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Fixing China's Greenhouse Gas Emissions For Them

mdsolar writes: 'Paul Krugman, who won a Nobel Prize for understanding world trade, has proposed carbon tariffs as a way to get China to cut greenhouse gas emissions. He wrote, "China is enormously dependent on access to advanced-country markets — a lot of the coal it burns can be attributed, directly or indirectly, to its export business — and it knows that it would put this access at risk if it refused to play any role in protecting the planet. More specifically, if and when wealthy countries take serious action to limit greenhouse gas emissions, they're very likely to start imposing "carbon tariffs" on goods imported from countries that aren't taking similar action. Such tariffs should be legal under existing trade rules — the World Trade Organization would probably declare that carbon limits are effectively a tax on consumers, which can be levied on imports as well as domestic production. Furthermore, trade rules give special consideration to environmental protection. So China would find itself with strong incentives to start limiting emissions." As I read it, Article XX of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade does indeed allow us to unilaterally impose tariffs on China.' mdsolar continues, "I'd suggest that there should be a ramped approach. First, we should acknowledge that dangerous climate change has come early and we are already suffering damages. The growth in Federal crop and flood insurance payouts is owing to the effects of climate change. Instead of increasing premiums, we should use climate damage tariffs to cover this increase. That amounts to a pretty small tariff, but it firmly establishes the liability connection. Non-Annex I countries (as listed in the Kyoto Protocol) are becoming the main contributors to cumulative emissions just as climate change has turned dangerous, that makes their emissions the cause of dangerous climate change. An accident of timing? Yes. But deliberately increasing emissions, as China is doing, eliminates safe harbor as well.

This small tariff could be used as a stepping stone to larger tariffs imposed cooperatively with other Annex I countries if China does not turn around. The larger tariffs could be used to assist with adaptation costs in countries with low per capita emissions where vulnerability to dangerous climate change is high. Lack of a clear funding mechanism for this sort of thing has been a sticking point at climate negotiations. This would essentially get funds from those who are causing the damage."

322 comments

  1. Yes, good idea. by Animats · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That's a good idea. China needs an economic incentive to clean up their air pollution problem. They can certainly do it. It took less than 20 years after the US Clean Air Act to get air pollution under control.

    1. Re:Yes, good idea. by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 3, Insightful

      China needs an economic incentive to clean up their air pollution problem.

      I've read the other day that skilled (== in high demand) foreign workers have already started refusing to move into Chinese cities, citing health reasons. They want extra money for health insurance/risk compensation. I'd call that an incentive.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    2. Re:Yes, good idea. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      USA and Europe cleaned up their mess by transferring the production to factories that polluted even more, but this time in China. The companies used "agents" and well connected locals to handle the corruption needed to pollute effectively. The local Chinese citizen loved it as long as they got a small part of the money. They did not see the problems at that time.

    3. Re:Yes, good idea. by AmiMoJo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The EU has been doing this for a long time. RoHS stopped them putting hazardous substances in products just to keep costs down. We already have a scheme for carbon trading that takes into account companies that do their manufacturing in China, although it could go a lot further.

      Nice to see the US finally waking up to this.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    4. Re:Yes, good idea. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It took less than 20 years after the US Clean Air Act to get air pollution under control.

      The average American still contributes much more to climate change than the average Chinese. You are still the prime offenders, together with a few other terrorist nations like Canada or Australia. Sure, you are keeping your local air pollution under control, because you care about yourselves, but greenhouse gas emissions are still going strong, at the expense of everybody else on the planet.

    5. Re:Yes, good idea. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      China may have an air pollution problem, but CO2 is not pollution.

      You are taxing the wrong thing if you think carbon dioxide is damaging the environment. There are much worse things which should be addressed first.

    6. Re:Yes, good idea. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the early 00's expats in Beijing would get

      • an extra two weeks holiday
      • payment of all expenses for that holiday to a location of their choice in east asia
      • pay about 30% higher than other locations

      Nothing changed. In fact things have got worse. Basically the rich and powerful find ways not to suffer from the discomfort and the poor and week can do nothing to fix it. This is the reason that non-democratic countries inevitably fail.

    7. Re:Yes, good idea. by gtall · · Score: 2

      While I'm sympathetic to the carbon tax idea, the U.S. Clean Air Act wasn't aimed at carbon pollution. The pollution it did aim at was much easier to control.

    8. Re:Yes, good idea. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The blanket claim that "CO2 is not pollution" is not true: just try breathing 100% pure CO2 for a while. At lower concentrations the thermal aspects hold at an atmospheric level, so the only argument that's reasonable is one of degree, not kind. Perhaps the amounts in question don't bother you, perhaps, but they do bother others and we have to work out a way to proceed.

    9. Re:Yes, good idea. by GNious · · Score: 1

      I was contemplating a job-opening in Shanghai, briefly, but decided against it specifically due to health-concerns in relation to the general air-quality.

      Observation: I currenlt live in a European city, with yearly smog-warnings.

    10. Re:Yes, good idea. by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Well, then I guess salt is poison.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    11. Re:Yes, good idea. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a good idea. China needs an economic incentive to clean up their air pollution problem. They can certainly do it. It took less than 20 years after the US Clean Air Act to get air pollution under control.

      Lol, the US did it by sending all it's most hazardous industries overseas... China can clanup also, Africa needs some development.

      The trick is we need to stop designed obsolescence, and buying things we don't need; Oh and most important reduce our number(humans).

    12. Re:Yes, good idea. by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 2

      "Discomfort"? I've had two family members die on me in an asthma attack. I have the occasional breathing problems myself. Yet by your logic, I'm just too pampered if I'm avoiding places with problematic air quality, right? GFY.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    13. Re:Yes, good idea. by Opportunist · · Score: 2

      They outsourced pollution along with jobs.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    14. Re:Yes, good idea. by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      CO2 certainly is a problematic gas, but considering just what China is pumping into the air, I really, really WISH that all they pumped out was CO2.

      It would still be poison, but on a way lower level.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    15. Re:Yes, good idea. by jc42 · · Score: 2

      That's a good idea. China needs an economic incentive to clean up their air pollution problem. They can certainly do it. It took less than 20 years after the US Clean Air Act to get air pollution under control.

      Doing this with tariffs might be more difficult than US, EU and UN administrators might think. The Chinese management system (government + industry) has a documented history of faked economic reports. This is due in part to the general practice of promoting/demoting managers based on the production figures from their own areas of control, with little or no independent auditing of the data. The fishing example was documented by outside researchers about 15 years ago, but as the (rather well done "neutral" phrasing of the) wikipedia article hints, the catch figures still show numbers that are discounted as "probably mostly fictional" by the FAO and various other international organizations and researchers.

      It can be rather difficult for outsiders to collect verifiable data on economically or politically important subjects within China. The same problem will arise with the proposed tariffs. They will presumably be based on available data on emissions, which will mostly come from within China, and will be produced by people whose jobs and pay levels rely on their organizations producing the "right" data. There will be little or no truly independent auditing of the data; auditors will also be similarly rewarded or punished based on the acceptability of their reports to the higher-ups. As with the fishing industry, the pollution-emission data could show decreasing levels while the actual numbers are increasing, and this could continue for decades.

      Collecting data on the pollution from outside will be attempted, of course, but China is a big chunk of territory, and there are practical limits to the accuracy of data data collection from outside that territory. Most of the monitoring will have to be done from orbit, and while that's improving, there are still many ways that interested parties can confuse the issue. Just read the ongoing political debates over climate change/warming to get a feel for how easy it is for interested parties to confuse and mislead our political and industrial leaders.

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    16. Re:Yes, good idea. by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The USA only want to put an carbon tax/tariff on foreign products.
      They will look pretty dumb when the 'foreigners' put the same tariffs on US products.
      AFAIK the USA are just a very small bit behind China in CO2 output. That means per inhabitant and also per 'product produced' the USA produce far far far more CO2 than China.
      When we have world wide CO2 based tariffs, the USA will be the first country going 'bankrupt'.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    17. Re:Yes, good idea. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're all a bunch of idiots. Why don't you stick to programming. When everything you buy from China (which is just about everything you buy) goes up in price because of what you've done, you'll bitch, act surprised, and feel powerless.

      Fools.

    18. Re:Yes, good idea. by I'm+New+Around+Here · · Score: 1

      Try breathing 100% oxygen for a while. It too can be deadly.

      --
      If you think I voted for Trump because of this post, you're wrong. I voted for Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party. Again.
    19. Re:Yes, good idea. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess Mr. Plant will have to prove you wrong, sir!

    20. Re:Yes, good idea. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      china going solar/nuclear program...

    21. Re:Yes, good idea. by stenvar · · Score: 1, Informative

      Actually, the US is twice as efficient at GDP/ton of GHG, about the same as Canada, Australia, and Finland.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L...

    22. Re:Yes, good idea. by stenvar · · Score: 0

      The blanket claim that "CO2 is not pollution" is not true: just try breathing 100% pure CO2 for a while

      Pure nitrogen will also kill you, and pure oxygen will hurt your lungs and eventually kill you. By your argument, air is a pollutant. On the other hand, lowering levels of CO2 in the atmosphere further and further would kill us too, since that's where almost all food comes from.

      At lower concentrations the thermal aspects hold at an atmospheric level,

      Arguably, we currently have a CO2 deficit, since the large glacial cover we have right now is quite unusual.

      Perhaps the amounts in question don't bother you, perhaps, but they do bother others and we have to work out a way to proceed.

      We can simply ignore those "others", many of whom use the pretext of concern about climate change to achieve political and economic objectives.

    23. Re:Yes, good idea. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, the US is twice as efficient at GDP/ton of GHG

      I don't care damn how much GDP you're making out of polluting me. It's unbelievable that you're using that as an excuse for not paying your dues.

    24. Re:Yes, good idea. by hackus · · Score: 1

      BS.

      Monetary exclusions of any kind will not clean up the environment.

      What will clean up the environment is to decentralize power production, and authority.

      That will do it quite nicely then we can see some decent tech emerge in the free markets to deal with battery technology, homes producing their own power for example.

      Until that happens, the only reason why you would want money for cleaning up the environment is because you plan on using it to fulfill a lifestyle that probably destroys the environment.

      Maybe jet around the world, own like several mansions...and have a fetish for 3 headed dogs from hell.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C...

      PS: Now who would that be I wonder...give you a hint "I invented the internet."

      --
      Got Geometrodynamics? Awe, too hard to figure out? Too bad.
    25. Re:Yes, good idea. by Blaskowicz · · Score: 1

      wtf? Yes, ignore all those people concerned with things such as food security and ocean life collapse. On the other hand I should listen to your opinion on what ice cover should be "usual".
      Let me guess, you live in a certain 1st world country and have a very high annual income, $50K or more. If the worst happen, you'll just buy a different product at Walmart et al. or tweak your thermostat, so who cares. And you can even afford to move to a different place. Good for you. Now keep on making stuff up to help you rationalize and feel comfortable but don't pretend you know anything. More bluntly, enough with that notion that global warming is a conspiracy. I'm tired of that shit, it's ridiculous. It's thanks to people like you repeating lies and "conspiracy" propaganda that the Nazis got in power.

    26. Re:Yes, good idea. by symbolset · · Score: 3, Informative

      US annual CO2 per capita is three times China. Considering how much of our manufacturing they do, we can probably assign responsibility for some of their carbon output to US end users also. Tariff them? They should tariff us!

