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November 29, 2018

Observations on Volume 2 of the Fourth National Climate Assessment

Over the Thanksgiving weekend the Trump administration released Volume 2 of the Fourth National Climate Assessment, eliciting the usual array of apocalyptic predictions from the media about the fate of mankind should we fail to impose sharp limits on the emissions of greenhouse gases (GHG). Herewith, a few observations on this report. The report assumes one particular scenario for…

November 9, 2018

Environmental Policy: Benjamin Zycher Responds to His Critics

I thank Jonathan H. Adler, Patrick Allitt, and William Dennis for their thoughtful and informative commentaries on my Liberty Forum essay on reforming U.S. environmental policy, in particular with respect to the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and the Chevron doctrine of judicial deference to executive agency statutory interpretations in the face of legal ambiguities. I learned much from their observations, to each…

October 29, 2018

Washington State Initiative 1631: A Carbon Tax and Wealth Redistribution to Favored Interests

The Washington State electorate on November 6 will vote on Initiative 1631, a “pollution” tax on greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, the stated goal of which is an annual GHG emissions reduction reaching 25 million tons by 2035 and 50 million tons by 2050. Nowhere in the initiative is there any requirement actually to meet these goals —…

October 22, 2018

Hearken Sinners: The End Is Near

Dog bites man. Baby cries. Water flows downhill. And the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) says climate catastrophe is imminent. The new “Summary for Policymakers” of Global Warming of 1.5°Celsius, a “special report” from the IPCC, makes the following central arguments: It is difficult to see how anyone attempting to maintain an objective…

October 4, 2018

Washington Post Climate Reporters Beclown Themselves

They have translated the climate policy equivalent of the Dead Sea Scrolls. They have uncovered the smoking gun of smoking guns. They have provided final and convincing proof that the Trump administration — the bête noire of the Paris climate agreement, the facilitators of planetary destruction, the knuckle-dragging deniers of “science,” the heroes of polluters, belching cattle, and…

October 1, 2018

Reforming U.S. Environmental Policy

Environmental protection can be an important government function, in particular because private incentives, as reflected in market prices, often do not capture the full social value of environmental quality, or perhaps more precisely, changes in that quality. In the standard analytic framework, private actors cannot capture the value of environmental improvements, or do not bear…

July 23, 2018

The Curbelo Carbon Tax as Wealth Redistribution

Environmental policy as a tool of wealth redistribution is nothing new. The latest example is a proposal for a greenhouse-gas (GHG) tax just introduced by Representative Carlos Curbelo (R., Fla.). Curbelo’s tax would start at $24 per metric ton of GHG emissions, growing 2 percent per year above inflation and an additional $2 per ton…

July 17, 2018

State Attorneys General and the Climate Litigation Game

The central broad objective of the U.S. constitution is the protection of unpopular individuals and political groups from the whims and passions of the political majority of the moment. It is curious therefore that the election of prosecutors, in particular that of state Attorneys General, seemingly is accepted as a norm by many despite the…

May 18, 2018

The Fuel Economy Standards in Beltway Conventional Wisdom

I betray no secret when I report that reverence for the silliness embodied in conventional wisdom is a central characteristic of policy debates in the Beltway. No amount of evidence, no amount of logic, and no amount of proof showing that the earth indeed is round are sufficient to diminish the credibility of arguments that…

May 8, 2018

No-cost Climate Litigation and the Law of Unintended Consequences

Editor’s Note: This post represents AEI Resident Scholar Benjamin Zycher’s original content and does not include edits found on the publishing site, The Hill. To access that version of the text, click here. Several municipalities are suing the major oil companies for causing climate change and for the large asserted costs of preventing and mitigating its…