Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: climate change and ethics
- 1 Energy, ethics, and the transformation of nature
- 2 Is no one responsible for global environmental tragedy? Climate change as a challenge to our ethical concepts
- 3 Greenhouse gas emission and the domination of posterity
- 4 Climate change, energy rights, and equality
- 5 Common atmospheric ownership and equal emissions entitlements
- 6 A Lockean defense of grandfathering emission rights
- 7 Parenting the planet
- 8 Living ethically in a greenhouse
- 9 Beyond business as usual: alternative wedges to avoid catastrophic climate change and create sustainable societies
- 10 Addressing competitiveness in US climate policy
- 11 Reconciling justice and efficiency: integrating environmental justice into domestic cap-and-trade programs for controlling greenhouse gases
- 12 Ethical dimensions of adapting to climate change-imposed risks
- 13 Does nature matter? The place of the nonhuman in the ethics of climate change
- 14 Human rights, climate change, and the trillionth ton
- Select bibliography
- Index
- References
10 - Addressing competitiveness in US climate policy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 April 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: climate change and ethics
- 1 Energy, ethics, and the transformation of nature
- 2 Is no one responsible for global environmental tragedy? Climate change as a challenge to our ethical concepts
- 3 Greenhouse gas emission and the domination of posterity
- 4 Climate change, energy rights, and equality
- 5 Common atmospheric ownership and equal emissions entitlements
- 6 A Lockean defense of grandfathering emission rights
- 7 Parenting the planet
- 8 Living ethically in a greenhouse
- 9 Beyond business as usual: alternative wedges to avoid catastrophic climate change and create sustainable societies
- 10 Addressing competitiveness in US climate policy
- 11 Reconciling justice and efficiency: integrating environmental justice into domestic cap-and-trade programs for controlling greenhouse gases
- 12 Ethical dimensions of adapting to climate change-imposed risks
- 13 Does nature matter? The place of the nonhuman in the ethics of climate change
- 14 Human rights, climate change, and the trillionth ton
- Select bibliography
- Index
- References
Summary
INTRODUCTION
Mandatory policies to reduce US greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions without full global participation – principally cap-and-trade systems, occasionally carbon taxes, and sometimes standards – are being seriously debated in the US Congress. However, even efficient market-based policies that effectively attach a price to GHG emissions will likely increase production costs for some domestic producers and give rise to competitiveness concerns where those producers compete against foreign suppliers operating in countries where emissions do not carry similar costs. These concerns are likely to be most acute in energy-intensive, trade-exposed manufacturing industries. While the impacts can be mitigated to some extent by the use of offsets or other flexibility mechanisms, it would be virtually impossible to eliminate the disproportionate burdens placed on certain sectors without undermining both the effectiveness and the cost-effectiveness of the policy. As Olson has eloquently argued, the more narrowly focused the adverse impacts of a policy, the more politically difficult it is to sustain.
One of the key questions being asked is this: Why should US firms be disadvantaged relative to overseas competitors to address a global problem? The difficulty, moreover, is not just political: if, in response to a mandatory policy, US production simply shifts abroad to unregulated foreign firms, the resulting emissions “leakage” could vitiate some of the environmental benefits expected from domestic action. As is widely recognized, limiting emissions from the USA and other developed countries will not prevent dangerous interference with the climate system unless key developing countries also control their emissions.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Ethics of Global Climate Change , pp. 216 - 231Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011