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
    27. Re:Yes, good idea. by dryeo · · Score: 1

      Try surviving on salt water.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    28. Re:Yes, good idea. by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Try surviving without salt

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    29. Re:Yes, good idea. by Stellian · · Score: 2

      Actually, the US is twice as efficient at GDP/ton of GHG, about the same as Canada, Australia, and Finland.

      That's because a whole lot of that 15 trillion GDP is produced on Wall Street, Redmond and Hollywood - non tangible goods. As the GP said, per inhabitant USA produce far far more CO2 than China, and a CO2 tax would absolutely cripple US manufacturing and exports.

    30. Re:Yes, good idea. by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      US CO2 output per capita is not three but ten times that of China ...

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    31. Re:Yes, good idea. by dryeo · · Score: 1

      There's lots of things that we need some of and will kill us in excess. Look at fertilizer, plants need shit but it doesn't mean we want to live in shit and we've learned it is much healthier to keep the shit around us to an absolute minimum. Took a lot of sick people and there was always people screaming that shit is good, it is too expensive to keep under control and it has always been that way. Now no one denies that it is bad to live in shit.
      It's the same with CO2, we need some to trigger our breathing reflex, plants need some for photosynthesis, and too much will kill. We can argue about how much is too much and what the affects will be and the economics of dealing with it but to stick your head in the sand and claim that there is no affect is stupid.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    32. Re:Yes, good idea. by symbolset · · Score: 2

      No, they have been swinging way up in the last few years. The US is still 10 times India though.

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
    33. Re:Yes, good idea. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It took less than 20 years after the US Clean Air Act to get air pollution under control.

      The average American still contributes much more to climate change than the average Chinese. You are still the prime offenders, together with a few other terrorist nations like Canada or Australia. Sure, you are keeping your local air pollution under control, because you care about yourselves, but greenhouse gas emissions are still going strong, at the expense of everybody else on the planet.

      You're an idiot.

    34. Re:Yes, good idea. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I went to Beijing for the first time last year (April). 50% of the days I could barely see several hundred feet in front of me. You could taste the air.

      I was pretty excited about the weekend because I was going to see the Great Wall that was 50 miles away. The air was polluted the entire way. Finally after flying out I saw how the smog covered the land until we reached the ocean.

      Then several months later I had a repeat trip with pretty much the same result.

      The people are great and so is the food and culture but you couldn't pay me enough to live there.

    35. Re:Yes, good idea. by stenvar · · Score: 1

      That's because a whole lot of that 15 trillion GDP is produced on Wall Street, Redmond and Hollywood - non tangible goods.

      Yes, and your point is?

    36. Re:Yes, good idea. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wtf? Yes, ignore all those people concerned with things such as food security and ocean life collapse.

      Yes, you should ignore them until they actually have something other than FUD.

      More bluntly, enough with that notion that global warming is a conspiracy. I'm tired of that shit,

      I don't think global warming is a conspiracy at all, I think it's just irrelevant and FUD. No conspiracy required, just mass hysteria and stupidity.

      It's thanks to people like you repeating lies and "conspiracy" propaganda that the Nazis got in power.

      The liar here is you, putting words in my mouth. And your analogy to the Nazis is quite apt: like you, they pushed for massive changes to the economy based on fictitious, supposedly scientifically documented threats to society, the food supply, etc.

    37. Re:Yes, good idea. by mdsolar · · Score: 2

      The Clean Air Act is controlling carbon emission now. It is the legal basis for increased CAFE standards. Also for new source regulations are just about to go into effect. That is why Kansas is rushing to get in under the wire. http://thinkprogress.org/clima... And proposed regulations on existing sources came out last Monday which are based on the Clean Air Act.

    38. Re:Yes, good idea. by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      China has agree to Article XX of GATT, so retaliation is not allowed.

    39. Re:Yes, good idea. by MouseTheLuckyDog · · Score: 1

      Just try breathing 100% pure water.

    40. Re:Yes, good idea. by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      My proposal is to scale tariffs to damage and particularly damage that shows up on federal books. The President mention wildfire fighting recently. Flood insurance premiums should not be rising, nor should crop insurance premiums. Get the extra costs covered by the tariff. That makes the tariff small and hopefully the nudge China (which needs to save face) will need to turn things around in the next five years. We'll see the turn around in falling coal and oil imports to China.

    41. Re:Yes, good idea. by AgNO3 · · Score: 1

      and where did you get these per capita numbers? The US isn't even in the top 10. Why don't you go rail on Luxembourg who is 9 on the list of per capital CO2 emissions. China is like way down in the 50's and the US is 12th. Australia is above the US as is the falkland islands. Its pretty stupid to talk about total emissions and compare 300,000,000 people with say the UK at 75,000,000. In fact Canada is only about 2% behind the US in per capita emissions.

      --
      OMG Ponies!!! with Glitter!!!! I miss Pink :-(
    42. Re:Yes, good idea. by AgNO3 · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure thats not how the Nazis came to power. Pretty sure it was massive debt and and super inflation.

      --
      OMG Ponies!!! with Glitter!!!! I miss Pink :-(
    43. Re:Yes, good idea. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And that is a bullshit statistic when China's population is 1.35 Billion and the USA is 314 million. Funny how statistics are used to tell whatever story you want. Espicially when you are not required to provide all the numbers.

    44. Re:Yes, good idea. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jesus, Richard, you're so predictable

    45. Re:Yes, good idea. by volmtech · · Score: 1

      Let's have a trade war. The US has an almost one half trillion dollar trade deficit. We buy less foreign manufactured goods, more Americans get jobs making them here, subject to our stringent air and water pollution standards. Most of our exports are not to countries we import from and what they do buy is low labor content raw materials. So the world's economy slows, that means less carbon dioxide is produced. Sounds like a winner either way.

    46. Re:Yes, good idea. by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      The Nazis came to power on spectacle, violence, anti-Semitism, and backroom politics. The hyperinflation was over before they got real power, although the longer-term effects caused hardship that they exploited.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    47. Re:Yes, good idea. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      your a genius -we got a Handle on our air pollution by exporting the manufacturing to China

    48. Re:Yes, good idea. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why doesn't Europe "pay its dues" first? Europe is still primarily responsible for the elevated carbon levels in our atmosphere. But, of course, like all the other crap Europe has foisted upon the world, they'd rather blame someone else than take responsibility.

    49. Re:Yes, good idea. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      China makes things, the US pushes bits of paper around and calls it an industry.

  2. Better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    How about we all stop buying cheap Chinese shit if we care so much?

    1. Re:Better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      People don't give a shit. Some things can NOT be solved voluntarily, because most individuals are morons who can't be arsed.
      Yes, I'm an elitist asshole and a "statist". I'm also right.

    2. Re:Better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "How about we all stop buying cheap Chinese shit if we care so much?"

      What? Then we'd have to actually _wash_ out T-shirts that we buy in bulk for 1.99, instead of throwing them away, which means we would have to buy a Chinese washing machine.

    3. Re:Better idea by tomhath · · Score: 2

      That's the goal of this proposal - turn that cheap shit into expensive shit. Then it will be okay to buy it.

    4. Re:Better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This solution doesn't work for the same reason you can't became a billionaire by convincing all chinese to give you one dollar.

    5. Re:Better idea by Opportunist · · Score: 2

      I wish I could. ,Where is that domestic produced TV, washer, fridge, computer monitor...

      It's just like George Carlin said in one of his shows when he came in flying a Chinese Flag: "I do this for patriotic reasons. It was the only flag I could find that was Made in the U.S.A."

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    6. Re:Better idea by dk20 · · Score: 1

      Not an american, but this is among the things i find more troubling. Many tend to be very patriotic and proudly wave the flag everywhere. Said flag bearing item is almost always "made in China".
      Open challenge to anyone living in the US, can you find something with the flag on it and was actually made in the USA (not "finally assembly in the US" or "printed in the US").
      Why on earth would you patriotically wear something "Made in China"?

    7. Re:Better idea by fustakrakich · · Score: 2

      ...most individuals are morons...

      How is the state any better if it's made up of individuals?

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    8. Re:Better idea by wiggles · · Score: 1

      Easier said than done.

      I rarely agree with Krugman, but he's right in this case - in order to effect change here, we need an economic solution - we need to make it so that it's in their best interest to reduce emissions. Voluntary boycotts of Chinese goods would be ineffective at best. We'd have to make goods from non-polluting sources have price parity with goods from polluting countries.

    9. Re:Better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As of a few months ago, the Pentagon is required to buy all flags that are made completely (including material) in the USA.

      http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-nation/wp/2014/02/21/the-pentagon-can-now-only-buy-american-flags-made-in-the-u-s/

      There are a few US companies that make flags.

  3. The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences by mdsolar · · Score: 2

    The prize is in honor of Nobel since Nobel did not institute a prize in economics. It was awarded in 2008 for Integrating the previously disparate research fields into a new, international trade and economic geography. http://www.nobelprize.org/nobe...

  4. Paul Krugman by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    "Paul Krugman, who won a Nobel Prize for understanding world trade"

    Like, whoa dude.

    1. Re:Paul Krugman by JDAustin · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      That's former Enron advisor Paul Krugman....

    2. Re:Paul Krugman by fche · · Score: 2

      There are few problems for which the former enron adviser's solution is not more government or more taxes.

    3. Re:Paul Krugman by Opportunist · · Score: 2

      So ... Obama got it for understanding World Peace?

      Just wanting to know...

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    4. Re:Paul Krugman by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obama got it for understanding World Peace?

      No. He got it for reading a speech about World Peace off a teleprompter.

    5. Re:Paul Krugman by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wish you didn't post A.C. for this, it is a very true statement. (posting A.C. due to spending mod points on this story)

  5. Who is being taxed, exactly? by mpoulton · · Score: 1

    Soooooo.... we tax ourselves to make China change? Because that's what's being proposed. Tariffs are passed straight through to the buyers of the products. We we're raising prices on imported goods, to change the behavior of the manufacturers, who will still take in the same revenue. As long as domestic manufacturing remains more expensive than the imports plus tariffs, we will still be buying the imported goods, just paying more for them and funneling the extra money back to the federal government.

    --
    I am a geek attorney, but not your geek attorney unless you've already retained me. This is not legal advice.
    1. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by mdsolar · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Correct. But industry in the US would pick up, leading to more domestic prosperity. Without the tariff, China gets to lower costs of production and compete unfairly, reducing US GDP. Note also that we are paying this in increased flood and crop insurance premiums. The latter directly cuts into the competitiveness of our agricultural exports. Better to pay with external tariffs than internal premiums.

    2. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, it will make goods made in Korea, Japan, Thailand more competitive. ALSO, it will encourage Apple, IBM, Dell, HP etc etc to consider what is happening as it will increase to the cost of their goods, so they will be putting pressure on the Chinese government too.

      On the other side, if nothing is done you will pay more for insurances, more for food and everything else in your life.

      Climate change does not stop for people who don't believe in it, the insurance companies believe its going to impact them so they are already increasing insurances to cover the expected costs. This will be passed onto consumers wether they believe or not.

    3. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by cowwoc2001 · · Score: 2

      I actually think that's a good thing.

      The "disposable economy" will currently live in causes a lot of domestic waste, not to mention the havoc it wrecks on domestic employment.

      Yes, we'll buy less widgets. But in return employment rates will rise, and we'll shift to higher-quality merchandise.

      It's one thing to buy a poor-quality product when the competition is twice the price. It's another thing when the price difference is only 25%.

