Anti-fossil fuel SCC relies on garbage models, ignores carbon benefits and hurts the poor
Foreword:
The Social Cost of Carbon is a key foundation for numerous Obama-era energy policies, regulations and programs. Climate alarm activists insist the SCC is rooted in solid science and economics, but it is actually little more than Garbage In-Garbage Out forecasting – and worse.
The SCC assumes fossil-fuel-driven carbon dioxide emissions are causing dangerous manmade climate change, and blames U.S. emissions for every conceivable climate-related cost worldwide. But it fails even to mention, much less analyze, the tremendous and obvious benefits of using oil, gas and coal to power modern civilization – or the undeniable benefits of more CO2 in Earth’s atmosphere helping crops and habitats grow faster and better. Finally, the SCC totally ignores the social, economic, employment and environmental costs of the regulations imposed in the name of saving the planet by converting America to a totally carbon-free energy system.
By Paul Driessen and Roger Bezdek
“If you could pick just one thing to reduce poverty, by far you would pick energy,” Bill Gates has said. “Access to energy is absolutely fundamental in the struggle against poverty,” World Bank VP Rachel Kyte and Nobel Prize Laureate Dr. Amartya Sen agree.
The UN Development Program also calls energy “central to poverty reduction.” And International Energy Agency Executive Director Dr. Fatih Birol notes that “coal is raising living standards and lifting hundreds of millions of people out of poverty.” In fact, all fossil fuels are doing so.
Indeed, fossil fuels created the modern world and the housing, transportation, other technologies and living standards so many of us take for granted. They are essential for electricity and life, and over the past 250 years they more than doubled average life expectancy in countries that took advantage of them.
But the Obama Administration and radical environmentalists despise fossil fuels and used every tactic they could devise to eliminate them. One of their most important schemes was the “social cost of carbon.”
Federal agencies used the SCC to calculate the “hidden costs” of carbon dioxide emissions associated with fossil fuel use, by assigning a dollar value to every ton of CO2 emitted by power plants, factories, homes, vehicles and other sources. However, the entire process was little more than junk science and Garbage In-Garbage Out forecasting.
First, each ton of U.S. emissions averted would initially have prevented a hypothetical $25/ton in global societal costs allegedly resulting from dangerous manmade climate change: less coastal flooding and tropical disease, fewer droughts and extreme weather events, for example. But within three years regulators arbitrarily increased the SCC to around $40/ton.
That made it easier to justify the Clean Power Plan, Paris climate agreement, and countless Obama Era actions on electricity generation, fracking, methane, pipelines, vehicle mileage and appliance efficiency standards, livestock operations, carbon taxes, and wind, solar and biofuel mandates and subsidies.
Second, the supposed bedrock for the concept is the now rapidly shifting sands of climate chaos theory. New questions are arising almost daily about data quality and manipulation, the degree to which carbon dioxide affects global temperatures, the complex interplay of solar, cosmic ray, oceanic and other natural forces, and the inability of computer models to predict temperatures, sea level rise or hurricanes.
Meanwhile, as the 2015-16 El Nino dissipated, average global temperatures rapidly fell back almost to their 1998-2014 level, according to Britain’s Met Office and other experts. That means there has been no measurable planetary warming for 18 years. Nor are other predicted disasters happening in the real world.
That means the very notion that U.S. emissions impose major climate costs is increasingly indefensible. Moreover, developing nations are burning fossil fuels and emitting carbon dioxide at many times the U.S. rate; that means even eliminating their use in America would have no effect on atmospheric CO2 levels.
Third, the SCC scheme blames American emissions for supposed costs worldwide (even though U.S. CO2 emissions are declining each year). It incorporates almost every conceivable cost of oil, gas and coal use on crops, forests, coastal cities, property damage, “forced migration,” and human health, nutrition and disease. However, it utterly fails to mention, much less analyze, tremendous and obvious carbon benefits.
That violates a 1993 Bill Clinton executive order requiring that federal agencies assess both benefits and costs of proposed regulations. It is also irrational, and completely contrary to human experience.
Fossil fuels created the modern world and lifted billions out of destitution and disease. They supply over 80% of the energy that powers United States and other modern civilizations; they will continue doing so for decades to come. They generate up to $70 trillion in annual global GDP.
Using readily available data on global living standards, economies, disease, nutrition, life spans and other benefits – and the government’s own SCC cost figures and methodologies – we estimate that carbon benefits exceed costs by orders of magnitude: at least 50 to 1 and as much as 500 to 1!
The U.S. Energy Information Administration forecasts that fossil fuels will provide 75-80% of worldwide energy through 2040 – when the total amount of energy consumed will be at least 25% greater than today. That means these notable benefit-cost ratios will continue. The Obama Era SCC ignores all of this, too.
