US presidential candidate Barack Obama has announced plans for a US-wide
carbon emissions trading scheme as part of a major new energy strategy designed
to slash carbon emissions by 80 per cent on 1990 levels by 2050.
In
a
speech delivered in Portsmouth New Hampshire, the Democratic hopeful said
the trading mechanism would be supported by a $150bn investment over the next 10
years in clean technology, as well as an energy efficiency programme designed to
cut the US economy's energy intensity in half by 2030.
He added that if elected he would also set targets to cut oil consumption by
35 per cent by 2030 and ensure the US takes a leadership position in
international climate change negotiations.
The idea of cap and trade programmes – such as that currently operating in
Europe whereby a set quantity of carbon credits are allocated and those firms
that exceed their quota have to buy in extra credits from those that do not use
all their allowance – has been endorsed by several US presidential candidates,
including Obama's rival Democratic runner John Edwards.
But Obama insisted that unlike Edwards' proposed scheme, his plan would see
all firms have to pay for their assigned credits at auction rather than having
them initially assigned for free by industry.
"The market will set the price, but unlike the other cap-and-trade proposals
that have been offered in this race, no business will be allowed to emit any
greenhouses gases for free," he said.
This auction approach would effectively introduce a tax on carbon emissions
and would be likely to add significant costs for businesses operating in the US.
But Obama's camp argued that it would ensure polluters pay for all emissions,
creating a major incentive for them to achieve cuts in their carbon footprint.
The announcement is likely to be welcomed by European politicians who are
still smarting over their treatment at President Bush's recent conference of the
world's largest emitters.
According to BBC
reports, several attendees at Bush's Washington conference are furious at
being denied the opportunity to voice their concerns in public and feel they
were outmanoeuvred in the press by the White House's media machine.
With Bush repeating his refusal to countenance binding emissions cuts,
European negotiators are now reliant on the next incumbent of the White House to
deliver a global successor to the Kyoto Treaty. As such they will have been
heartened by Obama's latest plans, as well as recent calls for quantifiable
carbon emission reduction targets from his rival Democratic presidential
frontrunners, Hillary Clinton and John Edwards, and support for climate change
legislation from Republican candidate John McCain.
Meanwhile, one US energy official last week predicted carbon regulation "of
some sort" was now inevitable, despite the Bush administration's opposition to
anything bar voluntary emission reduction programmes.
According to Associated Press reports, Dan Arvizu, director of the National
Renewable Energy Lab of the Department of Energy, said that the position of the
administration "was beginning to evolve" and as such carbon legislation was
likely.
"I am neutral as to which kind of carbon management regulation there will be,
" he is quoted as saying. "[But] it is very clear to me that there will be
carbon management, whether it will be a direct tax, carbon cap-and-trade or some
other instrument."
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