    4. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      depends... it could effectively allow more domestic production.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    5. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by aliquis · · Score: 1

      Boho.

      Polluters get to pay for their pollution?!
      (Purchasers of goods and services which require pollution of the planet.)

      HOW UNFAIR!

    6. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by Misagon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You could also see it this way:
      You would be taxing away the competitive advantage that companies in a polluting country would have against companies in those who restricts its carbon emissions.

      In the short term, it would promote domestic business. In the long term, the polluting country is supposed to lower its emissions and get back in the game, and then both foreign and domestic companies should be able to compete on the same terms - creating more competition and again lower prices.

      --
      "We mustn't be caught by surprise by our own advancing technology" -- Aldous Huxley
    7. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by sumdumass · · Score: 0

      So let me get this straight, you are saying that if we do nothing about climate change, costs are going to increase some unknown amount naturally so we need to artificially increase costs with a known amount to combat it? Do I have that correct?

      How about instead of playing five knuckle shuffle while attempting to funnel more money into the government coffers we instead look at ways to sequester the carbon emissions and perhaps replace them with naturally economically viable solutions?

      The entire idea behind cap and trade is to restrict usage and it hits the poor the worse. I mean seriously, all the regulations and mandated emissions crap (which is mostly a good idea BTW) on cars has increased the cost of purchasing a new one by about 1/3 from between 1967 and 2001. Who can afford new cars more easily? The rich and well off people. Who buys used cars that they are tired of driving? The poor. The same will be had with cheap imports that the poor rely on. This is a real problem because the amount of poor people seem to be increasing. But it is nothing new, take the tobacco taxes. They determined tobacco was addictive and bad for you so they tax it to fund things because you won't quit and they know there will be a source of revenue. Except you should pay because smoking is bad M'Kay. And most of the smokers are poor.

      So lets stop trying to Rube Goldberg money to the government and actually find ways to make clean energy naturally competitive and sequester emissions instead of saying fuck the poor, we are doing this for your own good because the government wants more money.

    8. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, we would be taxing ourselves, but we would be taxing bad behavior, namely that of buying things which have been manufactured in an environment-unfriendly way. We already "tax" this behavior with regard to things made here, by enforcing domestic environmental protection laws and thereby increasing the cost of domestic products.

      The problem with the concept is that it wouldn't really give a competitive advantage to foreign manufacturers who for example generate their own electricity with solar panels. Their products would still be taxed for the environmental damage caused by their competitors in the same country. This acts as a strong disincentive for individual manufacturers to make improvements. Any effect could only come from making foreign countries enact environmental protection laws similar to ours. And like that, such tariffs would never fly.

    9. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Manufacturers will still take the same revenue per unit sold, but they would sell fewer units with higher prices. Now, if the tariff is sufficiently high, it will make it more cost effective for the manufacturers to start using different manufacturing techniques that allow them to dodge or at least significantly reduce the tariff, bringing the price down compared to doing nothing.

    10. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      LOL, "unfairly"? China's per capita emissions are lower than Europe and the US, what alternative reality do you Americans live in? You Americans are so out of touch reality we wonder what's going to happen to you guys when your own shit finally hits your own fan.

      Forget about lower prices, once the dollar collapses and the US loses the ability to print money like psycho and make the rest of the world suffer for it, the price of oil will double overnight in the US, which instantly makes everything else more expensive.

    11. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by james_gnz · · Score: 1

      How about instead of playing five knuckle shuffle while attempting to funnel more money into the government coffers we instead look at ways to sequester the carbon emissions and perhaps replace them with naturally economically viable solutions?

      Governments could put more money into research, but it would still have to come from somewhere (not that I'm saying this is necessarily a bad idea, but I think it's a false dichotomy).

      The entire idea behind cap and trade is to restrict usage and it hits the poor the worse.

      Yes, but everything hits the poor worse. If food prices rise as a result of increasing crop failures, this would hit the poor worse too.

    12. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by mvdwege · · Score: 2

      Tariffs are passed straight through to the buyers of the products.

      No. If importers could pass on the cost of the tariffs with impunity, then they could have sold at higher prices already and pocketed the difference as profit. Since they do not do so now, there is a strong indication that their competitive position means they can't.

      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
    13. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It's even more ridiculous when you consider China would have signed Kyoto if it wasn't for the US refusing to sign it. Now that China has shown itself a formidable opponent they pretend to care about the environment... but only outside their borders. I doubt anything will come of it, though, as it'd cost a pretty penny to many big corporations and they're the ones who decide everything in the end.

    14. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by sumdumass · · Score: 0

      Governments could put more money into research, but it would still have to come from somewhere (not that I'm saying this is necessarily a bad idea, but I think it's a false dichotomy).

      It's not a false dichotomy. Just because I present only one or two options does not in any way preclude other options. I just gave an alternative that actually makes some sense as apposed to the give government money and magically it will all get better plan being offered here. You may have other ideas that make fucking sense too. The government already has money that could be spent on these types of things yet they are not doing it. All it will end up being spent on is more spying on citizens and a military style police force for ever department under the government like it currently is.

      Yes, but everything hits the poor worse. If food prices rise as a result of increasing crop failures, this would hit the poor worse too.

      reread what you just wrote. "if" if a powerful word there. If the dog didn't stop to shit, he would have caught the rabbit. If the rabbit didn't stop to shit, the dog never would have caught him. Of course in both those scenarios, if is just a guess because there is no reason to believe anything would be true in the inverse (the dog catching the rabbit or the rabbit escaping capture) outside of knowing where a given failure currently is.

      Well, food prices may or may not go up. You simply do not know and it will not be over night if it did unless it was purposely manipulated to do so. In the US, we have what is called a strategic reserve in which our food production was considered to be part of our national security. You may know it better as subsidies in which the government manipulates the markets in order to encourage excess food production so a natural disaster like drought in the south and flooding in the Midwest doesn't cause half the country to start. The excess is put into reserves and eventually either sold to struggling foreign nations at discounts or given as aid if not needed to go back into the US food supply. You can have over 1/4 of the food crops completely wiped out in the US and you will still see more of a fluctuation in prices on the consumer end due to the availability in oil or energy needed to produce, process, and market them.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A...
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F...

      If food prices rise will not be an issue until well into the future and only if someone manipulates the existing programs or future programs that have stabilized food prices for well over 50 years. And yes, we have had price spikes in food that would have been completely worse if this had not been in place. Today you see specific commodity spikes due to specific weather events mostly and gradual overall increases in food prices due to regulations and oil mostly.

    15. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      here is an idea that will that will likely get me put on an an American 'freedom' watch list someplace. Why don't we make the manufacturers of said products responsible for said pollution costs. ALL of the costs and ALL of the manufactures USA, CHINA and were ever you live. After all they get the profit.

      Now before you whine and say that is not fair there wouldn't be any pollution if there wasn't any consumer demand so let the CONSUMER pay for the cleanup. Well that may have been true but these days the companies create a demand for shit where there is no real need of that shit. Plus the consumer does already pay for the clean up of those externalities by taxation.

      Finally it would be a good incentive to the product designer\manufacturer to make them 'clean' in order to reap that profit.

    16. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      Their entire emissions, as a political entity, are greater than those of the USA or Europe. We have to deal with them as a political entity, not as a "per-capita" entity, because it's the political entity that makes the decisions as to industry, emissions, export policy, etc, etc, etc.

      Australia has one of, if not the highest, per-capita rates of greenhouse gas emissions - but it's only a small (~2% IIRC) part of global emissions. We should do something about it, obviously, but does anyone think that reducing Australia's emissions to African "per-capita" levels will really do any good, in the global scheme of things.

      Deal with the country's emissions, not the per-capita emissions. India and China will have a greater effect on global emissions, from their political/economic decisions - positive or negative, than nearly any other country.

    17. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Soooooo.... we tax ourselves to make China change? Because that's what's being proposed. Tariffs are passed straight through to the buyers of the products. We we're raising prices on imported goods, to change the behavior of the manufacturers, who will still take in the same revenue. As long as domestic manufacturing remains more expensive than the imports plus tariffs, we will still be buying the imported goods, just paying more for them and funneling the extra money back to the federal government.

      lol I thought all the tea partiers left slashdot

    18. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Governments could put more money into research, but it would still have to come from somewhere (not that I'm saying this is necessarily a bad idea, but I think it's a false dichotomy).

      Like Solyndra? Where the research money goes into fake companies that have no viability but are chosen because they are owned by campaign contributors? And THAT is going to fix things?

      Going to the same government who can't take care of its wounded soldiers despite billions being spent on medical treatment for them. Going to the same government who spies on all its citizens and when it gets caught breaking the law it just says the person who made that public should be thrown in jail and those breaking the law will be given a pass and continue their wrong doing. The same government that sicks the IRS on its political opponents and refuses to answer questions about it to Congress.

      You are an idiot or corrupt if you think giving the government more money to fix a problem will do anything other than oppressing its citizens.

    19. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by mdsolar · · Score: 2

      China did sign and ratify Kyoto. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L... The US signed but did not ratify. During the negotiations, the Senate indicated it would not ratify unless China accepted some emissions guidelines. (Could have been an increase like Spain, we only wanted a commitment.) http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/...::

    20. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This sort of reminds me of a Monty Python sketch about who to tax:

      "I think we should tax foreigners living abroad", and "I think we should tax people standing in puddles of water."

      The point being, that everyone thinks that problems can be solved by taxing someone else.

      --
      Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
    21. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by damienl451 · · Score: 2

      The point is to change relative prices, not make the poor worse off overall. It is true that carbon pricing would be regressive but the revenue can and should be used to alleviate that problem by transferring money to those who will be disproportionately affected by the tax/tariffs at the bottom of the income distribution. Another option is to use the revenue to lower other regressive taxes (e.g. the payroll tax), provide income tax reductions, or boost the EITC, which should again mitigate the problem. Even if the revenue is not sufficient to make the poorest families whole, we may decide that additional transfers from general funds are necessary, which can definitely be paid for given that the US is an outlier among OECD countries in terms of how low taxes are.

      Looking at the problem from a global perspective, even if we were unable to offset the costs to the first-world poor, there is good evidence that the countries that will be hit the hardest by climate change are third-world countries with a heavy reliance on subsistence farming. And, within these countries, it is against the poorest people who will be hit the hardest. Which means that, from a utilitarian standpoint, it may still make sense to hurt relatively poor first-world people if it benefits those who are much poorer than them.

    22. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Your problem being?

      YOU are responsible for that pollution if you buy a product that caused the pollution during its production. So YOU should pay for it.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    23. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess you never heard the term " privatize the profits and socialize the losses"?

    24. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Soooooo.... we tax ourselves to make China change? Because that's what's being proposed. Tariffs are passed straight through to the buyers of the products.

      That's right. What we should be doing is subsidizing China's industries - that way stuff will be even cheaper.

      The problem is that China is subsidizing manufacturing, and for all the bluff and bluster and umbrage, those cheap goods we are buying under the guise of the free market, are subsidizing crypto-communist Capitalism. And the immense irony is that it becomes a weapon against us. Done in the right manner, it can destroy the economics of another country. All the while we sit and preen ourselves, confident in the knowledge that if only we can get government out of business, while using government driven business as some sort of role model.

      The question I've always asked is "If we were to ever go to war with China, will they build our weapons and supply our parts for us? The Ali Baba defense industries store?

