By Ross McKitrick
EPA Secretary Scott Pruitt has argued that the Paris Agreement on Climate Change is a bad deal for the U.S. because it doesn’t bind China and India. But that implies it could be fixed by imposing the same ruinous terms on developing countries—which would in fact just spread the damage. The real reason for pulling of the Paris Accord is that it is a futile gesture based on empty and dishonest premises.
The first thing to note is that the same computer models that say global warming is a problem also say that Paris will not fix it. If one were to graph the standard warming projections over the next century with and without Paris, the two lines overlap almost exactly. Whatever greenhouse gas (GHG) concentration we would have reached in the year 2100 without Paris, we will reach it shortly thereafter with. For all its costs, the Paris treaty will have almost no effect on global warming, and by depleting global income it will make it harder for countries to adapt and innovate in response to whatever changes occur. Thus not only does Paris not solve the problem, it arguably makes it worse.
This, by the way, was equally true of the earlier Kyoto Protocol: all cost and no benefit. Under current technology and economic realities we have only two options: do nothing and adapt to whatever changes the climate will undergo over the next century, or take a lot of costly and futile actions today and adapt to whatever changes the climate will undergo over the next century. There has never been a third option involving costly actions today that stop the climate from changing.
Paris binds countries to meet their self-imposed Nationally Determined Contributions, or NDCs. The Obama Administration submitted an NDC that committed the U.S. to a twenty six percent reduction in GHG emissions below 2005 levels by 2025 through specific regulatory measures, all of which were enacted by Executive Order rather than by passing laws in Congress. It amounts to an attempt by one Administration to bind all future Administrations despite lacking legislative warrant. If the U.S. NDC was supposed to be legally binding then it should have gone through Congress. And now that some of those measures have been repealed by the current Administration, it is dishonest to keep the existing NDC as part of the Paris Agreement.
Paris embeds an inconsistency between calling for the use of the “best available science” while also prejudging what that science is allowed to say. The Accord’s preamble calls climate change an “urgent threat” even though mainstream climate science and economics does not imply this, instead placing global warming rather low on the list of problems confronting the world. The Agreement enshrines the ill-defined and arbitrary target of holding “the” global average temperature to 2oC above pre-industrial levels while completely ignoring the critical question of how it should be measured. Nor does it say how much of the warming is natural and should not be counted against the 2oC limit. This omission alone makes the overall target absurd, since it could bind the world to taking actions to prevent the sun from shining brighter.
The Paris Agreement also veers into absurdity by its political and ideological language, requiring countries to address extraneous themes like gender equity, biodiversity, poverty eradication, migrants, disabled persons, a “just transition of the workforce,” “creation of decent work,” and so on. Having larded the treaty with social justice slogans, its authors cannot be surprised if they become points of contention. It is not surprising that conservative governments will dislike these items, and if the authors respond that they can simply be ignored, then they should not have been in the treaty to begin with.
Finally, a proponent might acknowledge all these problems yet still defend Paris as a “good first step” in the expectation that later steps will yield big benefits. But this is flawed reasoning. In any well-structured policy transition the first step yields the highest benefits at the lowest cost—the so-called low hanging fruit. Subsequent steps cost more and yield less, until the point is reached where costs exceed benefits and the process stops. Paris, like Kyoto, cost too much to implement while yielding unmeasurably small benefits. Subsequent steps will only be worse. It is a bad first step on a road to nowhere.
Pulling out of the Paris treaty would send a signal that the U.S. will not bind itself to bad deals based on hype and empty slogans. If this is the best global climate diplomacy could come up with then it is time to pursue other options.
Via the Cato Institute
Why would the US ever back out of the Paris climate accord? Coal is never coming back and renewables accounted for 65% of generating capacity last year. Fossil fuels are dead because they are no longer competitive with wind and solar.
Except these renewables are nuclear and hydro, not wind and solar. And if fossil fuels are dead, what’s powering all the cars, trucks, planes, trains and ships out there? In addition, it’s natural gas that’s providing the US with most of its heating and electrical generation capacity, and isn’t natural gas still a fossil fuel?
jtrobertsj April 27, 2017 at 5:46 pm
I do love how alarmists post their green fantasies as if they were obvious truth. Does this look like coal is dead?

Globally coal has never died. It is still a huge energy source in the US, and now that Trump is rolling back Obama’s misguided attempt to kill the industry via regulatory strangulation, it is rebounding.
Golobally, both India and China are building new coal-fired power plants as fast as they can. Plus of course the huge demand for coking coal worldwide will only increase … but then perhaps you don’t know what coking coal is …
Best regards,
w.
