The “Inflation Reduction Act”
- The package includes $260 billion in tax credits for low-emissions electricity production, including nuclear power; $80 billion in new rebates for electric vehicles and home energy upgrades; and $60 billion for alternative energy manufacturing.
- While the bill will likely produce further marginal reductions, claims that it will alter the nation's fundamental emissions trajectory are misleading
- Indeed, the bill ignores two major policy levers: carbon pricing and permitting reform
- Carbon pricing, the most basic way governments can nudge economies away from carbon-intensive goods and services, has been floated before, but this bill does not pursue setting a general price on carbon
- Permitting reform is perhaps the most important policy in the U.S. for advancing low-carbon energy innovation
- President Biden's decision-making in this arena has been emblematic of the often-self-defeating environmental ethos of the Democratic Party
- Raul Grijalva, chairman of the House Natural Resources Committee, called permitting reform a “euphemism for gutting our most foundational environmental and public health protections.” So the refreshing turn away from anti-growth environmentalism and toward energy abundance that the bill promises may be less than meets the eye.
- If carbon pricing represents a simple tool for governments worldwide, permitting reform is perhaps the most important policy in the U.S. for advancing low-carbon energy innovation.
https://www.city-journal.org/climate-bill-is-less-than-meets-the-eye?wallit_nosession=1
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