      Now eat your Melamine Crunch, it's loaded with protein, and is much less expensive than those socialist American brands.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    25. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a very small cave you live in ...

    26. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who will do the checking to see if they're really reducing pollution, and with the rampant corruption, could you really trust any of that data? Do you trust the current data? They're lying about a lot of things, including their economic power ...

    27. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Their entire emissions, as a political entity, are greater than those of the USA or Europe. We have to deal with them as a political entity, not as a "per-capita" entity, because it's the political entity that makes the decisions as to industry, emissions, export policy, etc, etc, etc.

      Australia has one of, if not the highest, per-capita rates of greenhouse gas emissions - but it's only a small (~2% IIRC) part of global emissions. We should do something about it, obviously, but does anyone think that reducing Australia's emissions to African "per-capita" levels will really do any good, in the global scheme of things.

      Deal with the country's emissions, not the per-capita emissions. India and China will have a greater effect on global emissions, from their political/economic decisions - positive or negative, than nearly any other country.

      That's the most retarded argument I've ever seen.

      It's the people and the machine they use that create the CO, not the "entity", Use your fucking head, there are 1.3billion people in China, of course the total release will be greater than a country like Australia.

      By your logic, it's ok for people in small countries to fly in jets all day and then complain about CO from bigger countries who doesn't. Classic western exceptional fucked up logic, I don't get it, why don't you westerners mind your own business? It seems to me you idiots think you guys are some kind of "world standards" when you only represent a small percentage of the world's population.

      Don't even get me started on the part where you compared a developed nation with a developing nation.

      The bottom line is fix your own shit before complaining about others, who gives a fuck about Australia anyway, it's too far away from everybody else.

    28. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's the most retarded argument I've ever seen.

      It's the people and the machine they use that create the CO, not the "entity", Use your fucking head, there are 1.3billion people in China, of course the total release will be greater than a country like Australia.

      By your logic, it's ok for people in small countries to fly in jets all day and then complain about CO from bigger countries who doesn't. Classic western exceptional fucked up logic, I don't get it, why don't you westerners mind your own business? It seems to me you idiots think you guys are some kind of "world standards" when you only represent a small percentage of the world's population.

      Don't even get me started on the part where you compared a developed nation with a developing nation.

      The bottom line is fix your own shit before complaining about others, who gives a fuck about Australia anyway, it's too far away from everybody else.

    29. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by Immerman · · Score: 1

      One of the most promising and simple options I've heard is to impose a carbon tax on all fossil fuels (and corresponding tariffs on products imported from places without the tax) and then distribute that revenue equally among the population on a regular basis (monthly?). On average everyone would break even, and in practice those at the bottom would come out a bit ahead, at the expense of those at the top who can most easily afford it. And it gives everyone at every level in society economic incentive to seek to reduce the carbon impact of their supply chain.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    30. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by Lawrence_Bird · · Score: 1

      If US industry can only produce those goods when the price is raised through tariff, then no, they will not as demand will also tank.

      Krugman remains the most dangerous man on the planet.

    31. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by fnj · · Score: 2

      ... US loses the ability to print money ...

      Thanks for the laugh to brighten the day. We have forgotten how to make steel or any consumer goods whatsoever, but somehow I doubt we'll forget how to print money, or run out of ink or special paper.

    32. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LOL, "unfairly"? China's per capita emissions are lower than Europe and the US, what alternative reality do you Americans live in? You Americans are so out of touch reality we wonder what's going to happen to you guys when your own shit finally hits your own fan.

      Forget about lower prices, once the dollar collapses and the US loses the ability to print money like psycho and make the rest of the world suffer for it, the price of oil will double overnight in the US, which instantly makes everything else more expensive.

      Our shit's going to hit the fan? Yes, China's per capita emissions are lower, but that's only because they have more people. China has far worse pollution problems than the USA. Having a lower emissions per capita doesn't help when you have to wear a mask walking down the streets of Beijing or when lead poisoning is still the most common pediatric health issue and your kids die or become retarded from it.

      The dollar won't collapse. The dollar is legal tender in the world's largest economy with tens of trillions of dollars of capital assets being traded in dollars domestically alone. The USA is also the worlds largest manufacturer and exporter, and these goods will also be priced in dollars.

      The source of all of these facts can be found in wikipedia.

    33. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do per capita emissions have to do with anything? This is about requiring a level playing field for industrial pollution rules. Having a vast, poor, rural population doesn't make any difference.

    34. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by stenvar · · Score: 1

      Correct. But industry in the US would pick up, leading to more domestic prosperity. Without the tariff, China gets to lower costs of production and compete unfairly, reducing US GDP.

      If by "prosperity" you mean millions of mind-numbing, low-paying jobs sticking little electronic parts into little holes, and prices going up dramatically, But a massive increase in inflation would indeed put an extra zero on everybody's paycheck soon, leading to a numerically higher GDP. At least the cost of college education becomes a non-issue since people don't need it for those jobs.

    35. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by surd1618 · · Score: 1

      How did this comment get modded -1? It has a thesis and some data. Maybe someone doesn't agree, but that's no reason for a neg mod.

    36. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by tbannist · · Score: 1

      So let me get this straight, you are saying that if we do nothing about climate change, costs are going to increase some unknown amount naturally so we need to artificially increase costs with a known amount to combat it?

      How about instead of playing five knuckle shuffle while attempting to funnel more money into the government coffers we instead look at ways to sequester the carbon emissions and perhaps replace them with naturally economically viable solutions?

      Apparently we can't do that either because somdumass opposes anything that would "artificially increase costs". Oh wait. You appear to already be opposed to your own solution for the same reason you oppose tariffs. Or maybe you think magic fairies are going to pay for carbon sequestration? The carbon is already sequestered, it's far cheaper to stop burning it than it is to try and re-sequester it after we burn it.

      I mean seriously, all the regulations and mandated emissions crap (which is mostly a good idea BTW) on cars has increased the cost of purchasing a new one by about 1/3 from between 1967 and 2001.

      Somehow I doubt the veracity of that claim. After searching for a bit I only found one reference to what that amount actually is, and according to the chart that I found on the ICCT site, it's about to $200-400 per gasoline vehicle which is simply not going to be 1/3 of purchase price of any new car.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    37. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Correct. But industry in the US would pick up, leading to more domestic prosperity. Without the tariff, China gets to lower costs of production and compete unfairly, reducing US GDP.

      China "competes unfairly" with the U.S. only if you don't consider U.S. companies part of the U.S. It is those companies who are doing the outsourcing.

    38. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because the Chinese companies we'd have to make pay for their pollution are in China, and it's the Chinese government, not ours, that has the legal authority to make them pay,
      All we can to is encourage their customers, who are in our jurisdiction(s), to buy elsewhere.

    39. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by AaronW · · Score: 1

      If you had bothered to research Solyndra their plan made perfect sense since the cost of silicon was quite high at the time. The problem for them was that the price dropped through the floor and the cost of solar cells dropped by a factor of 20, in part due to Chinese dumping. There was no way that Solyndra could compete with that. If you look at all of the DOE loans that were given out, their success rate was actually quite high. If you're too risk adverse you will never get ahead. That's what's missing today. Look at some of the research that was done in the past by places like Xerox PARK, Bell Laps, IBM, etc. We wouldn't be where we are today if it wasn't for the basic research that they did. If it wasn't for the work of John Bardeen, Walter Brattain and William Shockley at AT&T labs how long would it have taken for the transistor to come about? At the time that sort of research with crystals might be considered risky for a corporation to do, especially when it seems to have nothing in common with making phone calls.

      One thing with research is that you have to expect that some things will fail, that's how good research works. If you are so risk adverse that you won't invest in something that might fail then you won't get ahead. That's one reason Silicon Valley has been so successful. For every big name that grows out of the area there are at least ten failures. People are not punished for their failures since they learn from them and move on.

      --
      This post is encrypted twice with ROT-13. Documenting or attempting to crack this encryption is illegal.
    40. Re:Who is being taxed, exactly? by sumdumass · · Score: 0

      Don't pretend i said something i did not say. There is a big difference between making something more expensive just to funnel money into the government while hoping usage goes down and something with quantitative results adding cost to something. If you cannot see that, you probably should shut up while the aduylts talk.

      I'm posting from my phone so links are dificult right now but i got my number from a study done at the university of california. Its the first link when google searching cost of car regulation. . I'm not sure how you managed to ignore that but either your google finger is broken or you lied in trying to find the number i used. Perhaps you pretended something was said that wasn't again.

  6. How to use Article XX by mdsolar · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'd suggest that there should be a ramped approach. First, we should acknowledge that dangerous climate change has come early and we are already suffering damages. The growth in Federal crop and flood insurance payouts is owing to the effects of climate change. Instead of increasing premiums, we should use climate damage tariffs to cover this increase. That amounts to a pretty small tariff, but it firmly establishes the liability connection. Non-Annex I countries (as listed in the Kyoto Protocol) are becoming the main contributors to cumulative emissions just as climate change has turned dangerous, that makes their emissions the cause of dangerous climate change. An accident of timing? Yes. But deliberately increasing emissions, as China is doing, eliminates safe harbor as well.

    This small tariff could be used as a stepping stone to larger tariffs imposed cooperatively with other Annex I countries if China does not turn around. The larger tariffs could be used to assist with adaptation costs in countries with low per capita emissions where vulnerability to dangerous climate change is high. Lack of a clear funding mechanism for this sort of thing has been a sticking point at climate negotiations. This would essentially get funds from those who are causing the damage."

    1. Re:How to use Article XX by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

      Non-Annex I countries (as listed in the Kyoto Protocol) are becoming the main contributors to cumulative emissions just as climate change has turned dangerous, that makes their emissions the cause of dangerous climate change.

      Maybe it's just late, but can you to link directly to your source (pdf?) and maybe throw in a page reference for good measure

      The larger tariffs could be used to assist with adaptation costs in countries with low per capita emissions where vulnerability to dangerous climate change is high.

      China's per capita emissions are lower than Europe (as a whole and many individual countries) and much lower than the USA.
      I don't think per capita is the measure you want to be using.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    2. Re:How to use Article XX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      America still produces far more CO2 per capita than China. You want to slow climate change? Start with yourself! This isn't really about the climate. America is once again trying to push everybody else around for its own gain. What does it take to make an environmentalist out of an SUV driving American? The chance to impose tariffs on China! You fucking hypocrites!

    3. Re:How to use Article XX by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      The fact remains that the bulk of the excess CO2 that is already there was put there by the West, in particular the US. It's good that you guys are starting to get your shit together but considering your track record of opposition, it's a bit early to start lecturing other countries.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    4. Re:How to use Article XX by mdsolar · · Score: 2

      In fact, no. This was one of the interesting findings of the IPCC WGIII report. cumulative emissions from non-Annex 1 countries are taking over those from Annex 1 countries. The crossover has probably already happened.

    5. Re:How to use Article XX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      US didn't even ratify Kyoto protocol to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases. It's do as I say not as I do. Again...

    6. Re:How to use Article XX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Never going to happen. Too many want to drive their big V8 "american muscle, made in china but final assembly in the USA to get around terrifs" cars around.

    7. Re:How to use Article XX by stenvar · · Score: 1

      The growth in Federal crop and flood insurance payouts is owing to the effects of climate change. Instead of increasing premiums, we should use climate damage tariffs to cover this increase.

      I.e. you want to tax consumer goods to give even bigger handouts to powerful agribusinesses and wealthy owners of beach front property. Thanks for revealing so clearly the corrupt intent behind proposed climate regulations.

