Derec
Contributor
About a week ago, Obama reached a very lopsided deal on climate with China.
White House and China set historic greenhouse emissions levels
A good deal would have demanded China take real steps now to reduce their emissions, which are after all highest emissions in the world. If China could not be brought aboard such deal a climate duty on Chinese imports could be imposed whose price is proportional to estimated carbon emissions of the manufacture and transport of the item. That would hurt Chinese exports and would be a good incentive for them to agree to a deal that is not just window dressing.
At the same time, House passed a sort-of bipartisan bipartisan (31 Dems voted aye) Keystone XL bill yet again. Senate is due to vote on it soon but Democrats are set to fillibuster so although there is a solid majority in the Senate that support the passage the prospects are uncertain. In any case, unfortunately Obama indicated he would veto the bill using Tom Steyer talking points. Why do same people who decry the influence of the Koch brothers in politics welcome Steyer's influence?
Of course the Keystone pipeline should have been approved years ago. And if it had been, some of the red state Democrats like Pryor or Begich could have been saved. The uncertain new Senate vote on Keystone XL is ostensibly being done to try to save Mary Landrieu in her upcoming runoff. Of course, had she not been dissed by Harry Reid she would have been in a much better position and may have avoided the runoff in the first place!
Contrary to propaganda, Keystone XL is actually going to lower carbon emissions because the alternative is not sunshine and butterflies but rather moving the stuff by rail which is more energy intensive. The fact is that there isn't enough easy to drill light sweet oil to cover global demand. An increasing fraction of the oil we will use in the coming few decades will be low-grade, tight, and/or difficult to get. Rejecting oil sands because it is dirty would lead one to have to reject heavy Venezuelan oil, deepwater oil and Arctic oil as well. Then how much is left?
White House and China set historic greenhouse emissions levels
In other words, US has to reduce our emissions by quite a bit within 11 years but China is allowed to increase theirs for 16 more years and faces no real reduction targets even after that. It certainly does not seem like a very good deal for the US as it largely lets China off the hook - again.Under the deal, the United States would cut its carbon emissions between 26-28% -- from levels established in 2005 -- by 2025. China would peak its carbon emissions no later than 2030 and would also increase the use of non-fossil fuels to 20% by 2030.
A good deal would have demanded China take real steps now to reduce their emissions, which are after all highest emissions in the world. If China could not be brought aboard such deal a climate duty on Chinese imports could be imposed whose price is proportional to estimated carbon emissions of the manufacture and transport of the item. That would hurt Chinese exports and would be a good incentive for them to agree to a deal that is not just window dressing.
At the same time, House passed a sort-of bipartisan bipartisan (31 Dems voted aye) Keystone XL bill yet again. Senate is due to vote on it soon but Democrats are set to fillibuster so although there is a solid majority in the Senate that support the passage the prospects are uncertain. In any case, unfortunately Obama indicated he would veto the bill using Tom Steyer talking points. Why do same people who decry the influence of the Koch brothers in politics welcome Steyer's influence?
Of course the Keystone pipeline should have been approved years ago. And if it had been, some of the red state Democrats like Pryor or Begich could have been saved. The uncertain new Senate vote on Keystone XL is ostensibly being done to try to save Mary Landrieu in her upcoming runoff. Of course, had she not been dissed by Harry Reid she would have been in a much better position and may have avoided the runoff in the first place!
Contrary to propaganda, Keystone XL is actually going to lower carbon emissions because the alternative is not sunshine and butterflies but rather moving the stuff by rail which is more energy intensive. The fact is that there isn't enough easy to drill light sweet oil to cover global demand. An increasing fraction of the oil we will use in the coming few decades will be low-grade, tight, and/or difficult to get. Rejecting oil sands because it is dirty would lead one to have to reject heavy Venezuelan oil, deepwater oil and Arctic oil as well. Then how much is left?
