Global warming: planning not pricing

Carbon pricing and carbon taxes are now proposed by international institutions and mainstream economics as the main solutions to ending global warming and destructive climate change.  For some time, the IMF has been pushing for carbon pricing as ‘a necessary if not sufficient’ part of a climate policy package that also includes investment in ‘green technology’ and redistribution of income to help the worst-off cope with the financial burden.  The IMF is now proposing a global minimum carbon price — along the lines of the global minimum floor on corporate taxes which has recently secured agreement.

At the recent meeting of the G20 finance ministers, carbon pricing was endorsed as one of “a wide set of tools” to tackle climate change.  Speaking at the Venice International Conference on Climate, Christine Lagarde, president of the European Central Bank, also underscored the need for carbon pricing, emphasising the importance of an “effective carbon price that reflects the true cost of carbon”.  An agreed carbon price would then be a precursor to the establishment of a carbon border tax, which would serve as a tariff on imports from countries without carbon pricing.  This would be an incentive for others to join the ‘coalition of the willing’.

The EU Commission announced what it calls ‘Fit for 55’ plan to achieve a carbon-neutral EU by 2050 and reduce carbon emissions by 55% below 1990s levels before the decade is out.  Again, it looks to carbon pricing to achieve this, as well as carbon import taxes. The EU commission proposes gradually increasing minimum taxes on the most polluting fuels such as petrol, diesel and kerosene used as jet-fuel over a period of ten years. Zero-emissions fuels, green hydrogen and sustainable aviation fuels will face no levies for a decade under the proposed system. Paolo Gentiloni, Brussels economics commissioner, has called the reform a “now or never moment”.

It was no accident that the EU and G20 have turned to William Nordhaus, an American economist and Nobel laureate for economics advice on climate change.  Nordhaus gave the keynote address at the Venice conference.  He said that “It is a painful, painful realisation, but I think we need to face it: Our international climate policy, the approach we are taking, is at a dead end.”  But what was Nordhaus’ answer to this dismal conclusion?  He called for a “climate club” of countries willing to commit to a carbon price.  “A key ingredient in reducing emissions is high carbon prices,” he said, adding that a “climate club” would have to impose a penalty tariff on countries that did not have carbon pricing in place.  Nordhaus said such an approach would help solve the problem of ‘free riding’, which has plagued existing global climate agreements, all of which are voluntary.

Nordhaus has been a major advocate of a ‘market solution’ to climate change.  Nordhaus has constructed so-called integrated assessment models (IAMs) to estimate the social cost of carbon (SCC) and evaluate alternative abatement policies.  Nordhaus’ IAMs assume that the world economy will have a much larger GDP in 50 years so that even if carbon emissions rise as predicted, governments can defer the cost of mitigation to the future.  In contrast, if you apply stringent carbon abatement measures eg ending all coal production, you might lower growth rates and incomes and so make it more difficult to mitigate in the future. Instead, according to Nordhaus, with carbon pricing and taxes we can control and reduce emissions without reducing fossil fuel production and consumption at source. 

It is the tobacco/cigarette pricing and taxing solution.  The higher the tax or price, the lower the consumption, without touching the tobacco industry. Leaving aside the question of whether smoking has really been eradicated globally by pricing adjustments, can global warming really be solved by market pricing?  Market solutions to climate change are based on trying to correct “market failure” by incorporating the nefarious effects of carbon emissions via a tax or quota system.  The argument goes that, as mainstream economic theory does not incorporate the social costs of carbon into prices, the price mechanism must be “corrected” through a tax or a new market.  But as a recent essay pointed out, the problem is that climate change is not one market failure (like tobacco) but several: in capitalist transport, energy, technology, finance and employment.

Economists who have attempted to calculate what the ‘social price’ of carbon should be have found that there are so many factors involved and the pricing must be projected over a such a long time horizon that it is really impossible to place a monetary value on the ‘social damage’– estimates for the carbon price range from $14 per ton of CO2 to $386! “It is impossible to approximate the uncertainties in low-probability but high-damage, catastrophic or irreversible outcomes.” Indeed, where carbon pricing has been applied, it has been a miserable failure in reducing emissions, or in the case of Australia, dropped by the government under the pressure of energy and mining companies.

And while there is much talk about raising carbon emission prices, little or nothing is said about the huge subsidies that governments continue to make to fossil fuel industries.  EU Commissioner Gentiloni admitted as such: “Paradoxically, [the current energy taxation directive] is incentivising fossil fuels and not environmentally friendly fuels. We have to change this.”