    8. Re:How to use Article XX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Both of my big V8 "muscle cars" are made in Stuttgart, not America. What percentage of them do you think is made in China? I'm guessing right around zero.

    9. Re:How to use Article XX by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      No, a country has to be cutting emissions (as the US is doing) to invoke Article XX.

    10. Re:How to use Article XX by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      It is only because we have started with ourselves that we can invoke Article XX of GATT. If we were not cutting emissions, we'd have no standing.

    11. Re:How to use Article XX by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      Thought I had done this. You can get there from the link I provided but it is not direct. http://www.ipcc.ch/report/ar5/...

  7. Your reading of GATT is not applicable. by tlambert · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Your reading of GATT is not applicable. China falls under MFN, and tarrifs based on carbon emissions generally fall under "special interest protectionist measures", which means that they are not applicable.

    In reality, implementing this would either require revocation of MFN status for China by the U.S., or modification to GATT. Modification to GATT would require a unanimous vote in the WTO, of which China has been a member since 11 Dec 2001, which means that a modification to GATT is off the table.

    I've suggested that the way to deal with this, and with most of the job threat from offshoring, in fact, was to hold countries supplying products to the same standards that a domestic producer of those products would be held. That would include environmental, labor, and similar standards. This wouldn't address the economic inequity of people being to live for a lot less in China as on the same wages of the U.S., or that products manufactured for markets other than the U.S. market would necessarily meet U.S. standards either. But it would be a step in that direction.

    To deal with any of the other loopholes, such as the "final assembly" loophole, where tarrifs aren't charged if the final assembly occurred within a given economic block, rather than in a foreign economic block (also called the "last major transformation" clause), would require even more work. So companies like Apple could still perform final assembly of Apple products in the Czech Republic, which, as an EU member, means not paying VAT import taxes compared to if they were wholly manufactured in China. Just as companies like GM do in the U.S. with regard to primary engine components for automobiles manufactured in Brazil.

    Practically speaking, there's no way to get rid of all the loopholes without a One World Government(tm), which most people are against (especially the existing governments of nations which would be superseded by such a thing).

    We may be driven there eventually, but we know the real solution to the carbon problem is to move to other sources capable of handling ever increasing base loads - and yeah, that doesn't mean hydroelectric, which endangers fish populations, or unreliable wind, or solar based on the available of solar grade silicon, relative to demand, being rather low.

    1. Re:Your reading of GATT is not applicable. by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      Pretty sure MFN is part of GATT. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M... NAFTA, on the other hand, might pose a problem.

    2. Re:Your reading of GATT is not applicable. by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      Screw the World Trade Organization! Nobody elected them; mostly plutocrats put them in place. We should tell them to take a hike.

    3. Re:Your reading of GATT is not applicable. by tlambert · · Score: 2

      Pretty sure MFN is part of GATT. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M... NAFTA, on the other hand, might pose a problem.

      It is. But the (referenced in the original article) analysis by Joost Pauwelyn assumes that MFN treaty provisions regarding not imposing a tariff on China that we don't impose on ALL our other trading partners means that we would either habe to revoke MFN, so that doesn't apply, or change the GATT groundrules in the WTO.

      And yeah, I believe your reading of NAFTA would apply to moving the final assembly factories for Chinese products to the Maquiladoras just over the U.S./Mexico border in order to place them into the free trade zone would work to circumvent any tarrifs we were to establish under GATT/WTO governance as modifications to MFN rules, and/or by revoking MFN status.

      This is effectively what I was hinting at when I references the final assembly rules in the EU taking place in the Czech Republic: The NAFTA block of countries, for trade purposes, can be considered analogous to the EU block, except the NAFTA block countries do not enforce between themselves, and while they do enforce against externalities, unlike the EU, there's not a universal policy governing NAFTA block members.

      There are actually several other available loopholes that are in common use in Europe, both for exporting taxes at a lower rate -- e.g. make all contracts in the lowest corporate tax country (Ireland), then export them through an EU country (Netherlands) to the Bahamas or other corporate banking friendly climate, since it's an EU member with no costs for doing so, due to its own existing treaties. These loopholes can just as easily be applied within NAFTA (and commonly are, to the extent to which they are applicable), to push the boundaries.

      As it stands, however, unless it's done generally, which would hurt the partners who are our partners solely to give them economic aid in exchange for editorial control in some of their internal and external politics, we really can't do it with China given its existing trade status, and (given NAFTA), perhaps not eve were we to strip it of MFN status without political firestorms coming from that.

    4. Re:Your reading of GATT is not applicable. by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      There is no revocation of MFN. Article XX has environmental exceptions. We can impose tariffs are retaliation is not allowed. China has already agreed to this.

    5. Re:Your reading of GATT is not applicable. by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      or solar based on the available of solar grade silicon, relative to demand, being rather low.

      What is this? I haven't heard of it. Somehow I got the idea that solar power has been getting cheaper and more economical.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    6. Re:Your reading of GATT is not applicable. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and moreover, "solar grade silicon" is reasonably cheap stuff and getting cheaper all the time. they get all the leftovers from the chip makers which weren't good enough for the foundries.

      methinks he's talking out of his nuclear-one-world-solution arse.

    7. Re:Your reading of GATT is not applicable. by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Your reading of GATT is not applicable. China falls under MFN, and tarrifs based on carbon emissions generally fall under "special interest protectionist measures",

      What does that actually mean? Carbon reduction is clearly in the general interest.

      Practically speaking, there's no way to get rid of all the loopholes without a One World Government(tm),

      They're against it because it's a dumb idea. For one, there's no evidence whatsoever that it would get rid of loopholes.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    8. Re:Your reading of GATT is not applicable. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is silliness. One can always revoke any treaty, simply by shooting at the other signatories.

    9. Re:Your reading of GATT is not applicable. by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      What is this? I haven't heard of it. Somehow I got the idea that solar power has been getting cheaper and more economical.

      Yes, it has. Alas, without the 80% subsidy for solar power installations, it's still not worth installing where I am. And because of a quirk in our lifestyle (we live in one State, but work in another) we're not eligible for the full subsidy (some of the subsidy is Federal, some State - we can get the Federal, we don't pay taxes to the State we live in so we can't get the subsidy there).

      All of which reduces down to a solar installation would cost us ~3.5x as much as "normal"....

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    10. Re:Your reading of GATT is not applicable. by s.petry · · Score: 1

      Practically speaking, there's no way to get rid of all the loopholes without a One World Government(tm), which most people are against (especially the existing governments of nations which would be superseded by such a thing).

      If you are going to make such a blanket statement then you need to qualify it. As written, there appears to be an incorrect claim that it's just a matter of people wanting to hold local control.

      Governments are against a the "one world government" because their people are against the NWO. The people are against the NWO that has been forcing itself into society for decades, because it's been doing so to the detriment of the "people" under the umbrella. What has been put in place, such as World Bank and WTO is completely unaccountable to the people that have to live with the rules (and those are just 2 examples, there are many such organizations). The same people pushing the NWO, such as GW Bush, have no qualms about killing well over a million people to further their ideology. The people shaping EU monetary policy have destroyed numerous economies without conscience to further their "one world government" agenda.

      The above is not necessarily secret, but it does require study. Media monopolies in the US, UK, and EU are not going to talk about it, they are owned by people also trying to further that agenda. Enough can be found that we see elections like we just saw in the UK, where the platform for many winners is anti-EU.

      People do realize that if the NWO Government gets into power by nefarious means, the NWO will be inherently nefarious. History has proven this again and again, and there are many people that understand it and have been pushing back against the NWO for just that reason.

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    11. Re:Your reading of GATT is not applicable. by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"

      Well said.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  8. Per capita tariff by renzhi · · Score: 1

    How about a tariff on a per capita basis? Especially if we can tax on the amount of resources consumed per person per year. If the cost is not tied to each individual's life style, some people in some countries would continue burning through their huge SUV, while asking everyone else to live a caveman's life.

    1. Re:Per capita tariff by tlambert · · Score: 1

      How about a tariff on a per capita basis? Especially if we can tax on the amount of resources consumed per person per year. If the cost is not tied to each individual's life style, some people in some countries would continue burning through their huge SUV, while asking everyone else to live a caveman's life.

      Way to make "bombing them back to the stone age" a net economic benefit for the target, dude!

    2. Re:Per capita tariff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      To illustrate this:

      CO2 per capita (2009) [metric tons]:
      USA 17,2
      China 5,3

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_carbon_dioxide_emissions_per_capita

    3. Re:Per capita tariff by arbiter1 · · Score: 1

      Yet if you look at chinese cities they look like a bar back in the 1980's around midnight, filled with hazardous air. Their rivers put a bag of Skittles to shame in terms of colors.

    4. Re:Per capita tariff by arbiter1 · · Score: 1

      to many a point on the skittles reference, just do a google image search for "chinese river pollution"

    5. Re:Per capita tariff by TFAFalcon · · Score: 1

      Population density (/sq mile):

      China: 365
      USA: 84

      Sure the average US-ian produces a lot of CO2, but there are so many more Chinese that they still come out ahead when it comes to the area they cover.

    6. Re:Per capita tariff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think US should just kill them like sand niggers to reach fair population density.

    7. Re:Per capita tariff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is fair enough I suppose as the rest of the world has been trying to figure away to kill all merkins until you manage to breed some with an average IQ higher than 2 digits.

    8. Re:Per capita tariff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oddly enough, it works when I use "US river pollution" as well. Didn't the US have several rivers actually catch fire in the recent past?

      Do as I say not as I do at its finest?

  9. That's great by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    So, we have a non-lawyer, discussing a hypothetical situation, in which his understanding of international trade law allows for a hypothetical solution.

    . My hypothetical solution that works even better, cheap fusion for all! Why didn't he ask me?

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  10. Re:Proof? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    There's no such thing as climate! The Lord God Jesus Christ created the weather and the weather never changes. It's always sunny in Orlando, it's always rainy in Seattle, and it's always snowy in Duluth. So says the Will of The Lord.

  11. Wishful? Trade is a two-way street, is it not? by raymorris · · Score: 3, Interesting

    "China is enormously dependent on access to advanced-country markets". If Americans, for example, didn't have access to BUY goods from China, a lot of our inexpensive consumer goods would cost quite a bit more. Cables for electronics, lightbulbs, trash cans, trailer hitches, and a million other things would cost alot more to produce domestically. Therefore, cutting ourselves off from China would mean we could afford to buy less - we'd all become poorer, in terms of purchasing power. In that way, we're nearly as dependant on China as they are on us, are we not?

    Krugan certainly knows more about global economics than I do, but he's not shy about the fact that his writings are as much about promoting a liberal agenda as they are about understanding how global markets actually work. His book and blog are both titled The Conscience of a Liberal. Perhaps this proposal is a bit of wishful thinking, of wanting to promote "green", setting aside the fact that we don't really have much leverage over China. Heck, we've been trying for decades to get them to have some respect for basic human rights and we haven't been able to coerce them to do anything on human rights that they didn't want to do. They've been quite bold with claiming territory and sending warships to places they ought not be, so they don't seem to think the western countries have any leverage to rebuke them.

    1. Re:Wishful? Trade is a two-way street, is it not? by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      We can put tariffs on their imports, but they can not put tariffs on our exports. Our balance of trade improves and out buying power gets a boost from that. More jobs, better pay. We may have to make some of the stuff we invented ourselves. The Pacific Northwest is an excellent place to manufacture without greenhouse gas emissions. States with access to Hydro Quebec power could also expand manufacturing cleanly.

