FILE - A Tesoro Corp. refinery, including a gas flare flame that is part
of normal plant operations, is shown in Anacortes, Wash., after a fatal
overnight fire and explosion, April 2, 2010. Voters in Washington state
rejected Initiative 732 in the 2016 election, which called for the
nation’s first direct carbon tax on the burning of fossil fuels.
WASHINGTON —
A group of Republican senior statesmen are pushing for a carbon tax
to combat the effects of climate change and hoping to sell their plan to
the White House.
Former Secretary of State Jim Baker is leading the effort, which also
includes former Secretary of State George Shultz. In an opinion piece
published Tuesday night in The Wall Street Journal, they argued "there is mounting evidence of problems with the atmosphere that are growing too compelling to ignore."
The group will meet Wednesday with White House officials, including
Vice President Mike Pence, senior adviser Jared Kushner and Gary Cohn,
director of the National Economic Council. Ivanka Trump is also expected
to attend, according to a person familiar with the plans. The person
was not authorized to discuss the meeting publicly and insisted on
anonymity.
Carbon taxes are designed to raise the cost of fossil fuels to bring
down consumption. Baker and Shultz detailed in the opinion piece their
plan for a gradually increasing carbon tax, with dividends being
returned to people, as well as border adjustments for the carbon content
of exports and imports and the rollback of regulations.
Steadily increasing tax
According to an outline of the plan, the group will call for a
gradually increasing carbon tax that "might begin at $40 a ton and
increase steadily over time." It would raise $200 billion to $300
billion annually. They would then redistribute tax proceeds back to
consumers on a quarterly basis in what they call "carbon dividends" that
could be approximately $2,000 annually for a family of four.
FILE - The coal-fired Castle Gate Power Plant sits idle outside Helper,
Utah, Aug. 3, 2015. The plant was closed in April 2015 in anticipation
of new EPA regulations. Former President Barack Obama's Clean Power Plan
sought to to tackle greenhouse gases from coal-fired power plants.
Their plan would also set "border adjustments" based on carbon, which
would result in fees for products from countries without similar carbon
pricing systems. And they would seek to roll back regulations enacted
under President Barack Obama, including the Clean Power Plan.
So far, Trump has sent mixed signals on whether or how he will try to slow Earth's warming temperatures and rising sea levels.
During the transition, Trump met with prominent climate activists Al
Gore and Leonardo DiCaprio. Ivanka Trump, a close adviser to her father,
has indicated interest in working on the issue. But the president has
also hired oil industry champions who want to reverse Obama's efforts to
rein in emissions.
The White House press office did not immediately respond to request for comment.
Also supporting Baker's effort are Hank Paulson, treasury secretary
for former President George W. Bush; Greg Mankiw, who chaired Bush's
Council of Economic Advisers; and Marty Feldstein, chairman of President
Ronald Reagan's Council of Economic Advisers, according to the person
familiar with the plans.
Also on the list are former Wal-Mart Chairman Rob Walton; Thomas
Stephenson, a partner at the venture capital firm Sequoia Capital; and
Ted Halstead, founder of New America and the Climate Leadership Council.
The vast majority of peer-reviewed studies and climate scientists
agree the planet is warming, mostly because of man-made sources. Under
Obama, the U.S. has dramatically ramped up production of renewable
energy from sources like solar, in part through Energy Department grants
FILE - Then-Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders,
I-Vt., speaks at Georgetown University in Washington, Nov. 19, 2015.
Sanders' plan to slow down the impact of climate change included a
pledge to cut U.S. carbon emissions.
Sanders backed tax
Some environmental activists support a tax on emissions to help
transition off fossil fuels. Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders advocated
for a carbon tax as part of his bid for the Democratic nomination last
year. Hillary Clinton, the Democratic nominee, never supported a tax,
though she offered a slew of proposals to deal with climate change.
Trump's secretary of state, Rex Tillerson, was the longtime chief
executive officer of Exxon Mobil. Exxon was long considered a leading
opponent of efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from burning
fossil fuels. But under Tillerson's leadership, Exxon has started
planning for climate change and even voiced support for a carbon tax.
Trump's choice to run the Environmental Protection Agency is Oklahoma
Attorney General Scott Pruitt, who denies climate change science. And
Trump's nominee to run the Energy Department, former Texas Governor Rick
Perry, also has questioned climate science while working to promote
coal-fired power in Texas. He did, however, oversee the growth of
renewable power in Texas, which became a leading wind-energy producer
while he was governor.
Carbon tax legislation is unlikely to receive a warm welcome in the
GOP-controlled Congress, where Republicans were staunchly opposed to
Obama's climate agenda. Last year, Republicans in the House approved
symbolic measures opposing a fee on crude oil and a carbon tax on
emissions.
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