>From the print edition, sorry I don't have the link.
Jesse

Waking up and catching up 

Jan 25th 2007 | AUSTIN, CHICAGO, LOS ANGELES AND
WASHINGTON, DC
>From The Economist print edition 

Belatedly, and for many reasons, America is embracing
environmentalism 
Getty Images

WHEN Jim Webb, the new Democratic senator from
Virginia, replied to George Bush's state-of-the-union
message, he could bear to endorse only one of the
president's proposals. This was the idea of cutting
America's petrol (gasoline) consumption by 20% in ten
years, by increasing ethanol production to 35 billion
gallons a year and raising fuel-efficiency standards
for cars. 

Such a plan would reduce America's dependence on
imported oil from dangerous places (as would Mr Bush's
plan to double the country's petroleum reserves). But
it would address global warming only tangentially. The
Democrats in Congress are weighing much more dramatic
measures, including across-the-board cuts to the
greenhouse gases that are heating up the planet. At
the state level, politicians of all stripes are
already taking more radical steps. Even big business
is coming round. Mr Bush may be dragging his feet, but
America is greening fast. 

 

The Democrats' victory in last year's elections means
that Congress's stance on environmental issues has
changed dramatically. In one race for the House of
Representatives, a Democratic consultant on wind power
defeated a Republican ally of the oil industry.
Barbara Boxer, an ardent advocate of firm action on
climate change, has taken over the chairmanship of the
Senate Environment Committee from James Inhofe, who
often described global warming as “the greatest hoax
ever perpetrated on the American people”. 

Since Congress convened earlier this month, the
Democrats have got to work fast. The House has passed
a bill that would eliminate a tax break for oil
production in America, and would impose penalties on
firms that refuse to renegotiate the absurdly generous
leases the government accidentally granted them in the
late 1990s. The proceeds—perhaps $15 billion over the
next decade—would be used to fund renewable energy
schemes. 

Nancy Pelosi, the new speaker of the House, is now
turning her attention to global warming. She is
setting up a committee to address both that issue, and
America's dependence on imported fuel. She wants to
see legislation before July 4th, so that she can
declare “energy independence” on the same day that the
founding fathers severed political ties with Britain. 

Meanwhile, some half-dozen bills on global warming are
circulating in the Senate. Several propose
cap-and-trade schemes, whereby the government would
create a fixed number of permits to produce greenhouse
gases and then auction them or allocate them to
businesses. Firms without enough permits to cover
their emissions would either have to pollute less, or
buy up spare ones from firms that had managed to cut
back. 

John McCain, a leading Republican presidential
candidate, and Joe Lieberman, a former Democratic one,
are behind the most prominent cap-and-trade scheme.
Barack Obama, one of the Democrats' current
presidential aspirants, is a co-sponsor. It is the
most ambitious of the bills with serious backing: it
would cut carbon emissions to 2004 levels by 2012 and
then mandate further reductions of 2% a year until
2020. Although these targets are less onerous than
those of the Kyoto protocol, the United Nations'
treaty on climate change, most analysts reckon they
will prove too exacting for Congress. 

An alternative cap-and-trade scheme, sponsored by Jeff
Bingaman, chairman of the Senate Energy Committee,
suffers from the opposite problem: excessive modesty.
His plan would aim to slow the growth of emissions,
and ultimately stabilise them at their 2013 level by
2020. It includes a safety valve, under which the
government would automatically issue more permits to
pollute if the price of those permits rose too far.
The economic impact would be much smaller than under
the McCain-Lieberman plan but so, too, would the
reductions in emissions. 

Dianne Feinstein, a Democratic senator from
California, is proposing a third approach. She wants
to create cap-and-trade mechanisms within industries
rather than across the economy as a whole. She has,
for instance, proposed legislation that would cut
power companies' emissions by 25% of their projected
levels by 2020. 

All these initiatives face an uphill battle. The
previous Senate rejected the McCain-Lieberman plan
twice—by a bigger margin the second time around. Any
bill that involves mandatory caps on greenhouse-gas
emissions would need 60 of the chamber's 100 votes to
succeed, since Mr Inhofe has pledged to filibuster all
such measures. In the House the Energy Committee is
chaired by John Dingell, a Democrat from the carmaking
hub of Detroit who has long opposed mandatory caps. Mr
Dingell, who says Ms Pelosi's new committee is “as
useful as feathers on a fish”, will still have a big
say in any legislation. And even if a bill overcomes
all these obstacles, it would risk a presidential
veto. 

