["In these far from revolutionary times, radicals often fret about the 
difficulty of transforming the existing organization of production into 
socialism. But this project is nothing compared with the Sisyphean task faced 
by the other side, of constantly transforming the existing organization of 
production into capitalism."  
http://thenewinquiry.com/essays/disgorge-the-cash/ ]



http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/11/us/brothers-work-different-angles-in-taking-on-climate-change.html

Brothers Battle Climate Change on Two Fronts
By CORAL DAVENPORT
MAY 10, 2014


WASHINGTON — In the New Mexico of the 1950s, the two brothers grew up steeped 
in the beauty of the landscape, the economics of energy and the power of 
science. They skied, fly-fished, explored on the family’s 50,000-acre sheep 
ranch, watched oil towns go boom and bust, and talked of the nuclear weapons up 
the road at Los Alamos.

Today the work of Robert and William Nordhaus is profoundly shaping how the 
United States and other nations take on global warming.

Bill Nordhaus, 72, a Yale economist who is seen as a leading contender for a 
Nobel Prize, came up with the idea of a carbon tax and effectively invented the 
economics of climate change. Bob, 77, a prominent Washington energy lawyer, 
wrote an obscure provision in the Clean Air Act of 1970 that is now the legal 
basis for a landmark climate change regulation, to be unveiled by the White 
House next month, that could close hundreds of coal-fired power plants and 
define President Obama’s environmental legacy.

Called the Manning brothers of climate change, the mild-mannered, dry-witted 
Nordhauses are scions of a New Mexico family long rooted in the land, which 
powerfully shaped who the brothers became. But for the Nordhaus brothers, 
protecting the earth depends far more on dispassionate thinking and 
intellectual rigor than on showy protests outside the White House.

They have neatly divided their world — Bill is the academic theorist, Bob the 
legal mind and political pragmatist — but their work is intertwined.

“I tend to have lots of crazy ideas, and I run them by Bob first,” Bill said by 
phone from the Acela train between Boston and New Haven, Conn. He described 
himself as “an academic economist” who has stayed out of policy debates, 
although his ideas have not.

Bob agreed. “Bill’s work is about what needs to be done and how soon, using the 
tools of economic analysis,” he said over a recent lunch in Washington. “My 
work is: How do you convert that into a legal and regulatory policy?”

The two have a friendly rivalry, but both believe that cutting carbon pollution 
is crucial to protecting the environment and the economy from the risks posed 
by climate change. They also agree on the best way to do it: A Bill-style 
carbon tax, they say, would be far more effective and efficient than a 
Bob-style regulation.

Their story starts in Albuquerque, where their father, the grandson of a 
wealthy Santa Fe merchant, started the ski resort at the top of Albuquerque’s 
Sandia Peak and with a partner built the city’s iconic tram up the granite 
cliffs to get there. A specialist in energy and Native American law, Robert 
Nordhaus Sr. won a Supreme Court case giving Apache tribes the authority to 
levy fees on the oil companies that drilled on their native land.

Like him, both brothers went east to Yale, where in 1963 Bob graduated from the 
law school and Bill from Yale College. From there Bob headed to Washington for 
a job as a staff lawyer in the House legislative counsel’s office.

He was still there in 1970, working on the bill that would become the Clean Air 
Act, when his bosses came to him with an unusual assignment: The legislation 
already included language to regulate known pollutants, such as mercury and 
smog, but could he write a provision giving the federal government the 
authority to regulate as-yet-unknown pollutants of the future?

Bob wrote the provision — it became Section 111(d) of the Clean Air Act — at a 
time when carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas, was not considered harmful. It was 
not until 2009 that the Environmental Protection Agency defined carbon dioxide 
as a harmful pollutant because of its contribution to global warming. Thus it 
falls into the category of an unknown “pollutant of the future.” Section 
111(d), after languishing in obscurity for decades, is now the legal rationale 
for the Obama administration’s plan to regulate carbon emissions without a law 
passed by Congress.

While Bob began his career in Washington, Bill received a Ph.D. in economics 
from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and began teaching at Yale. By 
the late 1970s, when an increasing number of scientists were raising the threat 
of global warming, Bill wrote a paper proposing a tax on industries and 
businesses based on the amount of carbon they emitted into the air. The idea 
was revolutionary at the time, but economists, scientists and many world 
leaders now say it will have a powerful market effect and is the best way to 
stave off the catastrophic impacts of a warming world. Already, more than 30 
countries have passed carbon-pricing laws.

In the ensuing decades at Yale, Bill developed an economic model that put a 
price tag on the effects of climate change, like more droughts, flooding and 
crop failures and stronger hurricanes. He called it the Dynamic Integrated 
Climate-Economy model, or DICE.

“The name was both descriptive (representing a dynamic integrated model of 
climate and the economy) but also consciously aimed to suggest that we are 
gambling with the future of our planet,” Bill wrote in an email.

DICE profoundly changed climate policy. Although the chief political argument 
against curbing carbon emissions from cars and coal plants has long been that 
doing so would harm the economy, the DICE models show that, depending on 
various scenarios, one ton of carbon pollution can inflict $20 to $30 in 
economic damage — a major cost, given that the global economy emits about 36 
billion tons of carbon a year.

Bill’s work “was seminal,” said Robert Stavins, director of the Harvard 
Environmental Economics Program.

But it is, for the time being, politically untenable in the United States. The 
conservative Heritage Foundation has called the DICE model “flawed beyond use 
for policy making” and warned that it should not be used to justify “trillions 
of dollars of government policies and burdensome regulations.”

Here the work of Bob comes in: Mr. Obama tried but failed to push a 
carbon-pricing bill through Congress in his first term, which is why he has 
turned to Bob’s section of the Clean Air Act as the legal underpinning for the 
regulation due out in June.

Bob, who was an energy adviser to President Jimmy Carter and general counsel at 
the Department of Energy under President Bill Clinton, now says that because he 
was not writing the provision with climate change in mind, the new regulation 
is an imperfect and perhaps legally vulnerable solution to regulating carbon 
pollution. Environmental lawyers note that it has almost never been used.

“I call it the 40-year-old virgin,” said David Doniger, a lawyer with 
theNatural Resources Defense Council, an advocacy group.

But one way the E.P.A. will justify the new regulation is with an analysis 
showing that the economic benefits of the climate change rule would outweigh 
the costs.

A core component of that analysis? The DICE model.

Back in New Mexico, Bob recalled, he and Bill — the oldest and youngest 
brothers among four siblings — could not help noticing the changing world of 
energy around them. In the 1950s, he said, as the Los Alamos weapons program 
expanded, the state changed “from a pastoral economy, split between ranching, 
irrigated farming and extractive industries, to defense-related work, which was 
a whole different world.”

They also paid close attention to the climate changes, and periodic droughts, 
that affected the family ski business and their lives outdoors.

“Growing up in New Mexico,” he said, “you’re aware of the very fragile 
ecosystem.”
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