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The Issue
One issue where
Republican Sen. John McCain, Ariz., differs
substantially from his party is the government’s
role in addressing global warming. A
2007 National Journal poll found only 13
percent of Republican “insiders” believe humans
are responsible for global warming, yet McCain
supports taking government action to address
carbon emissions.
Politicians and the
media love to talk about global warming – as
long as the discussion is one of
“settled science” and ignores debate and dissent.
The broadcast networks have mentioned “global
warming” more than 270 times and “climate
change” more than 200 times since the beginning
of 2008 alone.
In response to
continued media obsession and the failure of
politicians to accomplish reform, McCain
proposes a cap-and-trade system aimed at curbing
carbon emissions from large-scale polluters.
In June 2008, the
Senate balked on the Lieberman-Warner bill,
legislation that would have set up a
cap-and-trade system for carbon emissions. The
proposal would have sought to
reduce carbon emissions by 65 to 70 percent
by 2050 – to about 2.13 billion metric tons per
year. McCain did not vote on Lieberman-Warner,
but co-sponsored an earlier version,
dubbed Lieberman-McCain and also called the
Climate Stewardship Act.
“The facts of global
warming demand our urgent attention, especially
in Washington,” McCain said in a May 2008
speech. “In the years ahead, we are likely to
see reduced water supplies … more forest fires
than in previous decades … changes in crop
production … more heat waves afflicting our
cities and a greater intensity in storms.”
The media have issued
similarly catastrophic predictions of the
results of climate change – “a
dying polar world,” a flooded New York City,
even asking “are
we all gonna die?”
But while the media
have bought into global warming alarmism,
they’ve spent little time evaluating the
presidential candidates’ proposals for dealing
with pollution – specifically through a carbon
cap-and-trade system. The networks mentioned
“global warming” or “climate change” almost 500
times in 2008; but they mentioned
“cap-and-trade” only 18 times.
McCain has proposed
to reduce carbon emissions to about 60 percent
below 1990 levels by 2050. The United States
emitted 6.1 billion metric tons of carbon
dioxide in 1990, according to the
Energy Information Administration. McCain
would seek to eliminate all but 3.66 billion
metric tons of emissions – the same
emissions levels seen in the mid-1960s.
Democratic candidate
Sen. Barack Obama, Ill., has proposed to reduce
emissions to 80 percent below 1990 levels by
2050 – less than half of what was emitted in
1949.
Under McCain’s plan
the government would
allot credits to businesses that emit carbon
and allow them to be bought and sold. Over the
course of the program, the number of credits on
the market would be reduced, requiring companies
to cut emissions or pay more for credits as
supply diminishes.
The Media’s
Position
Of the 18 stories
about cap-and-trade through Sept. 30, 2008, only
one-third (six stories) mentioned the cost such
a proposal would have if implemented.
Most of the discussion
of cost came in coverage of former Vice
President Al Gore’s call to switch the United
States to wind and solar energy – a proposal
that would cost between $1.5 trillion and $3
trillion over 30 years, according to Gore’s
Alliance for Climate Protection. That could be
like passing one financial bailout package
almost every two years.
“What would
electricity cost in terms of the transition
while it’s under way?” NBC’s Tom Brokaw asked
Gore on the July 20 “Meet the Press.” “Most
estimates are that it would cost a lot more
money, and that would have a devastating effect
on Main Street and especially on rural America.”
NBC’s Anne Thompson
raised the same point in two airings of her
interview with Gore – on the “Nightly News” July
17 and the “Today” show July 18. A CBS “Evening
News” anchor also made the point in covering
Gore’s proposal July 17.
The two other mentions
came on ABC’s “This Week.” On May 11, host
George Stephanopoulos challenged McCain adviser
Carly Fiorina on McCain’s support for the
Lieberman-Warner cap-and-trade legislation.
“Higher gas prices, a recession, higher energy
prices across the board, that’s the White House
line,” he said. Stephanopoulos asked if being a
leader on climate was worth it, “even if it
means higher gas, higher electricity prices?”
On June 15,
conservative commentator George Will pointed out
the bill was defeated “because it came up
against the fact that its purpose is to raise
the cost of energy. Its purpose is to diminish
economic activity.”
Journalist Sam
Donaldson defended the bill against Will’s
attack. “Diminish economic activity in the short
run to save the planet in the long run and our
great grandchildren can still be alive,” he
said. “Which way do you want to go?”
Donaldson’s defense
of the failed bill mirrored other reporters’
take on the bill when it was bigger news in
2007. Despite warnings from opponents about the
cost of the measure, members of the media
defended it as necessary.
When Democratic state
Rep. Jim Gooch of Kentucky pointed out the
expected costs of the Lieberman-Warner bill –
3.4 million American jobs and $6 trillion – on
“Good Morning America” Nov. 18, 2007, anchor
Bill Weir defended the measure and said the
concerns would only delay action on what he
called a “moral imperative.”
“But, but according to
all the scientists,” Weir responded, “the more
hand-wringing we do, the more we dither on this,
the worse it’s going to get. And what if you’re
wrong? What if this, in fact, is a global
catastrophe? Isn’t it a moral imperative as a
public servant to err on the side of planetary
survival and get something done?”
Others, like Anne
Thompson in a Dec. 8, 2007, NBC “Nightly News”
report, just ignored the negative effects a
cap-and-trade measure could have on the economy.
CNN’s Gerri
Willis referred to the failed Lieberman-Warner
cap-and-trade legislation as “historic” and
“a major step towards cutting carbon emissions.”