A matter of security 

But whatever the fate of these proposals, the
political climate is changing faster than the weather.
Almost all the leading presidential candidates favour
emissions caps. One of them, Hillary Clinton, has
condemned the Bush administration's failure to act as
“unAmerican”. That is a remarkable change since 2000,
when Al Gore toned down his environmental rhetoric
during his presidential campaign for fear of sounding
pious and obsessive. Indeed, activists are so
convinced that the next president will be greener than
Mr Bush that they are debating whether to settle for
immediate but modest measures on global warming, or
wait for a new administration to take bolder steps. 

The Democrats have always been the greener party, but
environmentalism is budding among Republicans too.
Take Saxby Chambliss, a moderate senator. He voted
against the McCain-Lieberman bill in 2005, but changed
his mind after visiting Greenland to view the melting
ice cap. “There really is something to it,” he now
says. 

APA no-brainer in Missouri 

Many factors lie behind the party's shift. Most have
to do not with sudden sentimentality in the face of
Nature, but with national security (a motivation that
lies, too, behind Ms Pelosi's new committee and Mrs
Clinton's patriotic posturing). Fiscal hawks fret
about the impact of growing oil imports on the dollar.
Military types fear global conflict for dwindling
resources in the event of catastrophic global warming.
Neoconservatives worry about America's dependence on
oil imports from unstable if not openly hostile
countries in Latin America and the Middle East. Some
think the solution is simply to pump more oil at home,
but others argue that America needs to move away from
oil altogether. One such figure, Jim Woolsey, a former
director of the Central Intelligence Agency, pointedly
drives a Toyota Prius, a famously fuel-efficient car. 

At the same time, a growing number of evangelical
Christians are beginning to see global warming as a
moral issue. They argue that mankind, as steward of
God's creation, has a duty to protect the environment.
One outfit, the Evangelical Climate Initiative,
encourages prominent pastors and theologians to sign a
“Call to Action”. Another group, the Evangelical
Environmental Network, runs a website called “What
would Jesus drive?” Last year Pat Robertson, a
prominent televangelist, told his flock, “We really
need to address the burning of fossil fuels.” 

The Republican Party has a strong, albeit fitful,
tradition of environmentalism. Teddy Roosevelt
expanded America's national parks. Richard Nixon
created the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Mr
Bush's father, when he was president, signed off on
America's first nationwide cap-and-trade scheme to
control emissions of the gases that cause acid rain. 

But the strongest force propelling environmentalism
among Republicans is self-preservation. Arnold
Schwarzenegger, the decidedly green governor of
California, was one of the few luminaries in the party
unaffected by last year's electoral meltdown.
Republicans in other western states, where a
Democratic tide is rising and a pristine landscape is
a major tourist attraction, are following Mr
Schwarzenegger's moves with interest. They fear the
party may lose ground with moderate middle-class types
who dislike urban sprawl and unfettered oil-drilling. 

The destruction wrought by Hurricane Katrina in 2005
had a big influence on voters, according to Jonathan
Lash of the World Resources Institute. Americans seem
to view the increasing incidence of freakish weather
as proof that climate change is real. Many of them
paid to see Mr Gore's film on the subject, making it
the third-most-successful documentary of all time (and
now a candidate for an Oscar). Polls show that
Americans are gradually growing more exercised about
global warming, although they are still less anxious
than Europeans or Japanese. 

The business view 

Even big business, which stands to lose most from
stricter environmental regulation, is beginning to
accept that change is in the air. Exxon Mobil, led
until recently by a fierce sceptic of global warming,
now concedes that there is a problem, and that its
products are contributing to it. Last year four-fifths
of utility executives polled by Cambridge Energy
Research Associates, a consultancy, expected mandatory
emissions caps within a decade. 

If regulation is indeed on its way, many firms would
like Congress to fix the rules sooner rather than
later, to help them plan investments in factories and
power plants with long lifespans. Earlier this week
ten companies, including Alcoa, Caterpillar and
DuPont, called for Congress to set up a cap-and-trade
system for greenhouse gases as quickly as possible.
Since most of the firms involved produce clouds of
emissions, they would obviously like to influence
future legislation. 

But the firms' bosses claim to see emissions caps as
an opportunity, not a threat. GE, a member of the
group, wants its executives to use their
“ecomagination”. By the same token Rick Wagoner, the
head of GM, the world's biggest carmaker, recently
hoped aloud that oil prices would remain high, so that
his firm would keep its incentive to develop
fuel-efficient cars. Wal-Mart, America's biggest
retailer, hopes to double its sales of low-watt
lightbulbs. 

