"Energy Emergence: Rebound and Backfire as Emergent Phenomena" - Report Overview
February 17, 2011
January 13, 2010 | Ted Nordhaus, Michael Shellenberger,
Originally published at Foreign Policy
By Ted Nordhaus and Michael Shellenberger
There was good reason to be hopeful in January of 2009 that the election of Barack Obama would bring about America's long-awaited clean energy revolution. As president-elect, Obama had started to talk about energy policy in a way that no leader of either party had before. Promising to save the country from both severe recession and industrial decline, Obama described the transformation of America's energy economy as a defining challenge of his presidency -- an economic and national security imperative that Congress would fail to address at the nation's peril.
But the reality fell far short of expectations. The Obama administration succumbed, like many others, to a sort of magical climate thinking that promised a painless and even prosperous transition to a low-carbon future with the tools already at hand. The only official within his administration to accurately grasp the technology challenges we faced, Energy Secretary Steven Chu, was sidelined at crucial moments.
Here is the back-story of how the Obama administration dramatically raised and then dashed America's -- and the world's -- hopes that 2009 would be a pivotal year for remaking our collective energy future.
One year ago, in his first State of the Union address Obama proposed a previously unprecedented $15 billion annual investment in clean energy research and development. Further, he appointed a technologist, the Nobel Prize-winning physicist Chu, as Energy secretary to oversee that investment. The $800 billion stimulus, passed shortly thereafter, gave further credence to the notion that after 30 years of false starts, overblown rhetoric, and outright neglect, Congress and the president might finally get serious about remaking America's energy economy.
The stimulus included billions for energy R&D, infrastructure, and efficiency and overturned the conventional wisdom that the United States would never again make big federal investments in technology as it had during the Cold War. But no sooner had the president's stimulus program demonstrated that a new way forward on climate and energy might be possible then the new administration relinquished its energy and climate policy to the partisans of the past.
A new administration is always an inchoate thing, a reflection of the divergent and conflicting interests that make broad and successful electoral coalitions possible. The Obama administration was no different, and when it came to energy and climate, a tangled text of sub-rosa commitments -- to various carbon emissions targets and timetables, to making clean energy "the profitable kind of energy," to investing in clean coal, nuclear power, and solar tax credits alike -- lay beneath the banner headlines about clean energy investments and green jobs.
As the new administration took shape, the question of how those various commitments would be reconciled was largely unresolved. But the senior team that Obama assembled to lead the administration's climate and energy efforts held some clues. Chu, as it turned out, was the only prominent energy technology advocate given a senior role in the administration. Virtually every other key policy role was filled by environmental regulators -- former Environmental Protection Agency head Carol Browner as climate czar, former Browner aide Lisa Jackson at EPA, and Nancy Sutley at the White House Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ).
Putting Browner, a former Al Gore aide, in charge of climate policy was payback to environmental groups and the green donors who had supported Obama's campaign. But it also signaled that, inside the White House, the clean energy investment message that the president had used to such great effect in winning battleground states like Ohio and Colorado was seen as just that: a powerful message to use in the campaign, not a policy priority.
In this, Obama was following two decades of magical thinking among both greens and liberal Democrats about energy technology. In this view, energy efficiency pays for itself, solar and wind power are already nearly cost-competitive with fossil fuels, and both can quickly and cheaply reduce emissions. This Pollyanna view of fossil fuel alternatives and efficiency, which makes going green seem cheap and easy -- "little more than the cost of a postage stamp a day" -- has provided the justification for green policy advocacy that has overwhelmingly focused upon pollution regulations and carbon pricing while ignoring serious investment in energy research and development.
The price of Obama's failure to break with green climate orthodoxy is only now becoming apparent. The collapse of international climate negotiations last month was just the latest evidence that efforts to regulate global pollution output cannot succeed. The Kyoto framework, which imagined that carbon pollution limits could be the primary driver of the complete transformation of the global energy economy, has irretrievably failed.
The real technological obstacles to decarbonizing the global economy today represent an insurmountable obstacle to political efforts to limit carbon emissions. Until policy makers get serious about addressing the central technological challenge, all efforts to control carbon emissions are doomed.
Chewed Up
Steven Chu came to Washington expecting to manage a massive expansion of energy R&D. Chu had cut his teeth as a research scientist at the justly famed U.S. government-funded Bell Labs, which he saw as a model since they were responsible for inventing or developing a range of devices now part of the fabric of American life, from fax machines to TV transmission, radio astronomy, solar panel cells, the transistor, calculators, cell phones, WiFi, and hundreds of other technological miracles.
Chu had never bought the idea that, in Al Gore's words, "we have all the technology we need" to solve the climate problem. Instead, he told the New York Times, "Nobel-caliber breakthroughs" are required in chemistry, physics, and biology in order to make more efficient batteries, solar panels, and biofuels that can compete with fossil fuels in price, and that nuclear power is needed to displace coal.
Unfortunately, his view hasn't shaped the actions of the administration or Democrats in Congress. By early spring it was clear that Democratic leaders in the House and Senate budget committees were not inclined to honor the president's request for a dramatic scale-up of federal clean energy R&D and that the White House was not inclined to fight for it. And with greens and establishment Democrats fully lost in the magical idea that we can achieve massive emissions reductions through conservation, efficiency, and existing renewable technologies, there was scarcely any constituency inside the beltway for the kind of big energy technology program that Chu had hoped to launch.