Fourth, SCC schemes likewise impute only costs to carbon dioxide emissions. However, as thousands of scientific studies verify, rising levels of this miracle molecule are “greening” the Earth – reducing deserts, and improving forests, grasslands, drought resistance, crop yields and human nutrition. No matter which government report or discount rate is used, asserted social costs of more CO2 in Earth’s atmosphere are infinitesimal compared to its estimated benefits.
Fifth, government officials claim they can accurately forecast damages to the world’s climate, economies, civilizations, populations and ecosystems from U.S. carbon dioxide emissions over the next three centuries. They say we must base today’s energy policies, laws and regulations on those forecasts.
The notion is delusional and dangerous. The rate of change in energy generation and other technologies has become exponential over the past several decades, with forecasting ability declining at an equal rate. Uncertainties over man and nature-driven climate changes during the next 300 years are equally colossal. Combining all the SCC assumptions, methodologies, fabrications and omissions, and injecting its absurd predictions into high-speed computer models, just means bogus forecasts are generated more quickly.
Finally, the most fundamental issue isn’t even the social cost of carbon. It is the costs inflicted on society by anti-carbon regulations. Those rules replace fossil fuel revenues with renewable energy subsidies; reliable, affordable electricity with unreliable power that costs two to three times as much; and mines, drill holes, cropland and wildlife habitats with tens of millions of acres of wind, solar and biofuel “farms.”
Anti-carbon rules are designed to drive energy de-carbonization and modern nation de-industrialization. Perhaps worst, their impacts fall hardest on poor, minority and blue-collar families. Those families spend proportionately three to ten times more of their incomes on energy than families earning $50,000 to $250,000 a year. They have little discretionary income and face the greatest risk of having their electricity cut off – as happened to 330,000 families during 2015 in ultra-green Germany. Worldwide, billions of people still do not have electricity – and the SCC would keep them deprived of its benefits.
Bureaucrats, activists, scientists and corporate rent-seekers certainly welcome the SCC mumbo-jumbo. They have profited the most from the countless billions that Obama regulatory agencies lavished on them every year, and from the tens of billions that Mr. Obama stashed in dozens of agencies, programs and crannies throughout the government, so they couldn’t easily be found or cut.
Above all, they would profit massively from the $93 trillion that the Financial Stability Board’s climate task force says the world must spend in low-carbon infrastructure programs over the next 15 years, as part of the Obama-UN-FSB-Climate Crisis, Inc. plan to de-carbonize and de-industrialize the planet.
Taxpayers, consumers and families would be hammered if the Climate Cabal got even more power over energy policies, economic growth, livelihoods and living standards. Thankfully, eliminating the social cost of carbon and programs implemented under it requires little more than applying the same rules and standards that government regulators have imposed on Volkswagen, Fiat and Wall Street dishonesty.
That is why the Trump Administration is challenging the SCC, climate cataclysm deception, and the bloated EPA budget behind so much of it. It’s why the House Science Committee’s Environment and Oversight Subcommittees held a hearing on the SCC, and why we and other experts will eviscerate it during the upcoming Heartland Institute 12th International Climate Conference in Washington, DC.
It’s time to rescind and defund the SCC – and replace it with honest, objective cost-benefit analyses.
Roger Bezdek is an internationally recognized energy analyst and president of Management Information Services, Inc. Paul Driessen is senior policy analyst for the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow and author of articles on energy, climate change and human rights.
I sometimes get the impression from many here that the concern for the poor, the disadvantaged, for bird life, the environment etc is generally only an issue when related to climate change scepticism. For instance the Bill for Trumps weekly golfing holidays would have been really useful in minimising the impact of his decision to remove funding from after hours school programmes and social housing , but many here will not see that as an issue.
I do understand and sympathise that carbon taxes etc can disproportionally affect the poor in society which is unacceptable. But I wish that that concern for the disenfranchised in society was a steady moral compass, as opposed to an outrage when related to climate change issues.
By the way, can I suggest when responding to my outrageous and unacceptable observation, that posters try and address the points, as opposed to immediately targeting getting myself or my ethnicity?
“Gareth Phillips March 19, 2017 at 2:56 am
I do understand and sympathise that carbon taxes etc can disproportionally affect the poor in society which is unacceptable.”
No you DO NOT! You have no idea what you are talking about.
And the first poster off the mark with the Ad Hominem attack is Patrick. Tell me Patrick, do you have the evidence to demonstrate that I have no idea what I am talking about ? Or is it just an angry shot from the hip without thinking anything through?
It really is funny how the poster who does nothing but insult those who disagree with him, gets his panties in a wad when someone throws an insult back.