The G20 countries have provided more than $3.3tn (£2.4tn) in subsidies for fossil fuels since the Paris climate agreement was sealed in 2015, a report shows, despite many committing to tackle the crisis.  The report says all 19 G20 member states continue to provide substantial financial support for fossil-fuel production and consumption – the EU bloc is the 20th member. Overall, subsidies fell by 2% a year from 2015 to reach $636bn in 2019, the latest data available.

But Australia increased its fossil fuel subsidies by 48% over the period, Canada’s support rose by 40% and that from the US by 37%. The UK’s subsidies fell by 18% over that time but still stood at $17bn in 2019, according to the report. The biggest subsidies came from China, Saudi Arabia, Russia and India, which together accounted for about half of all the subsidies.

The report found that 60% of the fossil fuel subsidies went to the companies producing fossil fuels and 40% to cutting prices for energy consumers.  A recent report by the International Institute for Sustainable Development concluded that reforming fossil fuel subsidies aimed at consumers in 32 countries could reduce CO2 emissions by 5.5bn tonnes by 2030, equivalent to the annual emissions of about 1,000 coal-fired power plants. It said these changes would also save governments nearly $3tn by 2030. The International Energy Agency’s road map for net-zero emissions by 2050 calls for a 6 per cent decline in coal-fired generation annually. Yet coal will grow by almost 5 per cent this year, and another 3 per cent in 2022, hitting a new peak.

Nordhaus is right.  Current climate change policies are at a dead end and the impact of climate change and environmental destruction is getting worse by the day.  Earthquakes, storms, floods and droughts — the number of recorded loss events resulting from natural disasters – has been increasing for some years now.

The report also examined how G20 countries were putting a price on carbon pollution. It found that more than 80% of emissions were covered by such prices in France, Germany and South Africa. In the UK, 31% of emissions are covered but the UK has one of highest carbon prices at $58 per tonne of CO2. Just 8% of US emissions are covered and at the low price of $6 per tonne. Russia, Brazil, and India do not have any carbon prices. In his address to the G20, Nordhaus showed that the current average global carbon price is under $2 and 80% of global emissions have no carbon emissions pricing market at all!

So the carbon pricing and taxation solution, even if it worked to lower emissions, is a pipedream as it can never be implemented globally before global warming reaches dangerous ‘tipping points’. All the latest climate science suggests that the tipping points are approaching fast and allowing fossil fuel production to continue while trying to reduce its use by ‘market’ solutions’ like carbon pricing and taxes will not be enough. Even the IMF has admitted that market solutions have not worked. 

Market solutions are not working because for capitalist companies it is just not profitable to invest in climate change mitigation: “Private investment in productive capital and infrastructure faces high upfront costs and significant uncertainties that cannot always be priced. Investments for the transition to a low-carbon economy are additionally exposed to important political risks, illiquidity and uncertain returns, depending on policy approaches to mitigation as well as unpredictable technological advances.” (IMF)

Indeed: “The large gap between the private and social returns on low-carbon investments is likely to persist into the future, as future paths for carbon taxation and carbon pricing are highly uncertain, not least for political economy reasons. This means that there is not only a missing market for current climate mitigation as carbon emissions are currently not priced, but also missing markets for future mitigation, which is relevant for the returns to private investment in future climate mitigation technology, infrastructure and capital.” In other words, it ain’t profitable to do anything significant.

What is the alternative? Mark Carney, former Bank of England governor and climate change envoy for the UN and many multi-nationals, reckons it is ‘regulation’.  “We need clear, credible and predictable regulation from government,” he said. “Air quality rules, building codes, that type of strong regulation is needed. You can have strong regulation for the future, then the financial market will start investing today, for that future. Because that’s what markets do, they always look forward.”

Carney’s answer is really an excuse for continuing to expand fossil fuel production.  Although the IEA recently said that if the world was to stay within 1.5C Paris target increase in global heating, there could be no more exploration or development of fossil fuel resources, Carney argues that countries and companies could still carry on exploiting fossil fuels, if they use technology such as carbon capture and storage, or other ways of reducing emissions. “With the right regulation, with a rising carbon price, with a financial sector that is oriented this way, with public accountability of government, of financial institutions, of companies, yes, then we can, we certainly have the conditions in which to achieve [holding global heating to 1.5C“.

