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California’s Proposed Pandemic Revisions to Cap & Trade: It’s (Still) a Tax!

By -- July 29, 2020

The foundation upon which the courts decided Cap and Trade was not a tax was an argument that it was a fee for permission to emit. That seems to have all but been forgotten. The diminution of offsets as a way to control emissions, in order to maintain state revenue levels, pretty clearly shows it’s not the emissions but the revenue that concerns the legislature. -Tom Tanton (below)

Due to the government-directed business shutdowns in response to the coronavirus, California’s greenhouse gas emissions have reportedly fallen the most since World War II (minus 5%), which is what environmentalists have long said they wished for. But along with it, cap-and-trade revenues from industrial purchases of pollution allowances dropped from $600-$850 million per quarter in 2019 to $25 million in May 2020, a 97-percent decrease from the prior year’s peak permit auction.

In response, the California legislature has requested that Cap-and-Trade regulations be reevaluated to try to intentionally sell fewer pollution permits to increase revenues. Assemblywoman Christina Garcia (D) stated: The legislature, the nonprofits, the activists now need to figure out how to take advantage of this opportunity”.

The above legislative directive runs against court rulings that cap-and-trade revenues are not a tax, but a license fee. To understand this issue, I interviewed Tom Tanton, Director of Science and Technology Assessment for the Energy and Environmental Legal Institute and former principal policy advisor to the California Energy Commission. 

Question 1: The legislature has been asked to revise the cap-and-trade program now that revenues have fallen, despite a simultaneous historic drop in emissions.

Tanton: It is astounding that the legislature is surprised, as the program is designed and intended to reduce emissions, which has happened, however, for entirely different reasons.

Question 2: Now the legislature wants to covertly find a way to increase revenues during what may be a prolonged economic depression to fund the legislature’s pet political projects and patrons without calling it a tax. 

Tanton: A rose by any other name would smell as sweet.

Question 3: It is interesting that emissions have dropped to an historic low due to virus epidemic shutdowns of the economy.

Tanton: I believe this standard was met earlier without the virus.

Question 4: Apparently CARB never factored a (man-made) economic depression into their program models.

Tanton: Nor many other emission-reducing factors. Nor did they consider an emission increasing factor (actually a slower reduction) due to government ineptitude in ‘fighting a market failure’.

Question 5: California’s cap-and-trade program’s pollution allowances to private industry dropped from $600 million in February 2020 at its February auction to $25 million out of $57 million worth of pollution permits auctioned at its May auction. In its design, was a man-made economic depression accounted for?

Tanton: Nor many other emission-reducing factors. Nor did they consider an emission increasing factor (actually a slower reduction) due to government ineptitude in ‘fighting a market failure’”. Nor were technological advances. The earlier, Great recession in 2008, resulted in emission targets being met, but the program had to continue.

Question 6: In a few words, what are some of the more cost-effective ways to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in the upper atmosphere (not same as visual smog)?

Tanton: For any measure to be ‘cost effective,’ the cost of reduction needs to be less than the benefit from reduction. The latter is typically measured by the ‘social cost of carbon.’ Some simple measures like improving the efficiency of power plants can go long way to reducing emissions, but are difficult to implement when other favored, but sporadic, technologies like wind and solar cause them to operate like your car in stop and go traffic … way lower efficiency and way higher emissions.

Allowing power plants to operate more in steady state would be one way. Another way would be to increase water allotments to farmers, (rather than flushing it out to sea) allowing them to increase crop production… that photosynthesis eats up carbon pretty well.

Question 7: One of the proposed reforms in the 334-page proposal to amend the program is to set up a system of so-called market-floating prices for pollution permits.  By withholding allowances from the market prices rise and as allowances are released prices fall.  But currently the way prices are set for allowances is by regulatory fiat, not markets.  Then why is this called a market program?

Tanton: Well, if you listen carefully they often say “market-like”. A true market is a set of willing sellers and willing buyers. The former is missing entirely, while the latter is pretty iffy. The fiats were implemented to avoid real chaos emulating the 2000 energy crisis.

Question 8: If there is another consecutive low revenue auction, wouldn’t that result in a lot of price unpredictability? 

Tanton: There is no doubt it’s there. Another low revenue auction would wake those still enamored with it to it’s ludicrous nature.  It would also likely be a lagging indicator of business flight from California.  Less snarky, it may just be an indicator of the on-going re-structuring of the California economy (less making, more doing. Less manufacturing and more services) to less carbon intensive activities.  I’ve always said Cap and Trade was industrial policy more so than environmental.

Question 9: I found data that says 13,000 businesses have moved out of California since 2007.  To what degree are emissions decreasing due to cap-and-trade and to relocations? 

Tanton: Ahh, there’s the rub. Emissions are not decreasing due to cap and trade, in my opinion.  Emissions that continue are just paid for through a system of indulgences (that’s what cap and trade does, just makes you pay for them).

Relocations, if they are a relocation and not a shut down, just continue the emissions elsewhere (at the new location). That my friend is called leakage.

There are two types: economic leakage (jobs and Gross State Product) and emissions leakage (emissions.)  But the emissions are of global import, sayeth the Anthropogenic Global Warming (AGW) crowd and matters not if they occur in-state or in, say, Idaho or Indonesia. It’s just virtue signaling.

Question 10: New California Assembly Bill 398 limits the allowances that industries can use to offset pollution that is estimated will result in a $16 billion ($4 billion per quarter) in Cap and Trade annual pollution permit auction revenues.  How will this new revenue generating formula work out?

Tanton: Part of the problem is that the compliance mechanism is so complex and sensitive to minor perturbations, so the politicians’ answer is to make it more complex and sensitive? The foundation upon which the courts decided Cap and Trade was not a tax was an argument that it was a fee for permission to emit.  That seems to have all but been forgotten. The diminution of offsets as a way to control emissions, in order to maintain state revenue levels, pretty clearly shows it’s not the emissions but the revenue that concerns the legislature.

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Note: This article, edited for MasterResource, previously appeared in CaliforniaGlobe.com

4 Comments


  1. California's Proposed Pandemic Revisions to Cap & Trade: It's (Still) a Tax!Climate- Science.press | Climate- Science.press  

    […] post California’s Proposed Pandemic Revisions to Cap & Trade: It’s (Still) a Tax! appeared first on Master […]

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  2. Bill Chaffee  

    In my opinion the focus should be on emissions that effect health, especially particulates. Even electric cars contribute to particulates by the tires wearing down and by stirring up dust. Keeping the streets cleaner would help with the latter problem. Also more CO2 would be absorbed if the practice of topping trees were stopped. Also the trees would provide more shade.

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  3. Wayne Lusvardi  

    The focus of California Cap and Trade is high atmospheric emissions that purportedly warm the planet, not low level smog. Conceivably, global warming could cause few health impacts but large economic impacts. What would happen if we who live in the higher longitudes had hotter weather like those who live near the equator? Perhaps our health would be better.

    As for particulates, we’re back to the problem of the human immune system. Those with intact immune systems may not be affected much by particulates while conversely those with compromised immune systems from drugs, prescriptions, diabetes, overweight, etc.would be more susceptible.

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  4. Mark  

    The programs/projects/departments/agencies having the funds reduced due to the shortfall of fees/tax revenue are noted here- https://calmatters.org/environment/2020/07/california-clean-air-programs-cuts/

    The extra climate credits being given out by PG&E to their rate payers during the pandemic are up for being rate base collected as denoted in their recent filing- A.20.007.02.

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