Gareth Phillips – March 19, 2017 at 2:56 am
So, Gareth P, are you claiming that the funding of “midnight basketball” and other such similar programs ….. is/was a super-duper really great after-hours school program that resulted in an immediate decrease in the number of robberies/shootings/murders in Chicago and other large US cities? To wit:
Good thinking, Gareth P, …… good thinking, …….. your approved programs are really making a “deadly” difference.
I think the mistake made by Trump and his follows in divesting funds for school children suffering poverty, was that feeding them was not producing improved academic results.
Think about that.
Do we ensure children get a decent diet to ensure they do well in school, or do we do it because children need a nutritious diets and it is a humanitarian action to do so?
If we look at it another way, would we withdraw food from a child because their school results were not up to scratch?
It must admit, I think the sight of Trump taking weekly golfing holidays which is costing the US tax payer millions each week, while withdrawing funds for organisations which try to ensure people are adequately fed is pretty sick. What do you reckon on meals on wheels? Not worth the effort?
Samuel Cogar says “…the funding of “midnight basketball” and other such similar programs ….. is/was a super-duper really great after-hours school program”
Thank you Samuel Cogar, I had completely forgotten about the origins of Midnight basketball.
Since the topic is social costs, “What about the homeowners and taxpayers who have to fund after school programs?” The truth is, stay-at-home moms are attempting the admirable feat of providing a good home (good books, good food, nice clothes) on a single income. And why should she be on the hook to pay for all of the moms who do not take care of their children? It really is hard for single income families.
Plus the infinite taxation device on our homes through funding public schools. Those who do not use them pay double for education. That is a high social cost.
Gareth Phillips – March 19, 2017 at 10:13 am
I think you have a serious problem ……. and I would tell you to “think about it” ….. but that would be wasted advise simply because your lack of “thinking ability” is the root cause of your problem.
First you were “badmouthing” President Trump for …… “remove(ing) funding from after hours school programmes” ……. which was/is ONLY supported by “troughfeeding” liberal moochers, ……. then your “thinking” got befuddled and you quickly forgot what you were “badmouthing” and began bitching about Trump et el “divesting funds for school lunch programs” that directly affects children suffering poverty,
Gareth, it is obvious that you are totally ignorant about the “School Lunch Programs in the public schools”, which is primarily funded by the USDA and conducted according to their Rules and Regulations.
The USDA’s “price support programs” pays the farmers for the produce they grow …. and the USDA then gives all that produce “free-of-charge” to all of the Public School Lunch Programs in the US as well to various Food Banks and other “food distributing” organizations.
Shur nuff, we ensure children get a decent diet by giving the parents “Food Stamps” …… but the parents sale or trade those “Food Stamps” to support their “drug” habit and their kids go hungry.
Gareth, either get the “illegal drugs” or the “children” out of the homes they are living in ….. and that alone will ensure that a majority of them will do well in school.
And here, Gareth P, …… I fixed your mistake, …… to wit:
Concluding you don’t know what you’re talking about is not ad hom. It is just that your post has no there there. Do Pres.Trump’s golf outings cost more than did Pres. Obama’s? You accuse skeptics of caring for the poor only irt carbon. Yet the evidence is that energy poverty hurts the poor is overwhelming.So best wishes and tata for now.
President Trump has spent 7 vacation in seven weeks as President. It has cost over $10 million so far. In comparison, Obama’s vacations for the whole of his eight years in office cost $97 million. A cost which outraged Trump who severely criticised Obama for his golfing holidays.
Now if Trump has cost $10 million in 7 weeks, and Obama cost $97 million in eight years, how long will it take at current trends for Trump to over take Obama, work it out so that you can come to your own conclusion.
Stating that someone does not know what they are talking abut without offering any evidence is a classic Ad Hom tactic. It is essentially an accusation of ignorance with no supporting evidence and no attempt to add anything to the debate. You may think it is a clever and dynamic tactic, but it has no moral or intellectual standing. To be honest, it is just sad.
“I sometimes get the impression from many here that the concern for the poor … is generally only an issue when related to climate change scepticism. For instance the Bill for Trumps weekly golfing holidays … but many here will not see that as an issue.”
When confronted with catastrophic man made climate change claims, heads of governments elsewhere, such as Egyptian president and CAHOSCC coordinator H.E. Abdelfattah Al Sisi and Indian PM Narendra Modi, have openly expressed concerns about the wellbeing of the poor. Unless Trump’s golfing ground becomes centre of US policies, I fail to see the relevancy in this discussion, let alone how you extracted the thoughts of many about it over here.
