Canada Needs A Bottom-Up, Market-Driven Climate Change Plan

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
39,778
454
83
Canada Needs A Bottom-Up, Market-Driven Climate Change Plan

The climate change file is a hot topic and not just because it's been a balmy winter. Speculation is that the prime minister will soon meet the premiers to discuss a new national climate change policy. It'll be the first opportunity for the federal government to set out its vision of a "pan-Canadian framework for combating climate change."

Cue the inflated rhetoric. One newspaper has editorialized that the government must be ready and "willing to inflict some pain on Canadians" as part of an effective climate change policy. A climate change advocate has mused that the former prime minister should be jailed for his perceived indifference to the issue. And, of course, Leonardo DiCaprio has hectored us for developing our natural resources at the expense of the "future of humanity."

Pain, prisons, and the future of humanity will hopefully not be on the agenda of the first ministers meeting. The goal should be a reasoned discussion about the short- and long-term costs of climate change and the policies that can limit them.

There are no mainstream voices that contest the science of climate change or present government inaction as a credible policy response. Climate change poses a real cost to the economy in both the short and long run. The magnitude of these costs is a source of debate but the new government is right to be concerned about its risks and ready to act to mitigate them.

But the prime minister and the premiers must also recognize that policies to curb emissions also impose costs. As an IMF report has put it: "The macroeconomic consequences of policies to abate climate change can be immediate and wide-ranging, particularly when these policies are not designed carefully."

This should hardly be controversial. The intent of these policies is to influence personal and industrial decision-making with respect to carbon usage. Discouraging the use of high-carbon technologies, products, and production processes is not an inadvertent outcome of climate change abatement policies. It's the principal goal.

Herein lies the challenge: Deciding which policies are likely to limit global warming's negative effects at the lowest cost in terms of economic output.

It doesn't make for a good soundbite or a simple solution. Finding the right policy will require trial and error, and a general humbleness rather than sweeping or costly reform. Government should acknowledge the risk of man-made climate change, but it should be cautious about the prospects of top-down, command-and-control solutions.

Instead, it should focus on creating the conditions for bottom-up, market-driven technological innovation. A pro-innovation agenda with respect to climate change is composed of the same basic policies for other sectors, including competitive taxation, strong intellectual property protection and a sensible regulatory regime, investments in human capital, and high-quality infrastructure. Government has a key enabling role for the next big idea to address climate change but it will almost certainly be conceived in a university laboratory or a business facility and not a bureaucratic office.

Canada Needs A Bottom-Up, Market-Driven Climate Change Plan | Sean Speer
 

Angstrom

Hall of Fame Member
May 8, 2011
10,659
0
36
What we need is to survive until manufacturing comes back. Screw the Carbon BS. We will be lucky if we don't hit a very deep depression with high inflation.
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
39,778
454
83
What we need is to survive until manufacturing comes back. Screw the Carbon BS. We will be lucky if we don't hit a very deep depression with high inflation.

No, climate change is real and human induced.

Running away from the problem will just fukk us later.
 

Angstrom

Hall of Fame Member
May 8, 2011
10,659
0
36
No, climate change is real and human induced.

Running away from the problem will just fukk us later.

Wrong, as the whole world will be automated, cleaning the mess and building atmosphere filters and temperature stabilization technology will be the new jobs.

Are you so stupid to think that humans will let themselves be wiped out by pollution? If our survival requires it, humans will innovate and clean the planet.
 

Angstrom

Hall of Fame Member
May 8, 2011
10,659
0
36
We can stop polluting all we want. If everyone else keeps going we still will be polluted. Duh.
 

Angstrom

Hall of Fame Member
May 8, 2011
10,659
0
36
Pollution will continue to grow. With a carbon tax or without. And thankfully, because the future needs jobs. Environmental technology R&D will be those jobs.

Because, humans won't just let itself be wiped out by pollution. It just doesn't work that way.
 

IdRatherBeSkiing

Satelitte Radio Addict
May 28, 2007
14,617
2,365
113
Toronto, ON
No, climate change is real and human induced.

Running away from the problem will just fukk us later.

You had the second glass of kool aid today I see.

The Climate is always changing. There is little evidence that man has much if anything to do with it. Only a moron or somebody brainwashed by the religion of man-made climate change would present that as fact. I am no longer convinced you are just brainwashed.

But even if you accept that the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere is the cause of global warming, Canada plays a completely insignificant role in the amount of CO2 placed in the air. Well under 1% if I remember correctly. So even if every Canadian stops driving and breathing, the CO2 reduction would be meaningless. Of course we all know where the CO2 is coming from but we won't do anything about that will we?
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
39,778
454
83
And climate will continue to change on top of us losing manufacturing jobs.

You can't stop it. If it's not us it will be others.


It depends on the timeframe you are looking at and what the reductions are.
 

Angstrom

Hall of Fame Member
May 8, 2011
10,659
0
36
The idea of a carbon tax is logically flawed. It won't produce a cleaner more prosperous Canada.

Pollution will export itself elsewhere and continue polluting. But we will have lost the benefits of the revenues from them.