    2. Re:Wishful? Trade is a two-way street, is it not? by TubeSteak · · Score: 4, Informative

      Krugan certainly knows more about global economics than I do, but he's not shy about the fact that his writings are as much about promoting a liberal agenda as they are about understanding how global markets actually work.

      Not understanding global markets indeed.
      Neither Krugman nor mdsolar seem to mention that China has the world's 2nd largest (by trading volume) carbon market.
      And that's just their pilot program.

      You'd think that since these two care so much about the issue, they'd follow the news:
      China's Chongqing to launch carbon market trading on June 13
      Thursday Jun 5, 2014

      The southwestern city of Chongqing will be the seventh region in China to launch carbon trading when its market opens on June 13, the local carbon exchange said Thursday, in a move designed to curb the city's greenhouse gas emissions.

      The market is the last of China's planned pilot CO2 markets ahead of the launch of a nationwide scheme later this decade as the world's biggest-emitting nation steps up efforts to slow down rapid emissions growth.

      China is already moving in the right direction and a hard cap is definitely in their future....
      If for no other reason than China is planning to increase its nuclear power production by more than an order of magnitude over the next 10~15 years.
      If everything goes to plan, China will be producing more nuclear power than #1 and #2 (USA & France) combined.

      Proposing a carbon tariff seems like a big middle finger to a government that is pouring tens of billions into solar, wind, and nuclear power.
      (Did I mention that China is #1 in wind power?)

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    3. Re:Wishful? Trade is a two-way street, is it not? by wickerprints · · Score: 1

      I find it rather strange that you are inferring that Krugman's proposal is merely liberal wishful thinking, or "promoting a liberal agenda," when there are numerous fiscal conservatives who would love nothing more than to level the playing field with respect to domestic versus foreign manufacturing. The dirty little secret, though, is that those fiscal conservatives are the blue-collar workers who've been squeezed out of jobs, not the ones who actually run the GOP political machine. The latter are what we might think of as corporate fat cats, ultra-wealthy investors, and the already-made men, for whom the consequences of globalization and foreign investment have been a windfall, rather than the ideologues living in Midwest states and the Bible Belt who buy the GOP "fiscal conservative" propaganda so easily that they are led to vote against their own immediate economic interests.

      So, one must be led to wonder how such a proposal could even be branded "liberal" or "conservative" at all--unless by "conservative," one only means "creating wealth by manipulating the market," rather than "honest pay for honest labor."

    4. Re:Wishful? Trade is a two-way street, is it not? by Splab · · Score: 1

      Not only that, but how about cleaning up your own yard before yelling at the neighbour? The US has been adamant about doing anything about pollution and unlike China, they aren't heavily investing in sustainable energy.

    5. Re:Wishful? Trade is a two-way street, is it not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      gee you think Krugman or someone on his staff doesn't know this?

      or hey, maybe one of the editors in the NYT newsroom might have remembered something they ran last week?

      http://www.nytimes.com/roomfor...

      look at the carbon emission trajectories. it is not pretty for China.

      http://www.nature.com/nclimate...

      (old link, 2013 version is even worse for them)

    6. Re:Wishful? Trade is a two-way street, is it not? by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      China is already moving in the right direction and a hard cap is definitely in their future....

      The industrialized countries that do the most to protect the environment are also the ones with the strongest, healthiest economies. Trying to weaken China's economy to reduce their carbon emissions is a backward step. As you stated, they are fully aware of their pollution problems and are actually doing a lot of this to improve.

      These simple "tax them" proposals are for the simple minded ones that don't consider all the resulting impacts. You can't just choose to tariff China without doing the same for other countries with similar per capita or per GDP pollution. Many US manufacturers use Chinese parts. If we increase their costs, then they will be less able to compete globally. Simply raising the cost of debt could offset a tariff, causing double harm to the US. So, unless the whole world goes along, which is a pipe dream, a tariff approach would do more harm than good.

    7. Re:Wishful? Trade is a two-way street, is it not? by drinkypoo · · Score: 2

      Carbon trading is bullshit. It's just a means to excuse emissions for which there is no excuse. Carbon credits could be legitimate, but only in a system absent of carbon trading. No one promoting carbon trading actually wants a solution to the carbon problem.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    8. Re:Wishful? Trade is a two-way street, is it not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're only repeating banker propaganda. It's the banks that profit from inflation. Why do you think they push "easy" credit so hard? Your "taxes" would be more appropriately be called "bank fees". The government is nothing but a collection agency. This is what the people want, so there's little point in arguing about it.

    9. Re:Wishful? Trade is a two-way street, is it not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's see. The US is #1 in geothermal energy, #2 in wind, #4 in hydroelectricity, #5 in solar, and while it's difficult to get ranking on biomass, nearly half of our renewable energy is generated via biomass (i.e., it's almost as much as the rest combined).

      13% of US electricity production comes from renewable sources and 11% of our total energy use comes from renewable sources. That does not include the 19% of our electricity that comes from nuclear (another non-carbon source) or the rapid switch from coal to natural gas (less emissions of carbon). Our total carbon emissions in 2012 are about the same as they were in 1996. The carbon intensity of the US compares favorably to the EU - we've been doing better than the EU for most of the last decade.

      On top of this, the EPA has been taxed to further reduce carbon intensity another 30% by 2030.

      But go ahead, tell me how much better everyone else is...

    10. Re:Wishful? Trade is a two-way street, is it not? by stenvar · · Score: 1

      Our balance of trade improves and out buying power gets a boost from that.

      If you export more and import less, you work harder for getting fewer stuff. The "increase in buying power" doesn't help you because you're not actually buying or consuming. Even if exporting more and importing less were a good thing, other nations wouldn't just let the US benefit at their expense, they'd adopt similar policies and we'd have a trade war.

      Tariffs and trade restrictions benefit powerful special interests and politicians, they do not benefit the country as a whole.

    11. Re:Wishful? Trade is a two-way street, is it not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong. Salary would raise so that purchasing power is preserved.

    12. Re:Wishful? Trade is a two-way street, is it not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Carbon market is a useless, costly, accounting trick. What's the emission reduction target ?

    13. Re:Wishful? Trade is a two-way street, is it not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      +1 Funny

    14. Re:Wishful? Trade is a two-way street, is it not? by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Tradable carbon credits are just putting the market to work.

      We have two companies, A and B. A produces things that don't need a lot of CO2 production to make, and B makes things that do require a lot of CO2 production, and external costs are the same except for that. If their products cost the same, then B's products are more expensive counting externalities. Now, if A and B both get non-tradable carbon credits, A has an excess while B has to cut down on production, regardless of how important B's products are. (It's possible that limited supply for B's products makes the price go way up, so B and competitors make a lot more money.) In the meantime, A has no incentive to reduce CO2 production further, since it's already sitting on unused carbon credits.

      Now, suppose that A can sell carbon credits to B. This means that A's products get cheaper while B's get more expensive, which reflects their total cost including externalities. B can still produce all they can sell, they just won't be able to sell as much. Net result is that prices reflect the overall cost better, there's no artificial shortages, and there's incentives to reduce CO2 production because the freed-up carbon credits are worth money.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  12. Re:Proof? by mdsolar · · Score: 2

    http://pubs.giss.nasa.gov/abs/... " It follows that we can state, with a high degree of confidence, that extreme anomalies such as those in Texas and Oklahoma in 2011 and Moscow in 2010 were a consequence of global warming because their likelihood in the absence of global warming was exceedingly small."

  13. That's the idea by mdsolar · · Score: 1

    exactly.

    1. Re:That's the idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why add a tax onto the consumer, buy local and when China loses sales they will clean up their act. I hate seeing stores charging premium prices for something made in a sweat shop!

    2. Re:That's the idea by hodet · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Probably because solutions that depend on the herd to implement never happen. Not arguing for or against, I am just saying that expecting everyone to do the right thing will not happen. The only way it does is to legislate it. People are generally selfish and will continue to choose the $1 widget over the $10 widget.

    3. Re:That's the idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe you should just shoot them all!

    4. Re:That's the idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Probably because solutions that depend on the herd to implement never happen.

      Voting "depends on the herd".

      I'm afraid I forgot what my point was.

  14. tariffs are cool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the cool thing about tariffs is that no one minds when you impose them to strong-arm policies and trade wars never happen

    1. Re:tariffs are cool by mdsolar · · Score: 2

      Owing to Article XX, retaliatory tariffs are not allowed.

  15. Makes sense, though China civil war sooner by fredness · · Score: 1

    There is tremendous pent up frustration with the increasing corrupt and irrelevant government in China. Cracking high tariffs on goods from China likely will put 1000 times more pressure than all of the finger wagging and human rights pep talks the west has made in that last few decades, increasing unrest and civil collapse in China. However the west really likes to look the other way to get low wage / low cost / pro-business manufacturing, so likely tariffs will be lobbied against by US's own global business titans.

    Perhaps an NGO / consumer information institution to lead a product labeling campaign so at least consumers of the world can see 'virtual carbon' production cost on product packaging. Then consumers and businesses can more directly make choices about how carbon neutral their supply chain is. Currently there is very little information available on this when purchasing decisions are made in the west.

  16. The facts? by Rick+in+China · · Score: 3, Insightful

    China produces more TW-h per year than any other country at this point in time. There is already a HUGE effort in China to improve on that further. This is a nonsensical piece, the US is still the world's leader in terms of human waste production and CO2 emissions *per person* - I'm not sure what the political/fearmongering purpose behind this is but I'm sure there is one.

    1. Re:The facts? by retroworks · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Mod parent up. This is a silly idea. Yes, the Non-OECD growth in carbon emmissions is growing enormously. But the non-OECD still has LESS CO per unit of production than the OECD. In other words, a carbon tax would benefit China production from the start. Plus, over time, China's already investing a lot more in CO free energy (as a percentage of GDP) than the OECD is. http://www.eia.gov/forecasts/i.... Trade agreements don't allow WTO members to apply rules specifically against a certain member, they apply to all members, and the West still produces more CO per capita

      Obesity too is increasing in China. But if you tax obesity, you aren't going to advantage western countries. .

      --
      Gently reply
    2. Re:The facts? by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      Read Article XX of GATT. Countries with strong environmental laws can impose tariffs on those with weak environmental laws.

    3. Re:The facts? by Rick+in+China · · Score: 1

      Ok back to the facts - you want strong environmental laws? How about EXECUTION for heavy polluters in violation of regulations? Yes, China will execute company heads who are involved in pollution violations. Just like China executed heads of the melamine milk scandal. I don't see US executing corporate heads - or prosecuting anyone from any corporation who constantly breaks the law / regulations out the window / laughs at the country as they drive profit and buy politicians, and sneer at regulations as being 'for the small people'... want to talk about tough? I think we know who wins that one. :D

  17. Re:The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Nobel did institute a prize for economics, and the other social studies. It is called "Nobel prize for literature".

  18. It would mean a trade war by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    and possibly actual war... they are building up in the south china sea for a take over of basically everything that isn't nailed down.

    I don't know if this will help that situation.

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    1. Re:It would mean a trade war by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We're already in a trade war, and getting our asses handed to us trying to compete with disposable workers and unregulated industrial production.

      Not everyone in the US is a doctor or web programmer.

