Today is Wednesday, June 20, and a new group thinks it has the magic formula for a carbon tax.
Americans for Carbon Dividends, a newly formed group with some old-school Republican leaders, is set to begin peddling a carbon tax in Congress. Yes, most of the carbon taxes you’ve heard about from us ended up in tax heaven. But this effort could be different. Here’s why:
The proposal brings together two elements. There’s a rising fee on carbon, which starts at $40 a ton and increases over time, and there’s also a dividend policy that returns that money to Americans in the form of a check. Supporters hope the dividend part of their plan will win over the public. If their tax manages to pass through Congress, gas prices and electric bills might go up, but an average family of four would get about $2,000 back from the government in the first year. The amount would rise along with the fee.
The fact that the group includes a prominent Republican like Trent Lott, a former Senator from Mississippi, doesn’t hurt its odds. But some of its most important supporters are oil companies. Exxon Mobil and Shell support the initiative, and if you’re thinking that’s a red flag, you’re probably right!
Under the proposal, the environmental regulations in the Clean Power Plan (or what’s left of them after Trump and Pruitt have their way) would get rolled back, and fossil fuel companies would get a reprieve from the climate change lawsuits that have been hounding them for the past few years. But Americans for Carbon Dividends claims the plan would be even more effective at reducing emissions than all of Obama’s regulations.
It’s not just oil companies supporting this version of a carbon tax. Exelon, a major nuclear energy company, teamed up with two renewable groups, First Solar Inc. and the American Wind Association, to help raise support for Americans for Carbon Dividends.
The group knows a carbon tax has a snowball’s chance in hell of making it through today’s highly partisan Congress, so they plan to keep drumming up support until a more amenable Congress comes along.
The Smog
Need-to-know basis
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Reality TV
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