Lots of firms are growing healthily on the back of
America's sudden enthusiasm for alternative energy.
Americans invested almost $30 billion in the sector in
2006, according to New Energy Finance, a research
firm. American venture capitalists lavish seven times
more on greenery than their counterparts in Europe.
Ethanol production was expected to double in the next
few years, even before the latest boost from Mr Bush.
Wind and solar power are also booming. And the bigger
green firms become the more influence they will have
over politicians. 

States to the fore 

At the very least, businesses want to avoid a
patchwork of conflicting local regulations on
environmental matters in general, and greenhouse-gas
emissions in particular. There is already a bit of a
muddle, since several states have taken much bolder
and more experimental steps than the federal
government. California, the boldest of all, has taken
on carmakers, electricity companies and the EPA, to
name a few. Its politicians vie to out-green one
another. Some 40 of its legislators drive hybrid cars.
Mr Schwarzenegger, not to be bested, has converted one
of his fuel-swigging Hummers to run on hydrogen. 

Congress may be thinking about tackling greenhouse-gas
emissions, but California has already done it. Its
Global Warming Solutions Act, which was passed last
year, aims to cut them to 1990 levels by 2020—an
ambitious target for a state that has grown rapidly in
the past 15 years and will probably continue to do so.
The details have yet to be fleshed out, but the
reductions will come from both a cap-and-trade scheme
for industry and regulations of various sorts. 

 

Mr Schwarzenegger issued the first such regulation
earlier this month, obliging producers of petrol and
other fuels to cut the emissions of carbon dioxide
from their products by 10% by 2020—presumably by
mixing in more ethanol and other biofuels. It is not
California's first attempt to reduce emissions from
transport: its legislature voted for stringent cuts in
2002. That move has become snarled in a court battle
over whether states have the right to set fuel-economy
standards. Meanwhile, the politicians keep trucking.
In September, the state showily sued six car
manufacturers, alleging they had damaged its climate.
It is also suing the EPA, for failing to regulate
greenhouse-gas emissions. 

California's politicians are keen on renewables too.
State law requires utilities to generate 20% of the
power they sell from sources such as windmills and
biomass plants by 2010, and 33% by 2020. Solar power
has won even greater favour: under the “million solar
roofs” scheme, the state plans to spend more than $3
billion over the next decade subsidising the
installation of solar-power panels. 

California has also pioneered the practice of
“decoupling”, which deprives power firms of their
incentive to sell as much electricity as possible.
Instead, the local regulator has devised a formula to
reward firms whose sales are lower than expected, and
to allow the recovery of the costs of
energy-efficiency schemes. 

Such measures (along with high power prices to pay for
them) have helped California rein in its electricity
consumption—although lovely weather and a relative
lack of heavy industry have also played a part. Power
use per person has remained roughly stable in the
state since the 1970s, even as it has doubled in the
rest of the country (see chart above). As a result,
California's greenhouse-gas emissions per person areon
a par with those of Denmark. Relative to the size of
its economy, they are lower. 

But California is not America's only green enclave.
Nine states in the north-east have combined to reduce
emissions from power generation through a
cap-and-trade scheme. Two of them plan to auction all
the permits, unlike the countries in the European
Union's Emissions Trading Scheme, which handed them
out for nothing. Ten states have signed up to follow
California's standards on car exhaust, including its
requirements on greenhouse gases. Many more promote
ethanol, or renewables, or energy-efficient buildings
(see chart below). 

 

On the whole, left-leaning states are keener on
greenery than right-wing ones, which tend to be more
energy-intensive. But politicians of all stripes in
the Midwest are keen to promote ethanol for the sake
of local farmers, who grow the corn from which it is
made. And Texas recently overtook California as the
country's biggest generator of wind power. 

Greenery is also popular at the local level. Almost
400 cities have devised plans to curb or reduce their
greenhouse gas emissions. Many buy only fuel-efficient
cars for their municipal fleets. Laura Miller, the
mayor of Dallas, has spoken out against the plans of
local utilities to build 17 new coal-fired power
plants. What is the point of her city buying police
cars fuelled by natural gas, she asks, when they will
soon be overshadowed by clouds of soot? 

Despite all this grassroots environmentalism, America
remains the biggest contributor to global warming,
accounting for roughly a fifth of all the world's
emissions. The federal government's recalcitrance on
the subject remains the biggest obstacle to an
effective global scheme to tackle the problem. But
whereas in Europe or Asia new ideas often flow from
the centre to the regions, in America the states are
the incubators of big shifts in policy. This means
that change is coming—fast.




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