Guest essay by Marlo Lewis Jr. of the Competitive Enterprise Institute
They’re back! The same GOP elders who have been pushing what American Enterprise Institute economist Ben Zycher charitably calls “The Deeply Flawed Case for a Carbon Tax” are now urging President Trump to stay in the Paris Agreement.
Yesterday in the New York Times, former Reagan Secretary of State George P. Shultz and his Climate Leadership Council colleague Ted Halstead, who heads the organization, argue that staying in the pact will “spur new investment, strengthen American competitiveness, create jobs, ensure American access to global markets and help reduce future business risks associated with the changing climate” whereas exiting will “yield the opposite.”
Shultz and Halstead ignore the chief perils of remaining in the Paris Agreement:
- The Agreement is the legal framework for a permanent global campaign of political pressure and diplomatic blowback to “name and shame” leaders, like Trump, who dare to champion the American people’s freedom to develop the country’s vast energy resources.
- Remaining in the Agreement ensures that U.S. leaders will continually have to negotiate domestic energy policy with foreign governments, multilateral bureaucrats, and anti-growth advocacy groups—elites who do not put America’s interests first.
- If Trump is free to treat President Obama’s emission-reduction pledge—the U.S. “nationally determined contribution” (NDC)—as a retractable wish list rather than the official commitment it plainly is, the next progressive president will similarly be free to rescind Trump’s NDC and pick up where Obama left off. No revision of the U.S. NDC can secure the future of U.S. energy producers as well as exiting a pact designed to bankrupt them.
- Failing to repudiate a treaty adopted unilaterally, with the stroke of a presidential pen, without benefit of the Senate’s advice and consent, will set a dangerous precedent undermining one of the Constitution’s important checks and balances.
Shultz and Halstead write that, “Our companies are best served by a stable and predictable international framework that commits all nations to climate-change mitigation.” No so. Our companies are best served by an international framework that allows them to capitalize on comparative advantages. One of U.S. industry’s key advantages, so vital to the manufacturing renaissance on which Trump campaigned, is an abundance of affordable energy.
As Stephen Eule of the U.S. Chamber’s Institute for 21st Century Energy explains:
It is well understood that America’s abundance of affordable, reliable energy provides businesses a critical operating advantage in today’s intensely competitive global economy. IEA [International Energy Agency] data show a huge comparative energy advantage in natural gas, electricity, and coal prices for U.S. industry compared to its OECD competitors, with prices for these energy sources in the United States often two to four times less.
European Union environment minister Margot Wallström once said that the “Kyoto [Protocol] is about the economy, about leveling the playing field for big business around the world.” That goes in spades for the Paris Agreement. The only way to impose high European energy prices on U.S. firms is to pressure U.S. leaders to adopt European energy policies.
Humorless scolds never consider that candidate Trump might have been twisting their tails when he tweeted that “The concept of global warming was invented by and for the Chinese in order to make U.S. manufacturing non-competitive.” Eule notes that the marginal cost of carbon dioxide emission reductions under China’s mostly business-as-usual NDC is $0 per ton whereas the marginal cost under the U.S. NDC is $85 per ton. What I find in Trump’s funny tweet is a serious point: Global warming is the rationale for the Paris Agreement, which would handicap U.S. manufacturers much more than it would China’s.
Shultz and Halsteed warn there will be “repercussions” and damage to America’s “reputation and credibility” if “America fails to honor a global agreement that it helped forge.” However, the exact same can be said if America fails to implement the NDC on the basis of which the Obama administration negotiated the Agreement, and which he subsequently submitted as the official U.S. commitment. The Paris Agreement expressly provides two options for withdrawing, but provides no option to “adjust” an NDC to make it less stringent. By what logic is the former less kosher than the latter?
Shultz and Hallstead would have us believe that Article 4.11, which states that a party “may” adjust its NDC “with a view to enhancing the level of ambition” also implies the party may adjust the NDC to do just the reverse. Huh?
That theory can’t be right, because it conflicts with the plain meaning of words like promise, pledge, and commitment. Try applying it to more mundane circumstances. Dad promises to pick up the kids after school. He fails to do so and they wait for hours in the freezing rain. Mom demands to know why he broke his promise. Dad retorts: “I did not break my promise, because I am now retracting it!”
