Posted by
RicFrankel on Tuesday, May 13, 2008 9:09:53 AM
Re: TownHall.com –
5/3/2008 – “Need Growth, Think Global Warming?” – Wayne Winegarden
Winegarden says “Because of our current technology
constraints, limiting U.S. emissions limits our use of energy and,
consequently, our economic growth”. He’s wrong in several ways.
First, energy’s
relation to economic growth does not follow from energy consumption but from
what we get out of energy consumption. If the economy could be measured by
automobile miles driven, wouldn’t doubling gas efficiency and increasing miles
driven by 50% mean significant economic growth with significant decrease in
energy consumption? As we actually began to put the current commercial
technologies available into our products, we will greatly reduce energy
efficiency at little to no net cost, especially as the prices decline with
economy of scale.
Second, emissions
are a very poor measure of energy consumption --- our hydroelectric capacity
produces plenty of consumable electric power with no emissions.
Third, technology
constraints do not currently prevent us from reducing emissions without
reducing energy production or utilization. In addition to existing market ready
technologies that allow energy production with reduced emission (natural gas
generated electric power, for example) there are many just commercialized
(solar heating and solar generated electric power, for example) and others
proven in concept and in the process of commercialization (wave power, for
example). And of course, the more efficiently we use the energy produced, the
less energy is needed to fuel our usage, and consequently the less emissions
are released.
In my opinion, cap and trade will do for energy emissions
what home equity withdrawal, variable rate mortgages, and packaged mortgages
did for home ownership in the long term. But that’s because cap and trade is a
terrible policy that will not accomplish what it is intended to and will have
negative side effects, not because it is a government policy. There are plenty
of governmental incentives for continuing to use current technology (especially
in the tax code) that could be removed from inefficient high emission
technologies and transferred to efficient low emission technologies.
Winegarden’s arguments about job creation sounds like
pre-automobile era economists arguing that leasing oil rights on federal lands
and building roads for automobiles would harm horse breeders, hay growers, and
buggy manufacturers. They’d be right about that but really, really wrong about
the effects on the economy. Winegarden is just as wrong about opposing
incentives to move to an efficient, low emission energy economy.