Does the Kyoto
global warming treaty pose too high a cost for the U.S.? It sacrifices prosperity on false altar
By Sterling Burnett
Copyright 1998 Augusta Chronicle
November 24, 1998
(Editor's note: The writer, H. Sterling Burnett, is environmental policy
analyst with the National Center for Policy Analysis.
IN DECEMBER 1997, in Kyoto, Japan, the Clinton/Gore administration negotiated a
treaty that would require the United States to reduce greenhouse gas emissions
by about
40 percent -- to 7 percent below their 1990 levels between 2008 and 2012 -- in
an effort to avert catastrophic human-caused
global warming. In support of its agreeing to the treaty, the administration cited an analysis
produced by five research laboratories at the Department of Energy that
claimed economic benefits of reducing emissions to 1990 levels by 2010 would
roughly equal the costs of the required energy cuts.
Many analysts argued the "five-lab" study was critically flawed. The evidence
came from more than 20 other analyses, including one produced by the DOE two
months prior to the five-lab study, indicating that merely reaching 1990 levels
of emissions would cause massive job losses,
steep price increases, and a severe decline in Gross Domestic Product. The
administration brushed off these claims and has held firm to its position. In
late September, however, the General Accounting Office released its analysis of
the five-lab study.
The five-lab study claimed the U.S. would not have to cut
energy use to reduce greenhouse gas emissions since the United States could
switch to "non-polluting" solar and wind power.
However, the GAO found the study relied on unsubstantiated assumptions
concerning solar power and wind power without discussing the specific steps
necessary to bring about cost-competitive wind and solar energy.
ALSO, THE study did not consider the full economic costs of the energy taxes
Kyoto proposed. Finally, it relied on implausible scenarios concerning the
feasibility of near-term replacement of power plants and other capital.
In short, all of the study's major assumptions were
either unrealistic or overly optimistic.
A second blow to the administration came on Oct. 9 when the Energy Information
Administration, the official forecasting arm of the DOE, released its analysis
of the proposed greenhouse gas treaty. The EIA found that meeting the Kyoto
treaty greenhouse gas limits would lead to a
52 percent increase in gasoline prices, an 86 percent increase in electricity
prices, a 4.2 percent decrease in GDP and 2.5 percent decline in personal
disposable income.
The EIA's analysis also examines the prospects for significant renewable energy
technology
breakthroughs, implementation of a cost-reducing emissions trading scheme
favored by the Clinton/Gore administration and the implications of fiscal
policies like a personal income tax rebate to offset the impact of increased
energy costs on individuals.
BUT EVEN accounting for such beneficial technology and
policy changes, the EIA's figures make the previous estimates of the cost of
Kyoto look optimistic by comparison.
In addition, the treaty would produce little or no benefit to the environment,
since a previous international agreement exempts developing countries from
greenhouse gas emission cuts.
According to the U.N.
International Energy Agency, as much as 85 percent of the projected increase in
CO2 emissions will come from developing countries such as China, India, South
Korea, Mexico and Brazil that are exempted from the proposed treaty.
Thus, while developed countries would suffer serious economic harm, developing
economies would continue to grow and the
environment would not improve.
IT IS CLEAR the energy cuts required to implement Kyoto would hurt people. If
the administration wants to pursue ratification of the treaty it should at
least admit that the energy diet the treaty will impose on the United States
will be "all pain, no gain."
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