– Peter Barnes is an entrepreneur and writer whose books include Who Owns The Sky? and Climate Solutions: A Citizen’s Guide. The views expressed are his own. –
A few days before the election, Barack Obama told Time’s Joe Klein:
Finding the new driver of our economy is going to be critical. There’s no better driver that pervades all aspects of our economy than a new energy economy … That’s going to be my No. 1 priority when I get into office.
That’s exactly the right choice for numerous economic, geopolitical, and ecological reasons. By spawning “a new energy economy,” Obama can create millions of new jobs, decrease our dependence on foreign oil and avert catastrophic climate change. But the politics of launching that new energy economy — even with enlarged majorities in Congress — remains challenging.
In facing this challenge, Obama will be constrained both by a gargantuan budget deficit and his campaign vow not to raise taxes on anyone making under $250,000 a year. And because of the recession, he can’t suck buying power out of the economy. On the contrary, he needs to stimulate spending by consumers.
He also faces a tight international timetable: in December 2009, the nations of the world will assemble in Copenhagen to negotiate a successor to the Kyoto Protocol. If Obama is to have any credibility in those negotiations, he must pass significant legislation before then.
How, then, can he fulfill his No. 1 priority?
There are many opinions about what should be part of a comprehensive energy policy, but the centerpiece nearly everyone agrees on — the great lever that will tip the whole economy toward clean energy — is a strong, descending cap on carbon emissions. If done correctly, such a cap will raise the price of polluting, spur innovation and conservation, and shift billions of dollars of private investment into new technologies for the next 40 years. But designing the cap correctly is critical; a half-baked, loophole-ridden and overly complex system will do more harm than good. The devil is in the details — and, of course, in the politics.
The most critical details involve where to place the cap and what to do with the permits the cap will create. The simplest and most effective place to put the cap is upstream — that is, on the small number of companies that bring carbon into the economy. An upstream cap could be administered without monitoring smokestacks, without a large bureaucracy, and without favoring some companies over others. It would work for the obvious reason that, if carbon doesn’t come into the economy, it can’t go out.
The declining number of permits that would be issued under the cap should then be auctioned rather than given away free — all polluters would pay, and there would be no politically chosen winners or windfall profits. Fortunately, Obama pledged during the campaign to do just this. But that leads to another crucial detail: what to do with the auction revenue, which over time will total trillions of dollars?
There are two possibilities: spend the money on a variety of energy-related programs, or give the money back to the people. While there’s broad agreement that some public spending is necessary to solve the climate crisis, it’s by no means clear that permit revenues should be used for that purpose. The reason is that permit revenues, though initially paid by energy companies, are ultimately paid by consumers in the form of higher energy prices. They are, in effect, a sales tax on carbon — a tax that will fall on millions of Americans earning under $250,000 a year, and that will rise as the cap tightens.
Obama’s best choice is to fund energy-related programs from other sources (including long-term debt) and return all the carbon revenue to the people. This can be done through yearly tax credits, or better yet through monthly cash dividends wired like Social Security payments to people’s bank accounts or debit cards. The advantage of cash dividends is that they’d tangibly and frequently remind people that higher carbon prices are coming back to them — and help them pay mortgages and other bills that fall due on a monthly basis. The whole system might then be called “cap-and-dividend” or “cap and cash back.”
Like Social Security benefits, carbon dividends would be taxed as ordinary income; the government would then recoup about 25 percent of the revenue and could use that money as it sees fit. More importantly, ordinary families would get the lion’s share of the auction revenue, and get it in a way that rewards conservation. Since everyone would get the same amount back, those who use the most carbon would lose and those who use the least would gain — their dividends would exceed what they pay in higher prices. Low-income families in particular would gain because they use less energy than others and would pay little or no taxes on their dividends. In addition, the overall economy would benefit from this periodic replenishment of consumer demand.
The most persuasive argument for cap-and-dividend, though, isn’t economic but political. As the presidential campaign revealed, energy prices are an explosive issue. A carbon cap will raise fuel prices not just once, but for years to come. The potential for backlash — for frenzied cries of “Drill, baby, drill!” — is never-ending. If America is to reduce carbon emissions to the level scientists say is necessary, it’s crucial that families’ pocketbooks be protected for the duration. Cap-and-dividend does this by permanently linking dividends to carbon prices. As carbon prices rise, so — automatically — do dividends. If voters scream about rising fuel prices, as they surely will, politicians can truthfully say, “How you fare is up to you. If you guzzle, you lose; if you conserve, you gain.”
Moreover, for a carbon cap to endure, it must have broad bipartisan support. A revenue-neutral cap is far more likely to garner Republican support than one that’s linked to a large increase in government spending. Consider, for example, Senator Bob Corker of Tennessee, who supports a declining cap on carbon but not a spending bill that earmarks trillions of dollars over 40 years. Though it’s not glaringly evident, there are more Republicans like him. This doesn’t mean Obama shouldn’t spend public money on energy; it means he should separate such spending from the cap.
The ultimate reason for paying equal dividends from carbon revenue may be this: it fits Obama’s vision of how government ought to work. In this vision, the government’s job is to serve ordinary people, not special interests. It is to be fair and transparent. And it is to unite rather than divide us, to move us from a “you’re on your own” society to one in which “we’re all in this together.”
Cap-and-dividend fits this vision perfectly. It curbs carbon emissions in a way that’s simple to understand and administer, favors no special interests, and provides a degree of security to all. It treats all Americans as co-owners of the air and allocates trillions of dollars in a completely transparent way. It would be a signature Obama policy, one that sets the tone for his whole administration and remains as memorably linked to him as Social Security is to Roosevelt.