This is disingenous nonsense.  Carbon pricing schemes just hide the reality that, as long as the fossil fuel industry and the other big multinational emitters of greenhouse gases are untouched and not brought into a plan for phasing them out, the tipping point for irreversible global warming will be passed. Instead of waiting for the market to speak, and for ‘regulation’, we need a global plan where fossil fuel industries, financial institutions and major emitting sectors are brought under public ownership and control. 

Who are the biggest emitters or consumers of carbon apart from the fossil fuel industry?  It is the richest wealth and income earners in the Global North who have excessive consumption and fly everywhere. It is the military (the biggest sector of carbon consumption).  The waste of capitalist production and consumption in autos, aircraft and airlines, shipping, chemicals, bottled water, processed foods, unnecessary pharmaceuticals and so on is directly linked to carbon emissions.  Harmful industrial processes like industrial agriculture, industrial fishing, logging, mining and so on are also major global heaters, while the banking industry operates to underwrite and promote all this carbon emission. 

A global plan could steer investments into things society does need, like renewable energy, organic farming, public transportation, public water systems, ecological remediation, public health, quality schools and other currently unmet needs.  And it could equalize development the world over by shifting resources out of useless and harmful production in the North and into developing the South, building basic infrastructure, sanitation systems, public schools, health care.  At the same time, a global plan could aim to provide equivalent jobs for workers displaced by the retrenchment or closure of unnecessary or harmful industries.  Planning not pricing.

11 thoughts on “Global warming: planning not pricing

  1. “Nordhaus is right. Current climate change policies are at a dead end and the impact of climate change and environmental destruction is getting worse by the day.” This is about the only thing Nordhaus is right about. It’s largely down to his criminal incompetence and ideological blindness that governments have done so little for so long. Most on here would probably challenge Nordhaus’s principles and underlying economic assumptions. But he’s also either scientifically illiterate or deliberately lying when it come to climate science.

    It’s really frightening that Nordhaus is part on any current discussion re climate.

    Here’s a talk and a paper by Keen which lambasts Nordhaus:

    https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/14747731.2020.1807856?journalCode=rglo20

  2. It seems to me that MR’s terminology is dangerously imprecise. Yes, bourgeois carbon pricing will never work because the bourgeoisie’s only goal is to safeguard private profits regardless of the broader social consequences. So any carbon-pricing scheme it comes up with will be a fraud aimed at covering up this fundamentally reactionary impulse. But that doesn’t mean that pricing is not an effective economic instrument. It is — and it’s one that a socialist government will want to utilize to the max, albeit in the context of a planned economy that uses the full range of politico-economic measures, including pricing, to reduce fossil fuels and encourage a transfer to alternative modes of energy production. The problem is therefore not carbon pricing per se, but the inability of people like Nordhaus to make full and proper use of it. Much the same can be said for MR’s statement that “[e]conomists who have attempted to calculate what the ‘social price’ of carbon should be have found that there are so many factors involved and the pricing must be projected over a such a long time horizon that it is really impossible to place a monetary value on the ‘social damage’– estimates for the carbon price range from $14 per ton of CO2 to $386!” Yes, but that’s because bourgeois economists want us to throw up our hands and agree that it’s all hopeless. But socialist economists should argue that social-pricing is not only possible but necessary, i.e. that it is an essential aspect of the economic-planning process. After all, how can we move away from fossil fuels unless we have a clear idea of how much such fuels truly cost and precisely what advantages other forms of energy production will confer? Bourgeois economists don’t want the masses to wrestle with such problems because they don’t want them getting at the truth. Marxists disagree.

    1. The BIS (a couple of years back, at Davos) actualy (accidentally?) proposed the correct solution to this global problem : “Central banks** might have to .buy (and shut down) the fossil industy”. **using their unlimited currency-issuing capacity.

      Indeed, the BIS itself can “pay for” the required transition and resourc e mobilization, free of market economics, via “planning not pricing”.