“I do understand and sympathise that carbon taxes etc can disproportionally affect the poor in society which is unacceptable. But I wish that that concern for the disenfranchised in society was a steady moral compass, as opposed to an outrage when related to climate change issues.”
This owner of this website defines the scope of the discussion. If you disagree with it, feel free to choose a different website.
“By the way, can I suggest when responding to my outrageous and unacceptable observation, that posters try and address the points, as opposed to immediately targeting getting myself or my ethnicity?”
In my opinion the qualifiers you have chosen for your observation are accurate irrespective of your person or ethnic background. Hoping this mets your expectations, have a nice day.
Gareth, do you realize that the President’s budget submittal is not the budget? What Trump has submitted may have very little to do with what the final budget will look like. The budget will also have nothing to do with the cost of Trump’s or Obama’s golf outings or vacations.
Most of the budgets that Obama submitted to Congress were so ludicrous that they were voted down unanimously or near unanimous (google -Obama budget defeated- for some interesting reading). And the Democrats under Reid and Pelosi often took the step of not passing a budget (sometimes not even proposing a budget in violation of the Constitution). They passed one massive pork laden budget at the beginning of Obama’s tenure and then kept rolling that budget over using continuing resolutions. This allowed them to squirrel away money for special interests rather than fund projects discretely.
One query; could you point me to the section of the Constitution that indicates it is the Federal governments purview to fund after hours school programs or social housing?
One thing I notice with most socialists. They really do get upset at the idea that people are permitted to have more than they do.
For example, Gareth here is upset that Trump is allowed to spend money on himself rather than have it seized by the government so that it can be given to people that he believes are more deserving. Such as himself.
I also love the way socialists assume that the only way to help people is for government to steal from those who work in order to give it to people who vote for the socialists.
Malthusian and other misanthropes are free to use terms like “social cost of carbon” and “fossil fuel”, but what prevents discussion about “social cost of life” and “hydrocarbons”?
When considered as a whole, carbon based life forms consume carbon dioxide.
All of the carbon in all organic matter came from carbon dioxide.
“Social cost of carbon” – another fabricated term invented to milk the taxpayer for all they’re worth; a revenue generating scheme. There is no such thing as a social cost of carbon.
https://www.facebook.com/fourtimesayear/photos/a.427072877441780.1073741829.360297500785985/631083467040719/?type=3&theater
I think Jonathan Swift would have found great inspiration from the term “Social Cost of Carbon”. Instead of merely lampooning the attitude of the wealthy English elites towards the Irish, he could have lampooned the attitude of the wealthy elites of the entire world towards the rest of us:
https://andromeda.rutgers.edu/~jlynch/Texts/modest.html
“A Modest Proposal
For Preventing the Children of Poor People
in Ireland, from Being a Burden on Their Parents
or Country, and for Making Them
Beneficial to the Publick”
Could so easily today become:
“A Modest Proposal for Preventing the Blight of Carbon Pollution
by Limiting Carbon Based Life Forms by Xenocide and Other Necessary Means of Limitation”
the whole idea of SCC is just one of the negative externalities of the social cost of stupid.
obviously, the pigovian solution is to tax stupidity.
97% of global economists project the market for stupid derivatives could exceed the entire world gdp by 2020.
who wants to lose a seat at that table?
I have no doubt that it is possible to construct a social cost of the burning of fossil fuels, but the problem with the people who do so, is that they don’t construct a figure for its social benefits. What reasoning person would not list both the pros and cons? I have no doubt that the pros would outweigh the cons by at least a hundredfold.
Thanks. but “pick one thing” is wrong – individual freedom protected by defense and justice systems is the one thing that would most help the poor, as it lets people produce for human life. It lets our means of survival – our minds – take the action needed for life.
There has never been a famine in a society with a relatively free press.
In contrast, climate alarmists want to enslave people – look at their proposed actions of many types, including suppression of speech.
Excellent analysis. However, the only point actually relevant is the last paragraph of Point #1: “…That made it easier to justify the Clean Power Plan, Paris climate agreement, and countless Obama Era actions on electricity generation, fracking, methane, pipelines, vehicle mileage and appliance efficiency standards, livestock operations, carbon taxes, and wind, solar and biofuel mandates and subsidies…” Thus, the initial production of a $25/ton number, later raised to $40/ton, it had become apparent the first figure wasn’t adequate to justify everything 0bummer wanted to do. That is ALL the SCC was about, ever and henceforward! Everything else around it, the “Three Programs™” (delving into theology a little bit, and the Three Wise Men?), the modules, the discount rate, the various “sources” of their costs, were all irrelevant as long as the final product was a number sufficiently large to justify totalitarianism. Why, I believe the Three Programs™ can be named individually: 1) Smoke. 2) And. 3) Mirrors.