(Pictured above: President Bush walks with President-elect Barack Obama at the White House, November 10, 2008. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque)


Substantial funds need to be directed toward carbon innovation: the development and deployment of low-carbon technologies like cellulosic biofuels. Incentives are of little use without the technology and buildout to achieve them. We actually need tens of terawatts of new carbon-free power to slow global warming. Current U.S. expenditures for global warming technology are completely inadequate.
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48 comments so far
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Finally a tax paper initiative that will pay for dividends for 100s of years into the future.
This will be Obama’s legacy.
I agree w/ 97% of this editorial. But this statement baffles me: “…the government would then recoup about 25 percent of the revenue and could use that money as it sees fit…” Last I checked our govt is $10 Trillion in debt. Shouldn’t any/all uncommitted revenue be immediately applied to reducing The National Debt?
pickensplan.org I’, with T. Boone Pickens on what needs to happen so should the new and future administrations!
I wonder at the paradox from an energy/environment “expert”. He sees the virtue in a new, sustainable, green energy initiative, yet fails to acknowlege the detrimental consequences of a consumer society.
China’s government is hell-bent for leather to get a consumer society established. It is frustrated by a population that would rather delay purchases, save money, and be prepared for the debacles that seem to cyclically and regularly plague economies. Huzzah, a lesson to our nation of capitalists on working and saving from the 4000 year old chinese society?
Rampant consumerism is killing the environment, bankrupting values, and helping to effectively put many into debtors hell.
Think globally, produce and consume locally. There is a nuance between Nationalism and buying local. It is time to look inward…there were untolled virtues in every berg having a butcher, baker, and candle-stick maker, as opposed to shipping melamine-tainted milk products from halfway around the world…
Finally, while 65-70 % of our taxes go to military industrial multinational corporations: if this corporate welfare is not income redistribution, I don’t know what is.
Let’s put more restrictions on industry. Enough restrictions and industry will cease to exist. No carbon to worry about after that. Also no jobs, no money and no fun.
Seems like a good idea in principle.
As for the first comment “we cannot taking money from people and giving it to others.” - The current bank bailout is doing just that.
Isn’t it strange how “spreading the wealth around” (e.g. tax cuts) to the top 10% of wealth holders is just good ol’ free enterprise capitalism but spreading the wealth around to the working class via tax cuts is socialism?
I don’t know whether to puke or laugh.
Priceless quote: “But that leads to another crucial detail: what to do with the auction revenue, which over time will total trillions of dollars?” We have indeed arrived in Obamaland, which is the place the happy little bumblebee inhabits before it hits the windshield.
J apparently does not understand how running trillions of dollars through a government bureaucracy, which will pick and choose favorite companies based on whether their lobbyist can get them a carbon loophole, and which will effectively steal money from certain “bad” segments of society in order to shower cash gifts on “good” segments of society, in exchange for their votes, of course, split up into <$200 increments to avoid FEC scrutiny, would be “socialism.” Buzz buzz, O happy J!
Substantial funds need to be directed toward carbon innovation: the development and deployment of low-carbon technologies like cellulosic biofuels. Incentives are of little use without the technology and buildout to achieve them. We actually need tens of terawatts of new carbon-free power to slow global warming. Current U.S. expenditures for global warming technology are completely inadequate.
There comes a time, when a country must come together like the Manhattan project, interstate freeway system and Apollo and Space Shuttle programs. I did not vote for Obama, but an energy policy is a win-win for all sides of the political spectrum. Present your ideas and ask us how to participate. Unfortunately it must be a mandate, the Public is too self-centered to see beyond their own daily self satisfaction.
“Socialism refers to a broad set of economic theories of social organization advocating state or collective ownership and administration of the means of production and distribution of goods.” wickapedia.
To the person who wrote the first comment above: your expressed opinion is exactly what’s wrong in America at the moment. The ideas of the writer show keen understanding and a sense of responsibility, both fiscal and civic. They have nothing to do with socialism, but rather keeping the USA afloat. You quite simply cannot have your cake and eat it. The times, they are a’changin’ my friend.
Why don’t we just eliminate all subsidies and tax advantages like the depletion allowance, etc from the carbon producing energy companies so the non-carbon technologies can compete?
Well it is not perfect this system sounds very promising. It provides incentives for the market and individual users to adjust “carbon spending” through a system of penalties and rewards. I could not think of a more effective method for dealing with the issue than this. In a sense a carbon “free market” will develop from this which favors conservation as its goal.
[...] across this in-depth analysis on Reuters for President-elect Obama to consider. It’s a new twist on the cap and trade scheme for carbon [...]
[...] across this in-depth analysis on Reuters for President-elect Obama to consider. It’s a new twist on the cap and trade scheme for carbon [...]
I have not heard of this plan before. First thoughts are that it is simple and brilliant. More importantly, it addresses the underlying principle of change required in our country, as exemplified in the election…change comes from the people. If we have a system that has low gov overhead and has a built in reward/punishment system associated to conservation, I think that would strike a cord with Americans. Somehow we have to sacrifice, it’s best to choose how we sacrifice then have to sacrifice in a panic.
Any government that levies taxes on their constituents are ‘taking money from people and giving it to others.’
I would ask the previous commenter to please elaborate, if possible, on which socialistic principles he or she finds offensive, and on which parts of the above idea sounded good at first.
There are many renewable energy sources. Strange as it may seem Nuclear Energy can be made renewable. There is a patent pending application at http://www.heliatomic.com that is worth looking into.
I started to read your article becouse the ide sounded good at first (like social security did for a few years)
and i was blown away by the socialistic principles that you are promoting. that is exactly what drives capitalistic people crazy. we cannot taking money from people and giving it to others. go out and make some money.