      It is amusing to see some libtards discover a new love for tariffs, however. Long after we've crippled our industrial base and ruined the working class with limitless foreign competition the left suddenly notices that all they've done by feathering their EPA nest while simultaneously precluding even modest limits on imports crying "oh noes trade war" is cause industry to evacuate into the arms of Chinese mercantilists that give zero fucks for the environment.

      So fuck you and your "trade war." And our nuclear arsenal is just as capable of eradicating the Chinese as it was the Soviets. So fuck your "actual war" bullshit too.

    2. Re:It would mean a trade war by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      Its hard to have a reasonable discussion with someone when they assume so much about what position and then dismiss you before you elaborate.

      As to the chinese trade war... you may be correct that they've been in trade war with us. We've seen similar things over time. That said, we also do a lot of dumping on the market as well. Mostly with food but there are probably other things as well.

      Anyway, I'd like to avoid a trade war if possible because I think we're getting closer to an actual war with the chinese. And that's a war that would really hurt us.

      Even if both sides refrained from striking their respective homelands and kept the whole thing between navies in the pacific... it would be very very expensive.

      The US is ever so slowly losing the ability to project its power as its military budget is reduced. That's simply a fact. Now we could increase that budget but then we'd have to cut something else.

      We can't get anyone to cut the entitlements. In fact, they keep getting increased. So that means the US is done as an international power. Over.

      The US should rather start winding down its operations to avoid an embarrassing war that claims american lives to no purpose.

      The ONLY way the US is going to be able to engage internationally is if it can balance its budget.

      If we can't do that then we're a banana republic. End of story.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    3. Re:It would mean a trade war by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      China has already agreed to GATT and Article XX. This is a way to get things fixed peacefully.

    4. Re:It would mean a trade war by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If we can't do that then we're a banana republic. End of story.

      We're already printing our entire budget deficit. We've been doing that for half a decade. We finally got here, just like all the deficit-hawk "crackpots" told us we would.

      Now it's just business as usual. Banana republic indeed.

      There must be a reckoning because the takers won't accept anything that might permit us to avoid one. They're too big a voting block.

      So we'll print and print until the gears strip. That is the "end of the story." The only politically viable "choice" we have. The rest is just the bullshit we indulge between now and then pretending otherwise.

      Not evacuating our industrial base to Asia and putting the "surplus" working class onto EBT cards, "extended unemployment" and "disability" might have helped to avoid whats coming, but that's water under the bridge now.

    5. Re:It would mean a trade war by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      Good luck with that. What the chinese say they agree to and what they don't retaliate for in various ways are two very different things.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    6. Re:It would mean a trade war by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah yes, an american inevitably posts about the "nuclear arsenal".

      You know China has them as well right? So you think its a good idea to get into another "cold war" with them? Problem is one nation runs a fiscal imbalance every year, how does that nation fund a new "cold war"?

      Here is an idea, it is now 2014 so why don't you think of a new solution besides what didn't work in the past? Maybe open up a dialogue and discuss meaningful ways to address the issue other then nuclear posturing?

    7. Re:It would mean a trade war by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah yes, an american inevitably posts about the "nuclear arsenal".

      Jealous, subject?

    8. Re:It would mean a trade war by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What, that trillions in taxes that the "nuclear weapons program" have cost to date did not go towards something useful like crumbling infrastructure, education, etc?
      http://www.cnbc.com/id/1012142...

      Yeah, totally jealous....that "cold war mentality" still exists.

    9. Re:It would mean a trade war by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      WTO enforces GATT so we don't have to take their word.

    10. Re:It would mean a trade war by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      wto hasn't responded to many issues that china has violated in the past... I see no reason why they would in the future.

      Regardless, they will only push if the US stands behind it. And that means the whole thing is backed by us and the chinese will attempt to punish us directly for that.

      Long story short, get ready for it to be ugly. if you don't have the stamina for a fight then don't waste our time and money by starting something you can't finish.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
  19. Why don't we by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sell them some coal without any carbon in it ?

  20. Bollocks by The+Evil+Atheist · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why should China, or any developing country, give up its own economic development when the currently developed and powerful countries didn't have to and because they lack the political will do their part? Developed countries should see this as an opportunity to make money from China by selling them back cleaner technology that the developed countries invent.

    It's bollocks to say "well, we already have a developed economy and we're too scared to change anything, so we'll make you live by the sink or float rules that we impose on you because we can".

    --
    Those who do not learn from commit history are doomed to regress it.
    1. Re:Bollocks by ThatsMyNick · · Score: 1

      Why should China, or any developing country, give up its own economic development

      It shouldnt, and no one is asking it to. We are asking China to stop polluting though. I live in west coast, and a lot of our air pollution comes from China. It is not unresonable to ask China to stop. It doesnt even have to affect their economic development if done right.

    2. Re:Bollocks by AmiMoJo · · Score: 2

      Why should China, or any developing country, give up its own economic development when the currently developed and powerful countries didn't have to and because they lack the political will do their part? Developed countries should see this as an opportunity to make money from China by selling them back cleaner technology that the developed countries invent.

      Because it's not us and them any more. We need each other, and a lot of the stuff being manufactured in China is western companies outsourcing production anyway. If the western companies decide to pollute less their factories and the factories of the companies they contract to build their stuff will clean up.

      As it happens China is actually pushing hard to clean up anyway. It will take a long time, but they are making far more effort than the US. The EU has really helped here, with things like RoHS and CE markings becoming selling points that China has bought in to.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    3. Re:Bollocks by TFAFalcon · · Score: 1

      Does China currently have any incentive to buy the cleaner technology? Upgrading would cost money and even for new factories the new tech is probably going to be more expensive then what they currently use.
      In fact implementing this tariff could be the thing that convinces them to start buying the cleaner tech.

    4. Re:Bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I live in west coast, and a lot of our air pollution comes from China. It is not unresonable to ask China to stop.

      I hope you are aware that an average American still pollutes many times more than an average Chinese national. What's more, the very reason why it is so hard to curb pollution, is because the USA have worked very hard to enforce "economic freedoms" often against the will of the locals - such that it is now nearly impossible to enforce a ban on pollution. Besides, such a ban would likely impact the USA much more than the Chinese, if done fairly.

      And now you dare complain that your air gets polluted by China. You had it coming.

    5. Re:Bollocks by The+Evil+Atheist · · Score: 1

      It does, because its own citizens are complaining about the environment more and more. Say what you like about the CCP, and I know bloody well I do, but they're deathly afraid of losing control. When pollution gets too bad, there will be riots. Actually, given the previous arrests of environmental activists in China, you can tell they're really keeping an eye on it.

      Upgrading would cost money, but you have to think more creatively doing business with the Chinese. Each province has its own interests and you can sweeten the deal quite a lot.

      --
      Those who do not learn from commit history are doomed to regress it.
    6. Re:Bollocks by ThatsMyNick · · Score: 1

      Nope, average american produces more CO2 than an average chinese person, but nope, an average american doesnt pollute more than average chinese person. SO2, NO2, soot (carbon particles) and other particulate matter are much more serious.

      Also averages are misleading. An average artic (or antarctic) resident would populute more, than an american, it doesnt mean they dont get to complain about american pollution or chinese pollution.

  21. The Great Depression was made longer and deeper by zephvark · · Score: 1

    by... anyone? Anyone? That's right, the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act... Let's just destroy the global economy for the sake of the world, shall we?

    1. Re:The Great Depression was made longer and deeper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fuck the world, longer and deeper. Great Recession until the end of time.

    2. Re:The Great Depression was made longer and deeper by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      A tariff will not destroy the world economy (unless you're of Ayn Rand persuasion). A massive drought on a global scale just might, though.

    3. Re:The Great Depression was made longer and deeper by Tailhook · · Score: 1

      The reason the US has zero tariffs on nearly all finished goods is that we use trade status as leverage to push various and sundry agenda on foreign nations — bases in Okinawa, drug wars in Mexico and Columbia, "human rights" ... or something ... in China, etc. — not some sacred truth learned from Smoot-Hawley.

      Many Western nations have significant tariffs on imports, Germany being the best example. They've had a rigorous trade regime for decades that limits competition with disposable Asian workers and unregulated industry. This is a major reason they still have a healthy working class, a fully funded welfare state and enough disposable wealth to prop up a continent full of deadbeat PIIGS.

      But keep chanting Smoot-Hawley if you want. The trade pendulum has swung so far to one side that it has got to swing back the other way at least a little, so you and your fellow Smoot-Hawley chanters are going to lose this argument in the long run. Now that the libtards and their St. Krugman are on the case it's going to be soon too.

      --
      Maw! Fire up the karma burner!
    4. Re:The Great Depression was made longer and deeper by james_gnz · · Score: 1

      It's a trade-off (so to speak). Whether or not it's a good idea depends on what the comparison is between the costs that would be caused by tariffs and the costs that would be avoided by tariffs.

  22. Re:The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Science by Apotekaren · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Exactly. For example, every time Krugman gets involved in a debate about the banking sector, it becomes clear why he got the award. The Honorary Nobel Prize he got was handed to him by the head honchos at the Swedish Central Bank, so it shouldn't come as a surprise when his views are heavily leaned towards a more finance sector friendly Keynesian way of thinking.

    So trying to boost his credibility with this "Nobel Prize" will only work on people who don't know what kind of a rigged anti-prize it is.

    --
    She: Hey, are you a traitor? Me: No, I'm atheist.
  23. Lower labor taxes as a result by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This will allow a move to tax to energy consumption instead of labor, while staying competitive.

    I'm all for it: a win for the environment, and a win for employment in EU and US.

  24. Re:Rights tariffs, then? by ixuzus · · Score: 4, Informative

    Uh, you do understand we're talking about tariffs, not sanctions, right? Sanctions are generally restrictions on trade and/or financial transactions. I suspect Iraq is the example you're thinking of. Tariffs are simply are tax on export. or (more commonly) imports. I honestly don't know where sanctions stand constitutionally in the United States but any argument that tariffs are unconstitutional is utter crap. Pretty much the first piece of major legislation passed after the introduction of the constitution was the Tariffs Act.

  25. Re:Rights tariffs, then? by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

    These are no tariffs, that's just putting a price tag on externalities - probably something we should have done ages ago.

    --
    Ezekiel 23:20
  26. Stop treating China like a third world country. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is the height of hypocrisy. China is putting landers on the moon, we should not have to fix their emissions for them. Oh, and the Chinese have become the largest consumer market for luxury goods.

    http://www.businessinsider.com/china-future-luxury-goods-market-2012-7?op=1

    Somehow I think we're getting scammed.

    1. Re:Stop treating China like a third world country. by tomhath · · Score: 1

      China is a Second World country

      First World - western countries aligned with NATO

      Second World - communist bloc (USSR before it broke up, China, etc)

      Third World - everyone else

  27. What could possibly go wrong? by Wizardess · · Score: 1

    This sounds SO good, clean, and to the point. But there are holes in this picture.

    But, what could possibly go wrong?

    For example, what does the world do if China turns around and hurriedly constructs a hundred Chernobyl style reactors for power?

    I'm surprised nobody (moderated high enough to matter) here has asked that obvious question. This is simply an application of the general rule that no good deed goes unpunished or the old cliche about the road to Hell being paved with good intentions.

    So, yes, I really am wondering, "What could possibly go wrong?" I wonder because as a pessimist I figure the worst possible thing will go wrong if you apply a nuclear weapon to digging a hole in the ground.