Well coal power plants are still closing in the USA.
https://cleantechnica.com/2017/04/24/us-coal-plant-closures-likely-eliminate-30-million-tonnes-annual-coal-demand/
“The United States is closing 46 coal-fired generating units at 25 electricity plants across 16 states over the next few years, transitioning to natural gas or intentionally closing them, and a new report shows that this will likely result in eliminating about 30 million tons of annual coal demand by the end of 2018.”
So coal is certainly a decreasing power source in the US and since 90% of Us coal goes in power plants, then it is certain there aren’t going to be any new mining jobs
China and India are not now rolling out coal power plants at the old rate.
china has cancelled over 100 in the last year and India’s are running at 55% capacity.
And the draft power plan from the Indian govt says it needs to start no new power plants till 2027. It is also shutting older coal plants and the plant proposed may never get built.
http://www.climatechangenews.com/2016/12/16/india-to-halt-building-new-coal-plants-in-2022/
Willis this is a good graphic, but it misses a few things. Coal is also used to manufacture cement, and has a range of other uses, from electrodes through to cosmetics. It also supplies the electricity for the manufacture of a good percentage of the world’s aluminium supply.
Perhaps true Griff, at least in the US, but why are they closing? And is there any potential for the circumstances driving closure decisions to change? Of course there is and let’s hope it happens!
I am privy to know the details of one planned closure (mothballing actually) that is the direct result of blatant sue and settle coercion involving the EPA, a once great state, the Sierra Club, and misguided and poorly supported regional haze regulations. The generating unit and associated transmission infrastructure in question will remain totally viable and ready to fire up should the day come that once again sane leadership prevails. It’s hardly sustainable to prematurely shutter perfectly good generating assets before their design lives are realized. A waste of resources really. Not to mention the complete lack of meaningful effect premature closure has on anything other than the guilt stricken collective consciences of all too prosperous eco justice warriors.
jtrobertsj April 27, 2017 at 5:46 pm
In addition to Mr. Katz’s comment about these being nuclear and hydro, it’s a classic newbie mistake to conflate generating capacity with actual generation. A windmill that is not turning may have a generating capacity of 3 megawatts … but if it is not spinning but sitting dead as it is most of the time, the amount generated is zero. As a result, generating capacity is a meaningless figure.
Next, the total ACTUAL generation globally from solar, wind, and biofuels in 2014 was about 1400 TWh … and total generation was 23536.5 TWh. So your much vaunted renewables provided a pathetic 6% of global electricity supply. And in the US it’s not much more, 6.6% of the total from wind, solar, and biofuels.
Finally, your claim that solar and wind are economically competitive is a sick joke. They only exist at all because of the billions of dollars that green folks like yourself have taken from the taxpayers and put into the pockets of the owners of the wind turbines and solar panels. You think this makes you noble.
I think that this makes you a common thief. You are stealing tax money from the poor and middle class to give it to the rich. Not impressed, amigo, taking money from other people’s pockets for your green fantasies is not something to boast about.
JT, you need to get much more skeptical and start turning over the rocks. You’ve been sold a bill of goods.
w.
Great contribution Willis. Please add me to your mailing list mrmichaeldarby@hotmail.com
Always good to look at actual TWh generated and then what percentage of total yearly generation that is.
Michael darby April 28, 2017 at 12:59 am
Thanks, Michael. Not sure what you mean by “mailing list”. My blog is here. You can subscribe to either blog to get an email each time there is a new post.
w.
What a hilarious and ignorant comment. Fossil fuels are essential raw materials that MAKE wind turbines and solar panels. Moron.
Where do you think all that concrete, steel and aluminium comes from? The frigging sky fairy?
65%??? What color is the sky in your world.
It’s closer to 1%.
Richard M April 27, 2017 at 6:38 am
Richard, while you might WISH that President Trump is “fast losing the support of his base”, in fact the polls show that if the election were held today he’d win again, including the popular vote.
As to “something in the win column”, if he were to never do anything more than what he’s done, killing the TPP, getting Goresuch on the court, installing the “remove two regulations for every new one” order, revitalizing the coal industry, bringing thousands of jobs back to the US, and banning lobbying for five years, for me and I suspect many others that would mark his as the most successful presidency in years … and he’s just getting started.
So … keep dreaming that Trump is failing. You seem to have no clue how his base views him. They look at the above list and they know he’s already won big. If you do wish to know what his base is thinking, my suggestion would be to read Salena Zito.
w.
