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State Climate Policy Solutions For a new, stronger, clean energy economy NCEL 09.08.09 K.C. Golden Policy Director “We are addicted to oil” Symptoms: Economic hemorrhaging: $450 M per month in King County Fever: increasing average temp is the least of it “We are addicted to oil” Symptoms: Economic hemorrhaging: Over $450 M per month in King County Fever: increasing average temp is the least of it Acute national insecurity: “Paying for both sides of the war on terror” Treatments for addiction • Gas tax holiday: Cheaper drugs • Drilling: Increase the supply of drugs Quit: Steadily reduce dependence….. ….by building a clean energy economy…. CAP Policy commitment to steadily reduce fossil fuel dependence …and a platform for launching a green economy State policies: Climate plans Maps from Pew Center State policies: Renewable Portfolio Standards State policies: Vehicle GHG Standards State policies: Commercial energy codes Cap makes it real: Get your wedge on! Key principles for climate policy design • EFFECTIVENESS • EFFICIENCY • EQUITY Effectiveness - Scale Effectiveness - Scale How much do we have to reduce climate pollution? Enough to stabilize the concentration of GHGs in the atmosphere “at a level that would prevent dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system.” How much is that? Avoid increases in average global temperature of > 2 degrees C How much is that? Stabilize the concentration of GHGs at 350-450 ppm So how much do we have to reduce climate pollution? 80% by 2050. More in the U.S. Avoiding Dangerous Climate Change – Cambridge University Press Effectiveness - Build Effectiveness – Get going! Efficiency Equity Internationally Domestically Sectors, geographies, industries, economics Equity – Green for all Design issues Cap and trade vs. Carbon tax Effectiveness: Quantity, not price, is the public policy imperative Trade Investments Tax Standards Incentives Design issues -- scope More is better • Effectiveness: Reduce more • Efficiency: liquidity, simplicity • Equity: not just point sources Design issues – emission rights Auction or give away? • Effectiveness: rewards innovation; facilitates investment, consumer protection • Efficiency: simpler (baselines, early action) • Equity: avoids windfalls; level playing field Design issues - Offsets Limit them • Effectiveness: discourages transformation • Carbon storage in biomass not equivalent to emission reduction • Efficiency: verification is complex; “additionality” – critical, but counterfactual • Equity: aggravates environmental justice concerns; intergenerational foul Cap and trade works for acid rain Annual Mean Wet Sulfate Deposition 1989-1991 2004-2006 Acid Rain SO2 Program Costs: Much Lower than Originally Predicted Acid Rain Program: Proje cte d Annual Costs at Full Imple me ntation in 20 9 $ Billion (2006$) 8 7 EEI 6 EPA 5 4 3 EPRI 2 GAO EPA 1 0 Source: EPA, 2006 1990 1994 2004 Fossil fuel price politics • Concern that climate policy will raise prices • But prices are through the roof now! • Why? Supply and demand. • What drives the opposition? It will reduce our consumption of fossil fuels Public opinion • Public “favors” drilling • But they favor efficiency, renewables, and climate solutions by wider margins • Bottom line: Do something! Why states? “Global” warming is a local, state and regional issue State Climate Policy Solutions For a new, stronger, clean energy economy NCEL 09.08.09 K.C. Golden Policy Director