Shultz and Halstead note that “Global statecraft relies on trust, reputation and credibility, which can be all too easily squandered.” No quarrel there. But that’s actually a reason to withdraw. President Obama had no business putting the trust, reputation, and credibility of the United States on the line without first vetting the Paris Agreement with the U.S. Senate. Submitting the Agreement to the Senate for its review would have spared everyone the present controversy, because the pact had no chance of being approved.
Article II, Section 2, clause 2 of the Constitution states:
He [the President] shall have Power, by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, to make Treaties, provided two thirds of the Senators present concur. . . .
The advice and consent process is a quality control filter. Especially as combined with the supermajority ratification requirement, Senate review ensures that no treaty will be adopted without broad-based political support. That discourages the executive from promising others more than the political composition of the country and statutory authorities actually allow him, or his successors, to deliver. The treaty process minimizes the risk that national interest concerns will impel one executive to upend international commitments made by his predecessor.
Shultz and Hallstead should be encouraging Trump to repudiate the dangerous precedent Obama set, not validate it. After all, how much confidence can other countries put in U.S. leaders if the latter cannot be trusted to follow their own Constitution’s rules of international engagement?
Shultz and Hallstead claim “the only risk Mr. Trump faces from altering or weakening domestic climate policy under Paris is in the court of public opinion, not in federal courts.” The court of public opinion, however, is what ultimately determines the direction of public policy. As long as we stay in, the Agreement will give “progressives” at home and abroad a high-profile global platform for lobbying U.S. policymakers and influencing public opinion.
It is naïve to suppose that legitimizing such an arrangement could not severely narrow the energy policy choices available to future administrations, Congresses, and voters. It is also naïve to assume the U.S. government can remain in a pact built on the narrative that governments must take urgent action to avert planetary disaster without inviting courts to step in when policymakers fail to deliver.
Shultz and Hallstead warn that “pulling out of the agreement could subject the United States to retaliatory trade measures, enabling other countries to leapfrog American industry.” But they just told us the only penalty for tearing up Obama’s NDC is bad PR. If pulling out exposes us to retaliatory carbon tariffs, why wouldn’t replacing Obama’s emission reduction pledge with a drill-baby-drill-style enthusiasm for new oil and gas exploration?
None of Shultz and Hallstead’s arguments for staying in make much sense. Until we get to the penultimate paragraph. Then we learn what they’re really after—a carbon tax:
If the president wants to strengthen America’s competitive position, he should combine a price on carbon with border tariffs or rebates based on carbon content. United States exports to countries without comparable carbon pricing systems would receive rebates, while imports from such countries would face tariffs on the carbon content of their products.
Far from viewing the Paris Agreement as a voluntary pact with no penalties for non-compliance, Shultz and Hallstead actually expect the Agreement to be enforced through a global regime of “border tariffs or rebates based on carbon content.” They want the United States to lead the world into a new era of retaliatory trade measures. History, however, suggests protectionism is harmful to world peace and prosperity. Also, how do they know U.S. firms would always or usually prevail in trade disputes, rewarded with rebates rather than penalized with tariffs?
Zycher points out how difficult it would be for the border tariff/rebate assessors to equilibrate carbon taxes with “regulations, or subsidies for such alternative energy sources as wind and solar power, or other policies that are purported to reduce [greenhouse gas] emissions.” Even more difficult is factoring in “the international supply chain phenomenon: Goods imported from a given nation are likely to embody components and other inputs from other nations—perhaps many other nations—in vastly differing proportions, and those nations’ policies on GHG emissions almost certainly will vary considerably.”
Sorting it all out—especially in anything approaching real time—would likely require “a new bureaucracy, or perhaps an expanded one at the Internal Revenue Service,” making highly technical decisions with “important implications” for profits, shareholder value, and market share. Hardly a plan to make America great again.
Trump should be wary of taking advice about the Paris Agreement from carbon tax advocates, because their political judgment is terrible. The battle for hearts and minds in American politics is to no small extent a contest between a party that is pro-tax and anti-energy and a party that is anti-tax and pro-energy. That clear product differentiation is a political asset of enormous value to the GOP. Indeed, that sharp contrast was an important factor enabling Trump to defeat Hillary Clinton in the 2016 elections and the GOP to retain majorities in the House and Senate.