Trump just keeps rolling right along despite all the obstacles being thrown in his path. It’s amazing to watch. He said today that the President of Mexico and the Prime Minister of Canada (both good friends, he said) called him and asked him to please renegotiate the NAFTA agreement, and Trump said he would be happy to as long as the US got a good deal. That’s just what Trump wanted. The art of the deal. 🙂
Trump is the Man.
Sure, that explains why he has the lowest approval ratings of any modern day President at the 100 day mark.
Chris April 28, 2017 at 9:54 am
Actually, that is explained by two things.
First, the media has been successful in demonizing him. For example, to date there is exactly zero evidence of collusion between the Trump Campaign and the Russians … but the media has convinced some 40% of the populace that the case is totally proven.
Second, ALL politicians have low ratings these days and guess what?
Trump’s approval rating is better than that of the Senate Majority Leader, the Senate Minority Leader, the House Majority Leader, or the House Minority Leader.
Considering that he’s polling BETTER than the leaders of both parties in both Houses, I’d say in the current anti-politician climate he’s in doing quite well.
w.
Once Gorsuch is in place, could a Supreme Court challenge to the Paris agreement be launched? Seems to me there could be plenty of valid grounds for such a challenge.
Speaking of low hanging fruit. Tearing up the Paris paper should have been an easy first win for a president Trump. A low cost, high yield presidential action. Why is this even being discussed now??
Excellent question.
Because corporate America doesn’t want Trump to tear it up. He may well still do so, but that is not what the corporate world wants.
The only urgent threat is to the sinecures of the sinful
I recently read a news report suggesting the president may declare the agreement a treaty, then send it to the Senate for carrying out the death sentence. That should make it harder for the remainers” to say it wasn’t given a fair chance.
“That should make it harder for the remainers” to say it wasn’t given a fair chance.”
Yes, and a U.S. Senate rejection will make it impossible for the Left to successfully blame the killing of the Paris Agreement all on Trump.
HAS April 28, 2017 at 1:22 pm
While I wish that were the truth, several things change that. First is the widespread subsidization of electric vehicles, from keeping Elon Musk rich with $4.6 billion in stolen taxpayer money to subsidizing rich buyers. Talk about a ripoff, taking tax money from the middle class to subsidize someone wealthy enough to buy a $100,000 car is a damn eco-crime.
Then you have all the people who are happy to ignore the fact that currently a used Honda gasoline car gets ~ 50 miles per gallon and has much lower lifetime costs, just so that they can brag to their friends just how wonderful and green they are.
Then you have the wildly market distorting “cap-and-trade” and “CO2 tax” scams that make inefficient EVs appear to the polloi to be efficient …
But yes, if you squint real hard and ignore all of that ugly reality, you’re right, an EV is almost “as good as” an internal combustion engine …
w.
Oh and did I mention running out of gas a mile from a service station and getting out with my gas can to walk for fuel, versus running out of electricity a mile from a charging station and getting out with my electron can to walk for fuel? …
w.
Cut the crap, just put it to a vote. Obama was to cowardly to do it because Kyoto had already been voted down .
“But as I said, Scott Adams was right. The meme of “Trump is Hitler” is indeed being replaced by the meme “Trump is an idiot”, and you are exhibit one in support of Adams’ claim.”
This is standard procedure for the Leftwing MSM. They characterized all Republican presidents in this way, with the exception of Eisenhower.
Yes, we are seeing the standard MSM/Left propaganda attack on a Republican president, with the exception that the attacks on Trump are especially intense, because there is a lot more leftwing media today taking potshots at him, than there was in the past.
But, Trump is getting the job done, and increasing his support, despite the MSM and the Left and their dishonest, undermining, half-truths and lies.
And you should always keep in mind that when our president is undermined, we as a nation are undermined. The MSM and the Left are not just attacking Trump, they are attacking us, too.
Through this storm of lies from the MSM and the Left about Trump, what kind of picture of Trump do you think the fattest man in North Korea has of Trump?
Perhaps Kim Jung Un has a distorted picture of Trump and perhaps that will cause Kim to miscalculate and cross a line he didn’t think was there because of those lies. If Kim had been shown the truth about the resolve of Trump and the American people (53 percent favor military action against North Korea), perhaps he wouldn’t have chosen to commit suicide.
MSM lies have big consequences. They are dangerous to our personal freedoms for many reasons. Their delusions hamper us from dealing with the real world in the proper way. Don’t believe their spin on *anything* if you value your freedoms.