Carlin Economics and Science

With emphasis on climate change

The Weird Reality of World Climate Policy

Climate policies vary greatly by country. For convenience I will characterize a move towards greater government-imposed “decarbonization” as a move to the left; and I will call less such decarbonization or fewer climate government regulations or fewer market-distorting subsidies to be a move towards the right. Since the current optimal climate policy is to take no current actions unless and until it is clearly shown that adverse changes in global temperatures are occurring and it is worthwhile in terms of benefits and costs to take effective actions to reduce global temperatures. Since this has never been shown, no action is justified until it is. Accordingly, the optimal policy is at the right end of the right/left spectrum.

At the risk of greatly oversimplifying the situation, I will try to sketch what is going on with respect to climate policy in four major countries.

In the case of China, the Government is helping to build about 300 coal plants in various countries to generate electricity, but the Government continues to publicly advocate the decarbonization embodied in the Paris “treaty,” at least for others. In the Chinese case it is primarily carrying out a rightest climate policy but without any change in its announced leftist government policies.

In Germany, which has had one of the most steadfast leftish climate policies over many years, the important Christian Democratic Union party is reconsidering their previous support for a carbon tax. So Germany is undertaking a major reevaluation of its climate policy and considering a move towards the right, apparently because of pressure from the business community worried that they are becoming less and less competitive as a result of some of the highest electricity prices in the world.

In France, the yellow vest protests are continuing, although with lower turnouts very recently, and have already moved policy to the right against climate taxes. Carbon taxes are opposed by middle and lower class citizens. The yellow vesters want nothing of the climate carbon-related taxes, and have forced the Government to retreat on climate-rleated taxes. So the losers are fighting back with some effect.

In the US, there are rather impermanent and possibly ineffective actions by the Trump Administration to reduce EPA regulations concerning climate change. The Democratic Party is trying to reduce carbon dioxide emissions at huge cost. The 2016 election moved climate policy sharply to the right with the election of Donald Trump. The US response is fractured between the parties, as in France and Germany. The outcome in the US now depends largely on the 2020 election, and this may have a major impact on the future of the climate control movement both in the US and elsewhere.

It must be remembered that carbon dioxide is a universal trace gas in Earth’s atmosphere, and appears to have little, or much more likely, no significant influence on temperatures. The major effect of decarbonization is higher energy costs and lower reliability of energy supplies, particularly electricity. Leftist climate policies mainly waste more resources for less usable energy.

If major emitters pursue leftish climate policies, very little will happen no matter how far left any country moves, except for the resulting higher energy costs, greater government regulation, lower energy reliability, and damage to the environment from renewable sources. So more waste, inefficiency, damage from renewables, and a less competitive economy.

Share this Post:

Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on linkedin
Share on pinterest
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
5 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Neulen, Holger

If you don´t like the whole debate around carbondioxyde
and on this of Global Warming and Climate Change

just follow this

:

https://freispruch-co2.ch/petition/petition-english/

:

to add your opinion to their global “Petition”.

Terry Krieg

China currently has 35 operating power reactors , is building 21 and has plans for another 290 by 2050. By then, 28% of their electricity will be nuclear generated.

Just beau

Another interesting characteristic of electricity generation in China is the importance of hydroelectric dams. Dams are the main source of renewable electricity, not solar or wind. The first dams began more than a century ago. There is still an aggressive dam building program.
Indicative of the importance of hydroelectricity, half the members of the Chinese politburo were hydro electric engineers just a few years ago. China’s economic expansion depends on more dams, nuclear power, and coal.
In contrast, the USA is expanding electricity from natural gas, but shrinking coal demand, while not increasing dams and nukes. US dams and nukes are wrapped up in infrastructure inhibiting green tape.
As an undemocratic totalitarian state, China is not constrained when it comes to building more dams and nukes.
Because the US has suspended adding dams and nukes, Americans may find it hard to grasp China is not likewise constrained.

Just beau

A Wikipedia entry claims China has 46 nuclear power plants in operation and 11 more under construction. Expanding nuclear energy is a distinguishing characteristic of China. This nations economy has grown so much and its ambitions are sufficiently great that it needs more generation of electricity and by means other than dams and coal. Since nuclear energy is still a modest contributor at 4 percent, plenty more such plants may be planned.

In contrast, Germany has been reducing domestic nuclear energy, becoming more reliant on foreign suppliers of hydrocarbons or electricity and upon costly domestic wind and solar. France and Germany each seem muddled about their energy futures. Best of luck luck to them in getting these sorted out.

President Trump is reputedly headed toward subjecting climate alarmism to an independent scientific review. That will be huge.
For the past 25 or more years, the USA has been a crucial ENABLER of climate alarmism via participation in IPPC activities. Trump has already bailed from the Paris process. This is already consequential, helping other skeptical nations and giving hope to skeptical voters within Western Europe.
It’s fine for other nations to stay involved. The United States does not need to participate in every worthless UN process.
The US could learn from China and invest again in new nuclear power plants. As Dr. Carlin has reported, solar and wind are not reliable or sufficient.

[…] Climate policies vary greatly by country says Alan Carlin. […]

Scroll to Top