So now a group of GOP elders argues that Trump, despite promising to cut taxes and remove political impediments to domestic energy production, should impose a new tax on energy. Similarly, they argue that Trump, despite promising to “cancel” America’s participation in the Paris Agreement, should stay in. And all so that America can finally get the carbon tax the elders think is a brilliant idea.
Had Trump campaigned for the Paris Agreement and a carbon tax in 2016, would he still have defeated Hillary Clinton? Indeed, had he campaigned as Shultz and Hallstead now urge him to govern, would he even have won the GOP nomination?
Those are questions Trump and his advisors should consider carefully if he does not want to become a mere blip on the road to a carbon-constrained future rather the president who changed the direction of U.S. energy policy and made America great again.
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I find it hard to believe that “America’s credibility ” can be any more damaged than the last 8 years has already accomplished.
For sure. Bright red chemical weapons line in Syria-nope. Great climate deal with China-nope. Brought the troops home from Iraq- and allowed ISIS to rise. CAGW the biggest threat we face-nope (try Russia annexing Crimea, China in South China Sea, North Korea nuclear, and ISIS). Science is settled– nope. Under Obamacare, you can keep your doctor,if you like your doctor–nope. And on, and on, and on…
US needs to get back to a revised version of TR’s foreign policy: speak loudly, carry a big stick, and occaisionally use it. Syrian cruise missile message, MOAB in Afganistan. Nothing not to like.
Pearse foreign policy 101.
1) When a giant nation signs an agreement with a bunch of its lessers, it becomes a minority voter in the deal. Remember most are anti-American.
2) When a giant nation signs bilateral agreements, it gets what it wants out of the deal and can stay out of deals with nations it doesn’t want to deal with.
3) The United States has nothing to worry about in being “shut out” because the rest of the world doesn’t want to be shut out of the United States.
4)The United States defends all the nations that Shultz considers will shut them out.
5) China (and others) doesn’t want to rock a very favorable trade arrangement.
6) A giant Nation has a giant market of its own that is presently under served. Self sufficiency in the cheapest energy in the world means they could work to replace considerable imports with domestic products (plastics, steel, aluminum, nitrogen fertilizers, all energy intensive products).
7) A giant nation with cheap energy, abundant resources and freedom to do can stimulate strong research and development in all areas of activity (real research and development has been starved in recent administrations) that would make a weaker world unable to match. Indeed, of 579 Nobel Prizes awarded, USA has garnered 344! most of which were awarded before socialist progressives began watering down the prestige of the prize over the last few decades.
I expressed my surprise at the percentage of anti-Brexit supporters who fretted about suffering terrible economic losses if they left Mother EU, reminding them that UK ruled the waves for 300yrs and spread the English language, culture, economics, freedom, vigorous education, work ethic, etc. and in their spare time, with their competitive bent, invented nearly all the sports and games (some derivatives were invented elsewhere!).
Here’s my foreign policy advice: Get out of the Paris deal and see what happens. If terrible things such that you can’t bear occur, simply join again! My outlook is that it would all collapse and Trump would, in the end, have saved the rest of the world from its economic and cultural suicide mission. Trump, they will never like you. You will never get a Noblel Prize. They will hate you, no matter what you do. At least leave this legacy of good sense to the world.
By failing to end Paris, Trump will signal to one and all that he is afraid to be “named and shamed” by Obama politics. The Left will sense weakness and rip Trump apart.
Trumps enemies will never love him. They fear him, because they see him as unpredictable and uncontrollable. But for a leader, fear is an asset. It keeps your enemies at bay.
However, if Trump caves in on Paris, Trumps enemies will smell blood. They will lose their fear and attack. A one term president, a footnote in history will be the result.
“By failing to end Paris, Trump will signal to one and all that he is afraid to be “named and shamed” by Obama politics.”
Obama is out in public now pushing the CAGW narrative again, and making lots of money doing it. He’s working hard to save his “legacy”.
I would bet that if Trump stays in the Paris Agreement, the MSM will be hailing Obama as the one who pressured Trump into “doing the right thing”.
