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Energy & Environment
Energy

DLC | Blueprint Magazine | January 22, 2002
Cap 'n' Trade
By Jan Mazurek and Byron Swift

Table of Contents

During the toxic "green wars" of the 1990s, national progress on both energy and environment was caught in the crossfire between those opposing any changes in the environmental policies of the 1970s and those seeking to relax standards altogether. Today, during a national emergency that is producing bipartisanship and unity across political battle lines, there's an opportunity for a breakthrough. It's time to form a new consensus in energy and environmental policy that joins higher standards and market forces in the battle for cleaner air. A comprehensive, four-emission trading system is the right place to start.

The momentum for such a system has grown out of recent history. Called "cap-and-trade," emissions trading was first introduced in 1989 to break the deadlock over reducing acid rain caused by sulfur dioxide (SO2) emissions. Emissions trading showed that creating a cleaner environment did not need to create inordinate costs. The model is simple: It sets tough environmental standards -- an emissions "cap" -- then lets companies that exceed the standards "trade" some of their emissions allowances to companies that don't. The cap-and-trade system holds the potential to address a controversy that promises to be far bigger than the debate around acid rain: climate change.

Despite his campaign pledge to use market mechanisms to cap carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions, President Bush abandoned that pledge and also unilaterally withdrew the United States from efforts to reduce greenhouse gases internationally. In both cases, the White House trotted out the acid rain argument: Controlling emissions costs too much. Yet 180 countries have stuck to the Kyoto Protocol; this clearly indicates that carbon will be capped and traded worldwide. President Bush's pullout only means that U.S. companies will be left in the cold as a global market develops to control greenhouse gas emissions.

In addition, many electricity-generating companies and members of Congress now view the price of not developing a strategy to reduce power plant emissions as too high. After all, electricity generators produce about one-third of the total U.S. emissions of nitrogen oxide (NOX) and mercury and an even higher share of its SO2 and CO2.

All this has generated momentum in Congress to create comprehensive cap-and-trade schemes for the four "emissions": SO2, NOX, mercury, and CO2. Along with acid rain and global warming, emissions of these four substances are linked to various health and environmental concerns, including fine-particulate exposure, smog, and regional haze. Legislators have introduced at least four comprehensive emissions bills, and power utilities have proposed two others. In addition, Sens. Joe Lieberman (D-Conn.) and John McCain (R-Ariz.) plan to introduce legislation to reduce CO2 emissions from the whole economy, not just those produced by utilities.

In developing the legislation, Congress should be guided by two key principles.

The first is the need to include carbon dioxide in any comprehensive effort to cap and trade emissions from electricity generators. Current legislative proposals as well as those proposed by industry include a cap-and-trade system for three emissions: sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxide, and mercury. But a big fight continues about including the fourth of the Big Four produced by electricity generators: carbon dioxide. Recent signals that the Bush Administration would opt to drop carbon dioxide from new anti-pollution standards have been, in fact, one of the big sources of disagreement, both here at home as well as between the United States and its European allies with respect to implementation of the Kyoto Protocol on global climate change.

The second principle is that a comprehensive emissions reduction package must integrate existing provisions for new sources under the Clean Air Act's New Source Review (NSR) with a cap-and-trade program. Congress created those provisions to ensure that air quality would not deteriorate when industry built new facilities or "sources." The NSR provisions require new plants to secure approval for major modifications that can affect air quality.

NSR's provisions require sources to install the "best available" and, in some instances, state-of-the-art technologies to reduce emissions. Such requirements can reduce incentives to bring new power online and to upgrade older generating facilities. To correct these deficiencies, Congress should integrate the two standards by eliminating NSR standards for those sources that are covered under the emissions cap. Once Congress imposes stringent emissions trading caps, NSR becomes redundant -- it no longer provides any significant emissions reductions. Eliminating NSR provisions for new sources has the potential to actually boost cleaner energy technologies by spreading the economic burden for pollution control more evenly among all electricity generators, rather than just place it on new sources.

In addition to including carbon and providing broad relief from NSR in a comprehensive emissions trading bill, decisionmakers should follow four key guidelines.

Make the strategy comprehensive. If the four emissions generated by electric utilities are not addressed in one strategy, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) must regulate the emissions individually, under different provisions of the Clean Air Act, with differing standards applied to different ages and classes of energy-producing technologies. Targeting these emissions one by one makes it harder for generators to develop a coherent investment strategy; moreover, the strategy does nothing to promote the development of clean, efficient technologies to reduce emissions.

Use emissions caps, not technology control standards. Effective market-based strategies such as emissions caps outperform "first-generation" approaches. First-generation approaches control emissions with prescriptive technologies only after emissions are created. In contrast, caps do not tell companies how to reduce emissions. Instead, companies are free to decide how to control emissions, provided that they meet stringent caps.

Establish phased reduction targets. We should adopt emissions caps with integrity, but give sources reasonable time to meet them. Doing so will help the United States to maintain a diverse fuel portfolio, including advanced coal technologies, yet spur development of alternative fuel sources and technologies.

Distribute trading allowances equitably. Select emissions trading allowance distribution methods that cover sources equally -- old and new, large and small -- and use methods that promote efficient energy production.

More than a dozen power generators have signed on to proposals to replace individual new regulations promulgated by EPA with a comprehensive emissions cap and allowance trading system. A number of these companies, including Pacific Gas & Electric's National Energy Group, Exelon Corp., and Northeast Utilities, favor mandatory strategies that add carbon to the three-pollutant trading methods proposed by the White House. Others acknowledge the importance of controlling carbon but favor voluntary approaches. Three-pollutant strategies will only perpetuate old, end-of-pipe controls and postpone inevitable retrofits to control carbon, ensuring that those retrofits will cost more money than they otherwise would have. That's why a comprehensive, four-emission trading system is the right choice in the changed climate of our national debate.

Jan Mazurek directs the Center for Innovation and the Environment at the Progressive Policy Institute in Washington, D.C. Byron Swift directs the Center for Energy, Economy and Innovation at the Environmental Law Institute in Washington, D.C.



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