
Despite some resistance from colleagues -- presumably from
oil-producing states like Mississippi and Alabama (Texas and
Louisiana being no-shows), and from coal-cultivating neighbor
West Virginia -- Kaine was allowed to move forward as long as he
"promised to merely start a conversation and not push any
specific agenda." He only partially kept his commitment.
The conversation started, and while governors debated the merits
of cap-and-tax schemes, whether a specific agenda was pushed
depends on your interpretation. If the meaning is, in this
context, that carbon emissions must be limited and how it is
accomplished is open for discussion, then no "specific agenda"
was pushed.
But if you're a climate realist (like thousands of scientists and
millions of Americans) who recognizes that human attempts to
limit carbon are futile and will do nothing to change global
temperatures one way or another, then the push to cap emissions
was on. Not one climate scientist was present to help the SoGovs
understand that global temperatures
have not increased since 1998; that Antarctic ice extent
is increasing; that surface temperature stations show a bias towards
warming; or other
fun facts that
undermine the global warming paranoia.
"Obviously we all agree on the goals of trying to approach this
climate-change issue -- that's cleaning up our air and holding
down greenhouse-gas emissions,"
said Kentucky Gov. Steve Beshear, a Democrat. "The issues
that we're wrestling with are in the details of how we do that,
the cost of doing it and how those costs are distributed."
It appears the closest anyone came to challenging climate
assumptions was Georgia Gov. Sonny Perdue, a Republican, who
"asked how scientists can reliably forecast global temperatures
into the next century if 'we can't even predict what the weather
will be like later this afternoon.'"
Logical enough, but then later he praised the work of the
Center for Climate Strategies, a cap-and-tax advocacy group
that has lobbied state governments (mostly governors) to
institute carbon limits and negotiate regional agreements
with each other, such as the Western Climate Initiative and the
Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative. Its goal is to create a
hopeless mishmash of state-level carbon regulations that would
cause electric utilities, oil companies, and other industries to
cry "uncle" and beg the federal government for a single, national
standard.
The other conference attendees also avoided science questions,
and instead acted as though something had to be done about
greenhouse gases, with the debate about what cap-and-trade would
cost the South. A voice of negativity arose from Mississippi Gov.
Haley Barbour,
according to the Daily Press of Newport News:
A federal energy bill that has passed through the U.S. House
and awaits a vote in the Senate could have a devastating effect
on power companies and result in rising electric costs for
consumers, a panel of Southern utility officials told 11
Southern governors Sunday.
The bill's requirement that utilities generate 20 percent of
their power through renewable resources like wind and solar by
2020 or face penalties puts an unfair burden on utilities in
the South, where those types of power generation are less
effective, the utilities said….
"Many of our states have no chance to generate consistent wind
and solar power," said [Barbour]. The House-passed energy bill,
named the American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009, "just
screws us."
Similarly Kaine's fellow Democrat governor from West Virginia,
Joe Manchin, also voiced opposition, the Virginian-Pilot
reported:
[Manchin] said he strongly opposes a proposed cap-and-trade
strategy pending before Congress. And he warned that any plan
that significantly hikes energy costs will not only hurt his
state's ability to compete for businesses and jobs but also put
the United States at a huge disadvantage against China and
India, economic giants that are not party to worldwide
negotiations on climate change policy.
For their parts, Kaine and his
chosen discussion panelists repeated the "we must do
something" mantra.
"We're going to have to move out and take a couple steps knowing
[China and India are] not going to immediately follow," said
retired Virginia Sen. John Warner, who spoke on climate change
and national security. "Maybe by Step 3, they'll recognize they
need to get going, too."
"I think the biggest bang for the buck because you both save
money and you remove a lot [of greenhouse gases] is in the
conservation and efficiency investments," Kaine said.
No one expected unanimous consent on the issue going in to the
weekend, but that's not what Kaine needed. He and his fellow
climate alarmists sought just a few Southern governors to start a
"conversation" and buy into the program, much like what happened
in the West, Midwest, and Northeast. All the talk points to a
likely mission accomplished.
topics:
Cap and Trade, Tim Kaine, Southern Governors Association