Forget Schultz and Baker. Tillerson and Mattis are closer to Trump and they are urging Trump to keep us in the Paris accords. They also support carbon taxes etc. There are a lot more RINOs on the bandwagon too. Face it, the RP always betrays its voter base. See “TrumpCare”, same as ObamaCare.
http://www.newsmax.com/Newsfront/james-mattis-tillerson-climate-change/2017/05/08/id/788868/
What newspapers does Trump read, TV stations he watches, radio he listens to. Crowd source funds for big ads, with interviews with Deplorables on how they feel if Trump caves on Parisite CC exit.
Gary Pearse, there is no actual evidence we have that Trump knows how to/actually does read. It is well known that he watches Fox News.
Watching Fox news would make him more educated than someone who reads most of the nations major newspapers.
MarkW: http://www.businessinsider.com/study-watching-fox-news-makes-you-less-informed-than-watching-no-news-at-all-2012-5
“study-watching-fox-news-makes-you-less-informed-than-watching-no-news-at-all-2012-5”
I watch a lot of Fox News, and consider myself fairly well-informed. I watch the other channels occasionally for laughs and to see what the enemy is up to. I don’t watch them to be well-informed on the truth because the truth is not in them. They are either deliberate liars or they are seriously deluded and believe the deliberate liars and echo them.
Fox has its share of flaky reporters, now, more than ever, with some of the younger reporters, but all in all, you are much closer to reality by watching Fox News than you will be watching anything else. Fox and Friends in the mornings is superb. The other channels present the false reality they live it as the truth but it is far from it.
I remember when there were only three tv channels and all of them were Liberal-leaning and Republican bashers. And no internet to use to complain about them. Those were the bad old days of constant leftwing propagada. We still get it today, even more so, but at least there are conservative voices out there now. And the conservative voices are winning the ratings war. 🙂
C’mon, Donald, time for a bit of leadership. When faced with decisions like this one, I find it helps to ask myself “What would The Baron Vladimir Harkonnen do?”
Good post, now only if Jared and his wife would read it and take it to heart.
Mr.Trump got elected to drain the swamp not drink it .This is one of the easy ones Punt the Paris Unagreement . Put it to a vote if necessary like Kyoto was . Paris sets legal traps because they knew it would never withstand a vote .
What’s changed since Kyoto by the way ? Climate gate , failed grossly exaggerating climate model predictions disproven, kids still know what snow is , the Arctic didn’t melt and polar bear populations are thriving . Besides warming has more benefits than drawbacks regardless. Gee how did the EPA miss that ?
The only people who would get absolutely screwed will be USA if they followed up this tax payer rip off .
Over thinking this as the swamp critters smooze and manipulate will be a test of the Trump team resolve
and the pretend Republicans will show themselves .
Pandering to eco- hustles would be a huge huge mistake but .breaking a core election promise would be an adios moment .
Time to repeal the Paris agreement, a Limerick
The Paris agreement repeal:
More CO2 please, a good deal.
It’s the feed-stock of life
not the cause of all strife.
Yet apocalypsians squeal.ople
The greening of the earth thanks to increasing CO2, feed more people, less hunger. What’s wrong with that? With more CO2, plants use less water to perform photo-synthesis, especially in warm climates.
https://lenbilen.com/2017/05/11/time-to-repeal-the-paris-agreement-a-limerick/
America still has a network of cheap reliable coal fired power stations which give it a powerful advantage over the rest of the world. If you close this down and use Chinese wind turbines and solar panels while the Chinese continue to develop their coal fired power you have lost a great competitive advantage.
Be brave America, you could again save the free world!! The emperor has no clothes.
I see where China may be buying natural gas from the U.S. in the future.
Not elders, elderly.
oh good lord … everyone does realize Trump will ignore these clowns advice …
The current US government is probably the last one with the chance to leave the Paris Agreement undamaged, as political as economical
– The Paris Agreement is based on purely political terms, it is not based on technical / scientific certainties.
– the Paris Agreement is a self-imposed perpetual danger, leading to ‘moral’ political blackmail.
– the Paris Agreement, including Carbon Tax, does not provide a real economic base, it offers inlet ports for irrelevant, insubstantial, illusory air [ sic ] deals.
If the US government – or the government of any other state – sees an advantage in certain aspects inhirited in the Paris Agreement there is always the possibility to conduct direct, bilateral or unilateral negotiations and discussions –
– AFTER dismissing the whole Paris Agreement Bundle.