The New York Times referred to it as a “bold
national policy.”
News magazines such
as Time – which has engaged in global warming
alarmism of its own, like when it featured a
doctored version of the
famous Iwo Jima flag-raising photograph to
represent a war on climate change – are also
backing cap-and-trade. In its
environment-focused issue April 28, Time called
Lieberman-Warner “an attainable good bill.”
The same issue
illustrated that Time has bought McCain’s line
that increasing government regulation counts as
a “market-based” solution. Eric Pooley wrote
April 28 that such a system “harnesses the power
of the marketplace to fight warming, a concept
that helped Republicans … fall in love with the
idea.”
On May 29, CNN host
Kyra Phillips characterized opposition to
cap-and-trade – complaints that it would raise
energy prices for American consumers – as
attempts of the coal industry to block the
measures.
“[Y]ou’ve got big
businesses and you’ve got the coal industry that
are opposed to this legislation going, this is,
this not the right timing, this is going to kill
the economy,” Phillips said during a
conversation with “conservationist and green
entrepreneur” Howard Gould.
While some in the
media are ignoring the negative aspects of
cap-and-trade and others are brushing cost
concerns aside, journalists like NBC’s chief
environmental correspondent, Anne Thompson, are
spinning the negatives as long-term positives.
“The Electric Research
Power Institute says this kind of solar power is
two to four times more expensive than
electricity from natural gas or coal,” Thompson
reported on the
“Nightly News” March 13. “But if there is a
cap on carbon emissions, [Accione Energy, NA CEO
Peter] Duprey says that could change.”
Cap-and-Trade-and-Higher-Costs
Inflicting higher
production costs on energy producers by forcing
them to buy emissions credits will raise prices
for consumers in the long run. McCain
said in May 2008 that a government-run
market on carbon emissions would “set limits on
greenhouse gas emissions while encouraging the
development of low-cost compliance options.”
In fact the very
purpose of cap-and-trade legislation is “to
drive up energy prices” so alternative sources
appear more attractive, according to Dan
Mitchell, a senior fellow at the Cato Institute
and a Business & Media Institute adviser.
“Now politicians don’t
like saying it that way but that’s the entire
theory, that’s the entire focus, that is the
intent of such legislation,” he said. “So the
average American household is going to be paying
a lot more for energy if this is implemented.
Now we have no idea how this will emerge at the
end of the sausage making process known as
legislation but presumably it will be even worse
than when it begins.”
It’s impossible to
predict the exact costs of McCain’s proposal
because, as Mitchell said, its exact goals would
likely change. But his plan is less aggressive –
meaning it would likely be less expensive – than
Lieberman-Warner, which would have resulted in
cumulative gross domestic product losses of “at
least $1.7 trillion” and 500,000 to 1 million
lost jobs by 2030,
according to The Heritage Foundation.
The increased cost to
produce energy brought on by scarcer and scarcer
carbon credits would be passed on to consumers
with a $467 average per-household increase in
energy costs, The Heritage Foundation estimated.
Former Federal Reserve
Chairman Alan Greenspan
wrote in his recent book “The Age of
Turbulence” that “there is no effective way to
meaningfully reduce emissions without negatively
impacting a large part of the economy.”
Greenspan is a
frequent expert commentator in many media
outlets, and he toured widely when “The Age of
Turbulence” came out. But members of the press
didn’t ask him about his assertion that
cap-and-trade systems or carbon taxes “are
likely to be popular only until real people lose
real jobs as their consequence.”
Duane Parde, president
of the National Taxpayers Union and a Business &
Media Institute adviser, predicted utility bills
could rise as much as 30 percent depending on
the specifics of a cap-and-trade plan.
“Pick a number, but it
would probably raise electricity rates 20 to 30
percent, and that would be paid, individuals,
families would have to pay higher utility
bills,” he said.
Economists also
questioned the candidates’ characterization of a
cap-and-trade system as “market-based.” Mitchell
said rather than being market-based,
cap-and-trade would cause “tremendous
distortions” in the energy market.
“It will open up
numerous opportunities for influence peddling
and special interest lobbying,” he said. “For
someone who claims they’re against special
interest lobbying, McCain is doing probably the
single biggest thing to enrich the lobbying
industry that been done, I don’t know, maybe
since the creation of the income tax. It’s
something that’s going to dramatically expand
the power and burden of government and that
cannot be called market-based by any stretch of
the imagination.”
The Club for Growth
in
May 2008 called cap-and-trade proposals
“another heavy government regulation with
tremendous costs to American businesses and
economic growth.”
But it could be even
worse, according to George Mason University
economist Dr. Donald Boudreaux, a Business &
Media Institute adviser.
“[C]ap-and-trade is
certainly better than a lot of the
alternatives,” he told the Business & Media
Institute, “than, you know, direct mandated
reductions in emissions. So of all the possible
plans it’s certainly not the worst but it still
does have a large element of government central
planning involved in it.”
But while the media
obsess about global warming catastrophe and the
candidates propose big-government solutions, the
American people aren’t so worried, according to
an ABC News poll that showed only 25 percent
of Americans view it as the world’s biggest
environmental threat. Fewer than half – 47
percent – said global warming was “extremely” or
“very” important.
The environment didn’t
even register on a list of issues important to
voters in an
August CBS/New York Times poll.
Obama: Read
about the media’s promotion of big-government
solutions to carbon emissions.
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