  3. A well-researched relevant article. Capitalism cannot solve global warming because it cannot distinguish between paid costs of production and actual costs. The only costs the capitalists recognise are the ones that cost them cash. That and that alone. Carbon taxing is a weak attempt by government to break down the wall between paid costs and actual costs. In 2020 according to Reuters the market turnover of carbon tax credits amounted to $214 billion. In 2018 the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air calculated that the environmental damage done by fossil fuels amount to $2.9 trillion per annum or $8 billion per day. This means the carbon tax only covers 27 days of pollution. Bit like the paid and unpaid part of the polluting year. Of course if the full amount was levied, the fossil fuel industry would pass into history and we would be spared from listening to those Tory idiots braying on about windmills. https://e360.yale.edu/digest/air-pollution-from-fossil-fuels-costs-8-billion-per-day-new-research-finds https://www.reuters.com/article/us-carbontrading-turnover-idUSKBN1ZN1RN

  4. We elect bourgeois to govern. Is it any wonder that bourgeois won’t outlaw greenhouse gas production? The Great Collapse is upon us now and still 99% of the people believe that establishing common ownership and democratic control over the wealth they produce is unrealistic, against human nature and so on to all the justifications for maintaining class rule. We’re acquiescing to our own demise rather than changing the way we produce and distribute the collective product of labour. Wage-slavery is freedom! On with the show, good health to you. The Earth is a commodity for sale to the highest bidder.

  5. From: Crushing Climate Impacts to Hit Sooner Than Feared: Draft UN Report …

    But global warming impacts are also amplified by all the other ways that humanity has shattered Earth’s equilibrium.

    These include “losses of habitat and resilience, over-exploitation, water extraction, pollution, invasive non-native species and dispersal of pests and diseases,” the report says.

    There is no easy solution to such a tangle of problems, said Nicholas Stern, former chief economist at the World Bank and author of the landmark Stern Review on the Economics of Climate Change.

    “The world is confronting a complex set of interwoven challenges,” said Stern, who did not contribute to the IPCC report.

    “Unless you tackle them together, you are not going to do very well on any of them.”

    ‘Transformational Change’

    There is very little good news in the report, but the IPCC stresses that much can be done to avoid worst-case scenarios and prepare for impacts that can no longer be averted, the final takeaway.

    Conservation and restoration of so-called blue carbon ecosystems — kelp and mangrove forests, for example — enhance carbon stocks and protect against storm surges, as well as providing wildlife habitats, coastal livelihoods and food security.

    Transitioning to more plant-based diets could also reduce food-related emissions as much as 70 percent by 2050.

    But simply swapping a gas guzzler for a Tesla or planting billions of trees to offset business-as-usual isn’t going to cut it, the report warns.

    “We need transformational change operating on processes and behaviours at all levels: individual, communities, business, institutions and governments,” it says.

    “We must redefine our way of life and consumption.”

    ________________________________

  6. Hello, Michael! In one of your early publications, you wrote that the mass of profits falls before the crisis, that this is an indicator of the future general economic downturn, and you linked this to the over-accumulation of capital. Could you tell us more about this? Because Marx showed that the mass of profit does not change during over-accumulation, he gave an example where the capital used to be 1,000, and the profit was 100, then he showed that the over-accumulation of capital occurred when the capital became 1,500, and the mass of profit did not change at all. Thus, it showed only a fall in the rate of profit, and not the mass of profit in general, since it was both 100 and remained (III. Excess Capital And Excess Population, The Volume Of Capital 3).

  7. Well the framing of the question answers itself. Socialist revolution will not be able to abolish wage labour and commodified wealth production by edict, on pain of collapse of the forces of production inherited from capitalism, in turn causing the collapse of any worker’s state. That transformation can only be effected over a period of planned transition. This defines the essence of “socialism” as a transition to classless society. I interpret dhlazare as simply saying that we will need to deal with climate change during that transition, and carbon pricing under workers’ control – the socialist state – is relevant to the extent that productive forces inherited from capitalism – one source of the carbon footprint and the sole source of fossil fuels – are still marked by the commodity form as they will be.

  8. The actual CO2 price in Europe expressed in €s incl. the UK – the author insinuates that the UK is not connected to Europe and is using US $ – is here:

    https://www.eex.com/en/market-data/environmental-markets/derivatives-market

    As far I understood Lagarde called for an import CO2-tax/price for goods and sevices, the author didn’t elaborate on this issue.Hence the low starting point, a full blast of actual EU CO2 prices would be called war fare and would inflict litigation processes en masse.
    Lagarde is a sock puppet, please name the mafiosis.

    But the quinessence is right, money can’t buy freedom.Jannice did know.

    € 200.-/ t CO2 will reduce the emission by ca. 40% provided it is charged all over all emmissions and no exemptions like military emissions as recent studies from Germany found out. The situation there is different from the global impact of a CO2 tax on the social systems.
    Most countries like China and the USA have practically no CO2 tax and no social system to cover the impact.

    Imagine the military has to pay upfront 40% of the war costs …. 🙂

    Peace to all of you.

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