The Democrats and most of the media are close to a complete melt down . Finish them off and get it over with . Exit the Paris farce and move on . Who cares who might be upset . How many Democrats voted for Kyoto by the way ? That’s right none , zero . That is because the Senate passed the Byrd-Hagel Resolution
95 to 0 . The Senate Resolution ensured the USA would not be a signatory to any agreement that mandated green house gas emissions unless the agreement mandated (not pledged) reductions from developing countries (China ) during the same time period . Of course China was not foolish enough to agree to such nonsense nor would other developing countries so pledge away but the USA has already drawn the line in the sand .
The Kyoto extension was not signed by little places like Russia , Canada and Japan for good reason .
But beyond the technicalities let’s face it … it’s a hoax designed to fund the UN , transfer wealth for warm fuzzies ., and prop up renewable corporate welfare with a nice little piece carved out for the promoters and bankers .
The USA Senate already dealt with this despite delusions that Paris is anything but Kyoto- lite .
Good conferences though . All expenses paid and save the planet too . Sweet .
Right on Amber – couldn’t have said it better mesself!
“The Democrats and most of the media are close to a complete melt down .”
Isn’t that the truth! I’ve never seen the Left so crazy.
Of course, Obama and friends have been agitating the situation for eight years, by trying to divide and conquer us, so that contributes a lot to the craziness, and then the Leftwing billionaires are funding the radical Left to undermine American society, and that contributes more craziness.
They have ginned up the craziness to a new level now, and that’s what we are seeing now.
Whooo Boy – This looks Ugly! Details to follow, Film at eleven……
5/11/17 “U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson signed The Fairbanks Proclamation today calling climate change a “serious threat” to the Arctic and noting the need for action to reduce its potentially harmful effects.”
http://www.yahoo.com/gma/us-signs-international-declaration-climate-change-despite-trumps-004206189–abc-news-topstories.html
The majority of viewers of this site will never be able to accept that there is really no difference between democrats and republicans. They buy into the political theater on the boob tube. I think Trump really intended to drain the swamp but he has surrounded himself with the worst of the worst people. And they will run the government, not Trump. Mike Pence, Jared, Tillerson, Mattis … Not a dime’s worth of difference from the last administration or the one before that. More debt, more war, more global warming …
Call the White House Comment Line: 202-456-1111.
A CO2 tax,
Like sparkling wine tax, ‘luxury goods’ taxes or the famous / infamous german ‘DDR solidarity’ tax,
http://www.kbismarck.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=31&t=1052
https://www.google.at/search?client=ms-android-samsung&ei=Ai0VWa2sOsSiwAKDo4CwCQ&q=sparkling+wine+tax+history+&oq=sparkling+wine+tax+history+&gs_l=mobile-gws-serp.
develop a self perpetuating longivety and are hardly to be removed by any following administration.
The history of ‘luxury [ import ] goods’ taxes like
– coffee, tea tax
– fossil fuels, gas tax
– alcohol tax
– tobacco tax
– sparkling wine tax … etc.
most always show a growing ‘moral’, ‘blackmail’ aspect. To suspicions, accusation ‘consumers’ are threatning their environment = ‘all other people’.
On the basis of moral, political arguments;
leading to ever lasting, barely scientific underlined confrontations –
– but with heavy impact on financial or living standard matters.
Trump will need a media diversion within a week with all the talking exploding watermelon heads ranting non stop about his recent firing of FBI Comey. So expect something very large to happen before the G7 meeting that takes place end of month after his Middle East peace tour. He certainly deflected all the Russia news talk last month with his 59 Tomahawks he delivered to Syria and the MOAB to Afghanistan, so I would think that either Iran or North Korea is going to get some special attention soon. Or perhaps someone/something else, but he definitely will need a diversion and quick.
Would be best to probably divert soon and trot out this stupid Parisite Agreement and threaten to kick it to the curb, and/or maybe give the Senate the chance to vote on it before the G7 conference so he doesn’t have to go empty handed and take the blame. The knives are definitely out for him now, and if continues to act in reactionary mode, then he is going to be a lame duck president very soon fighting off every thrusting political knive coming his way now. It is probably time for him to just quit listening to all the cooks in his kitchen and go by his gut instinct. It was what won him the nomination and the election, so banging Paris will only have him keeping his word to those who elected him.