Incumbent energy interests were happy to indulge the magical thinking by green groups and Democrats, who have been certain since the Carter administration that solar and wind are on the verge of becoming economically competitive with coal and oil. And so a deal was cut by green groups, coal utilities, and Rep. Henry Waxman and Rep. Ed Markey, who authored the legislation. Energy firms could purchase offsets rather than reduce their own emissions for far off into the future. The price of carbon dioxide would hover around $15 per ton -- a far cry from the $70 per ton that Chu had suggested would be needed to result in significant deployment of clean energy technologies. And utilities would be given trillions in free pollution credits even while raising the price of energy for consumers.
The green giants in Washington -- Environmental Defense Fund (EDF), National Resources Defense Council (NRDC), and the Center for American Progress (CAP) -- all claimed that cap and trade would constitute a breakthrough, and Chu dutifully defended the legislation, expecting it would include his $15 billion for R&D.
But Waxman and Markey ended up using virtually all of the money raised from carbon auctions to buy off fossil fuel interests, leaving virtually nothing for technology innovation. Believing that a carbon price -- any carbon price -- would work as a quasi-mystical "price signal" on the market, ushering in a world of solar farms and electric cars, they stiffed Chu.
In the end, Waxman-Markey would give R&D $1.1 billion a year, less than a third of current levels, and would give coal and utility companies $32 billion.
A Conjuror's Trick
Waxman-Markey passed the House last summer by a scant few votes, even as it became glaringly obvious to everyone who dared look that it would not require emissions reductions below business-as-usual levels.
Green groups insisted that the bill would reduce emissions and pointed reporters and green donors to allegedly independent analyses by the World Resources Institute (WRI). But WRI, a major party to the cap and trade agreement negotiated by EDF and NRDC with energy companies, simply used a magic accounting trick that was visible in plain sight: counting carbon offsets as real reductions of U.S. emissions.
Offsets typically fund activities such as tree planting or methane capture from landfills and have proven over the last decade to be extremely unreliable, when they have not been outright fraudulent. The extensive use of offsets in Waxman-Markey would have allowed U.S. emissions to rise at business as usual rates over the next decade rather than declining 17 percent below 2005 levels, as proponents of the bill claimed.
Nevertheless, WRI created graphs showing U.S. emissions magically going down 17 percent by 2020 and nearly 80 percent by 2050, the New York Times duly reprinted them, and partisans on both sides of the debate tacitly agreed to pretend as if proponents' farcical claims about the bill's mandated emissions reductions were true.
Doing so served all involved. The White House, Democrats in Congress, and national green groups could claim that progress was finally at hand to address climate change after eight years of Bush administration obstructionism. Republicans could attack the bill as a radical environmental plan to destroy the U.S. economy.
In this, domestic climate politics, like international climate negotiations in Copenhagen, had become a simulacrum of reality. Democrats and Republicans had, in the course of a few short months, effectively switched policy positions on energy, with Democrats voting to hand trillions in new subsidies to coal burning utilities and power plants while gutting Clean Air Act restrictions on the construction of new coal fired power plants, and Republicans, longstanding coal boosters, voting against a pro-coal bill.
But because hardly anybody other than the attorneys who were hired by the coal and energy companies to write the bill had actually read the 1,300-plus page document, legislators, reporters, and greens alike evaluated the proposal on its symbols, not its substance. The bill's introduction claims to cap emissions and expand clean energy, and even though it would do neither, in the simulacrum that is global warming politics, these symbolic intentions were more than sufficient for Democrats and greens to proclaim the bill a "breakthrough" and for Republicans to vote en masse against it.
Incumbent energy interests had, in short, hijacked magical climate thinking for their own uses. They took cap and trade legislation and turned it into an opportunity for them to raise energy prices on consumers, invest a fraction of the higher revenues into clean energy, remove existing regulatory obstacles to the construction of new coal plants, and lock in their competitive advantage while crowding out energy newcomers, including clean energy firms, for decades to come.
Prominent defenders of the legislation like CAP spokesperson Joe Romm labeled green critics of the bill "global warming delayers" and told anyone who would listen that Waxman and Markey had pulled a fast one on the coal lobby. Duke Energy's
In the wake of Copenhagen, leading green groups have doubled down on the passage of cap and trade legislation in the U.S. Senate in hopes of breathing life back into the global effort to regulate carbon emissions. Having now endorsed Obama's abandonment of the U.N. process, greens have bet all their chips that Obama will show up to the next round of negotiations with major emitters with a domestic cap in hand.
Obama will no doubt make a show of attempting to do so. But should that effort fail, and its prospects are tenuous, there will be no hiding how profoundly the entire green framework for addressing climate change has failed.
Comments
Pretending there are limitless resources available to support our current economy is the dangerous denial in question. There is no magic silver-bullet technology that makes energy cheap and clean. The obvious (and politically distasteful) answer is to fully pay for the energy we use - which means including a price on carbon for our gasoline and electricity.
The marketplace will adjust, creating entire new industries in both transportation and electricity efficiencies and conservation.
"It is not a momentous technological undertaking," to transform our economy away from fossil fuels. Its technologically possible today, and the "costs" of implementation are actually investments in our collective future.
See Dr. Saul Griffith "Climate Change Recalculated" to understand what it will take to build the renewable energy infrastructure we need.
By LMerry on 2010 01 14