Climate
Policy: Carbon Taxes, Carbon Cap-and-Trade, and
R&D as Means of Reducing CO2 Emissions
Wednesday,
March 14, 2007
12:30 p.m. – 2:00 p.m.
538 Dirksen Senate
Office
Building
The Environmental
and Energy Study Institute invites you to a briefing on how
carbon pricing policies and funding for low carbon technology
R&D can help mitigate human greenhouse gas emissions that
are contributing to global climate change. There is rising
interest in putting a price on carbon. From an economic point of
view, the challenge to policymakers is to implement policies
that balance the uncertain costs of restraining emissions
against the benefits of avoiding uncertain damages from global
warming. Policymakers must address two market failures with
respect to climate change: first, the health, environmental,
national security and other externalities associated with GHG
emissions; and second, the lost profits due to
"spillover" effects of public-sector R&D. The
first market failure can be addressed by pricing carbon, either
through a cap-and-trade system or via a carbon tax. The second
market failure can be addressed by increasing federal support
for low carbon technology research, development and deployment
(RD&D).
Briefing discussion topics include: carbon tax;
carbon cap-and-trade; carbon pricing and equity; relative roles
of carbon pricing, regulatory standards, and subsidies in
reducing carbon emissions; financing R&D for low-carbon
energy; price-sensitivity of energy demand and carbon emissions;
and political strategies for carbon pricing.
·
Dr. Terry Dinan,
Senior Analyst, Congressional Budget Office Presentation
·
Dr. James
Barrett,
Executive Director, Redefining Progress
·
Charles Komanoff,
Co-Founder, Carbon Tax Center Presentation
Audio Recording of Briefing and Q&A
The
recent IPCC Fourth
Assessment Report finds that most of the observed increase
in globally averaged temperatures since the mid-20th century is very
likely due to human causes. The recent Stern
Review on the Economics of Climate Change
finds that the costs of inaction on climate are likely to be
much higher than the cost of action.
A leading reinsurer, Swiss Re, recently published The
Effects of Climate Change: Storm Damage in Europe on the Rise.
Given the projected cost and magnitude of damage from
inaction on climate change, it is critical that a carbon
reduction policy, or combination of policies, be put into place
sooner rather than later.
This
briefing is open to the public and media. No reservations are
required. Please feel free to forward this notice.
For more information, contact Fred Beck (fbeck@eesi.org)
, 202-662-1892.
Click
here to access the print version