My Personally Conclusion
The Paris Agreement can be seen as a draft;
The Paris Agreement can be seen as a draft. A gravel pit or a ruin to gain construction materials.
And one more thing: The Senate Resolution of 1997 had this to say about Kyoto and/or any subsequent ‘Other Agreement. In my opinion, Paris is/was dead on arrival because it was not even legal for Obama to implement by Executive Order without having the Senate ratify it. It carries no actionable force.
This was also to include Developing Parties (other developing countries like China & India reducing their emissions in the same time frame) a. In Kyoto or any Future Agreement, Or b. Would result in serious harm to the economy of the United States. Note that this includes Kyoto and any agreement thereafter, or any Other Agreement. The Paris Agreement was never legal for the USA to enter into as an Executive Order under Obama, unless ratified by the Senate as per the Terms A & B. Read it and Weep!!!
Now, therefore, be it Resolved, That it is the sense of the Senate that
(1) the United States should not be a signatory to any protocol to, or other agreement regarding, the
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change of 1992, at negotiations in Kyoto in December 1997, or thereafter, which would
(A) mandate new commitments to limit or reduce greenhouse gas emissions for the Annex I Parties, unless the protocol or other agreement also mandates new specific scheduled commitments to limit or reduce greenhouse gas emissions for Developing Country Parties within the same compliance period, or
(B) would result in serious harm to the economy of the United States; and any such protocol or other agreement which would require the advice and consent of the Senate to ratification should be accompanied by a detailed explanation of any legislation or regulatory actions that may be required to implement the protocol or other agreement and should also be accompanied by an analysis of the detailed financial costs and other impacts on the economy of the United States which would be incurred by the implementation of the protocol or other agreement.
I’ve often wondered about Karl Kraus citating german or austrian newspapers punch lines or whole stories about best dressed, even in tuxedos, arrogant german business men,
during WWI, completely drunk, paying all consumations in locals, bars, pubs including prostitutes and every by runners for consumation of Sect / sparkling wine-
’till I understood it was for the good cause : http://www.kbismarck.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=31&t=1052
Meanwhile in the streets of Berlin, Vienna, Paris …. there where developing riots against aliens, foreigners.
/ you’re never too old to learn something new /
Meanwhile, to the surprise of no one, Tillerson signs the Fairbanks Declaration. The Alarmist fire continues to rage while Trump fiddles.
Who has their hand on the Tiller(son). Not the Donald it seems.
Looks like he doesn’t have the nads to act on Paribns. He likes targets where there isn’t a lot of flak and no lurking fighter aircraft. Thought he would have more mettle but he is looking more and more luhike a ball in a pinball machine. Maybe it’s just four months, but he appears to be losing control. Assuming he had any to begin with. Perhaps expectations were too great.
When I hear Tillerson speak I hear Exxon speak . Carbon tax yeah bring it on . Why wouldn’t they happily collect and remit another tax for government if they can get greenies off their back and point to how self righteous they are .
Maybe it hasn’t occurred to Tillerson that Obama’s alleged world’s biggest threat is a hoax and that there are some real problems to solve . Or are the big ones left to Ivanka to work on with Chelsea and Al Gore .
Tillerson is going to be a major lose cannon .
Yes, I am afraid of that too now. I thought in the early days, ok, give him some time to get up to speed and actually for awhile I thought that silence was maybe a strong show of force. Talk soft and carry a big stick. Actions speak louder than words. Still hoping for all this, but I am not holding my breath anymore. Just because he had success as a CEO at Exxon, is perhaps no cred for actually being an effective Secretary of State. I doubt Trump has Tillerson on a short leash, and is probably wondering if the guy is paying attention much. Starting to feel sorry for Trump in having a team that is appearing to be so divided. Hope I am wrong.
One thing they always leave out of the “Price on Carbon” equation is how to compensate those that remove carbon from the atmosphere e.g. Farmers, Foresters, landholders that allow nature do it’s thing on their land.
The NASA animation of carbon dioxide flux’s around the world show’s that photosynthesis is a powerful process so those that promote it should be payed the same rate as those who are taxed when they emit CO2 .
That would only be fair!
But I’m not holding my breath.