    {^_^}

    1. Re:What could possibly go wrong? by symbolset · · Score: 1

      I believe China is working on nuclear, and looking at breeder reactors.

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
  28. who is the journal of astrophysics going to believ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    no offense or nothin, and yeah yeah appeal to authority, but I'm going to have to take the word of the guy with the Nobel Prize in Economics on this one.

  29. Not just carbon by dutchwhizzman · · Score: 1

    The EU has been taxing imports from non EU countries to protect their own market for decades. The reasoning was that those countries had "unfair advantages" because the EU producers had to deal with strict(er) laws on environment, labor and warranty and such. This lead to the countries that wanted to export trying to find a way to produce even cheaper, making their own environment and labor situations worse than they were already, leading the EU to raise taxes to offset the competition advantage again.

    I'd say tax foreign manufacturers for not adhering to the standards you hold your producers to locally. That way, if something was manufactured with the same competitive rules as you hold your own to, there wouldn't be a tax and the manufacturers *and* your local economy would be trying to implement the measures you want them to take as efficient and fast as possible, just to gain a competitive advantage. You want your iPhone to be produced by people that don't jump off buildings? You don't want to send your rice and soy to poor countries because they can't afford to feed themselves? Tax them for not improving their standards of living and environment, not for producing cheap. The benefit of this is that your local competition will stop lobbying for higher import taxes but for stricter rules that they already can comply to and boost local innovation into greener, people friendly solutions instead of outsourcing as much as they can to cheap countries and trying to find holes in legislation to get away with it.

    --
    I was promised a flying car. Where is my flying car?
  30. Better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    How about we all stop buying cheap Chinese shit if we care so much?

    But the bottom dollar will always trump morals.

    How many people do you know who complain about Walmart or China? How many of these people actually abstain from buying things there?

    It's easy to criticize these countries or corporations, but when you can get your products there for half the price of the mom-and-pop store, guess where you're gonna go shopping?

  31. Dumbest smart guy ever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Such tariffs should be legal under existing trade rules â" the World Trade Organization would probably declare that carbon limits are effectively a tax on consumers"

    5 seconds of googling revealed that they are not legal under existing trade rules, and that WTO would NOT declare they are a proxy tax, because WTO does not subscribe to the consumer proxy doctrine.

  32. Stop buying their shit? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seems easy enough.

  33. Wishful? Trade is a two-way street, is it not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wanna know an easy way for American goods to be cost effective with Chinese goods? Eliminate the minimum wage (and kick out all the Mexicans and secure our borders). This will actually help poor people because A) prices will go down for basics that poor people need, and B) companies will be more willing to hire for jobs which aren't worth minimum wage.

  34. China's putting us to shame by bigtreeman · · Score: 1

    A tariff collected in the importing country doesn't contribute to China's efforts to install more solar or wind turbines.
    China is currently installing massive amounts of solar and wind generation capacity.
    They appreciate future savings and independence from imports.
    Solar is cheaper now because it is made in China.

    Just look at Australia's dumb government, a pack of climate change doubters.
    Going backwards on carbon trading, undoing incentives to install green energy.

    --
    Go well
    1. Re:China's putting us to shame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just look at Australia's dumb government, a pack of climate change doubters.
      Going backwards on carbon trading, undoing incentives to install green energy.

      Oh dear. A western nation that's failing to accept decline to "save the planet" or something. How tragic.

      Worst part is the US might notice and also reject the decline you're imposing. Now that would be really awful.

  35. LOL at 'Greenhouse gases' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Presumably the idiot who wrote this article is referring to ONE gas, carbon dioxide, not 'gases'. Secondly, there is no such thing as 'man-made catastrophic global warming', which is why they renamed it 'climate change', which obviously ISN'T the same thing at all, since it's a stupid, meaningless term, as the climate is always changing.

    Are you sick of this nonsense yet?

    www.climatedepot.com

  36. Re: False: Sveriges Riksbank Prize by elwinc · · Score: 4, Informative

    Exactly. For example, every time Krugman gets involved in a debate about the banking sector, it becomes clear why he got the award. The Honorary Nobel Prize he got was handed to him by the head honchos at the Swedish Central Bank, so it shouldn't come as a surprise when his views are heavily leaned towards a more finance sector friendly Keynesian way of thinking.

    So trying to boost his credibility with this "Nobel Prize" will only work on people who don't know what kind of a rigged anti-prize it is.

    Absolutely false. The Riksbank gets its authority from the Swedish Parliament.

    As you can see in this photo, Krugman is being handed his Nobel by King Carl XVI Gustaf who is a strictly ceremonial head of state. The King may be a customer of the bank, but he isn't a honcho at the bank; Parliament controls it.

    However, figurehead Carl XVI Gustaf has no say in who gets the Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences; that is decided by this group of professors. Not the Sveriges Riksbank at all. Yeah, I know, you've got a conspiracy theory to explain why all these professors are puppets of a bank. Bullshit.

    I just don't get why people post lies on the internet that are so easily checked on the internet. Makes no sense dude; for a ten second chuckle, you've branded yourself a liar in the Slashdot community. Where's the win in that?

    --
    --- Often in error; never in doubt!
  37. And where precisely... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...are bulk carbon credits manufactured?

    China of course! From his own crappy newspaper .

  38. Re:The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Science by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

    Nobel prizes are often handed out for being "first" rather for being "right" or "most knowledgeable". In some cases, the squeaky wheel gets the grease.

  39. OK, the summary reaches a false conclusion by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 2

    The growth in Federal crop and flood insurance payouts is owing to...

    The growth in Federal crop insurance payouts is primarily due to the fact that the 2008 Farm Bill introduced federal crop insurance (or at least as it is currently implemented) and that went into effect with the 2014 crop year. So, the rise in federal crop insurance payouts have NOTHING to do with global warming. Second the growth in federal flood insurance payouts is due to the increase in the value of developed properties in flood plains. Federal flood insurance was introduced in 1972. Since that time, largely as a result of federal flood insurance, there has been a steadily increasing trend toward placing expensive structures in the flood plains of the country. This results in the value of the properties being insured increasing, which leads to increased flood insurance payout. There are several other factors which contribute to those increased payouts. All of those factors make the impact of global warming on the amount of those payouts insignificant.

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    1. Re:OK, the summary reaches a false conclusion by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      You've got that wrong. Climate effects are definitely causing extra flood and crop damage for the US. http://www.theguardian.com/env...

    2. Re:OK, the summary reaches a false conclusion by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 0

      There was no evidence in that article that either federal flood or crop insurance payouts have increased due to global warming, but no actual evidence (not that I would expect it in such an article). There was a claim that such destruction has been greater due to global warming. One of the questions the author asked was about short attention spans. I would ask the same about the author(of course, considering that the author is James Hansen. the answer is outright deception, not failure to be aware): in my lifetime, the strength and frequency of hurricanes hitting the U.S. Northeast have been at historical lows, yet the author claims that Hurricane Sandy is evidence of global warming.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    3. Re:OK, the summary reaches a false conclusion by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      You've never seen a late October super storm that far North. Read it again. In 2012, climate damage increased crop insurance payouts be $14 billion. http://thinkprogress.org/clima...

    4. Re:OK, the summary reaches a false conclusion by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      You are right, I have never seen one that for north...but that does not mean that they have not occurred. In fact, in my lifetime hurricanes hitting the northeast U.S. have been at historical lows. Before the 20th century, hurricanes hit the northeast with greater frequency and strength than they have since the middle of the 20th century until now.
      The Farm Bill of 2008 drastically changed the way federal crop insurance works, meaning that as a result, payouts have increased. This is a result of a change in the law, not of an increase in damage.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    5. Re:OK, the summary reaches a false conclusion by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      There can be more than one cause for an increase in payouts. So, you have made a mistake there as well. Further, considering hurricanes only and not other cause of flooding is a mistake. http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05...

    6. Re:OK, the summary reaches a false conclusion by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      The cause of increased payouts for flood insurance is primarily due to the increase of the value of the properties in the flood plain..to the degree that any other contributing factor is insignificant. The cause of increased payouts for federal crop insurance is changes in the law...to the degree that any other contributing factor is insignificant. Neither of these facts mean that global warming is not happening, not do they mean that it is not caused by human activity. What these facts mean is that global warming alarmists are either misinformed or disingenuous to use the increased payouts as evidence of global warming (my bet would be that you are misinformed, but that your sources are disingenuous).

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    7. Re:OK, the summary reaches a false conclusion by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      You might want to read that link again. 80% of 2012 crop insurance payouts were owing to climate damage. You do not seem ready to provide evidence for your claim, you just assert it. That makes it likely that you are confused in some way.

    8. Re:OK, the summary reaches a false conclusion by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      Ah, I see one element of your confusion. You claim the crop insurance payout method changes in 2014. The evidence for climate damage caused increases in payouts comes prior to that. You have confused apples for oranges.

    9. Re:OK, the summary reaches a false conclusion by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but I do not trust the assertions of your source. I do not trust the newspaper that still brags about receiving a Pulitzer Prize for denying the Stalin era famines in the Ukraine and promoted Jayson Blair for publishing stories from towns he never visited. Feel free to Google "federal crop insurance" for yourself, rather than rely on sources with a vested interest in promoting climate change alarmism.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    10. Re:OK, the summary reaches a false conclusion by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      That's fine. You don't like facts but like to make things up. We know how to read your comments.

  40. Should not be China by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    China is just a geographical area enclosed by a man-made boundary. We could split that area into smaller pieces if we wished.
    That wouldn't change the fact that each individual, on average, amongst the 1.3 billion living within that boundary pollute *less* than each individual, on average, amongst the 1.3 billion living in the following countries taken together (in decreasing order of CO2 emissions per capita). It is *that* 1.3 billion which should reduce its CO2 emissions:
    Qatar
    Trinidad and Tobago
    Kuwait
    United Arab Emirates
    Bahrain
    United States
    Australia
    Canada
    Saudi Arabia
    Oman
    Kazakhstan
    Estonia
    Russia
    Czech Republic
    Taiwan
    Finland
    South Korea
    Netherlands
    Belgium
    Libya
    Ireland
    Germany
    Japan
    Turkmenistan
    Norway
    South Africa
    Greece
    United Kingdom
    Slovenia
    Denmark
    Poland
    Bosnia and Herzegovina
    Austria
    New Zealand
    Malaysia
    Italy
    Spain
    Iran
    Equatorial Guinea

    1. Re:Should not be China by Tailhook · · Score: 1

      China is still 50% subsistence farmers that live nearly carbon neutral lives. By contrast, "rural" Americans generally have a modest collection of SUVs; almost everyone in the US a is solid contributor to the per capita CO2 figure.

      If you attribute Chinese CO2 to the Chinese actually responsible for the CO2 — the urban Chinese workers employed by Chinese industry — per capita CO2 doubles to 14.2 tonnes. And while that still doesn't match the US at 16.4 tonnes, US GPD is almost 2x greater.

      So the US looks comparatively good; we get a lot more value for the carbon we emit. Likewise, if the US had 300 million subsistence farmers to improve that average we would be far down your list as well.

      The per capita argument is a cop-out used to rationalize extreme CO2 reduction schemes. It's a bogus argument that goes unchallenged too often.

      --
      Maw! Fire up the karma burner!
    2. Re:Should not be China by volmtech · · Score: 1

      Everyone should have to spend a year growing their own food. You would willing to give your first born son to a Monsanto salesman for a few gallons of Round-Up. I started farming in 1970, before most herbicides were developed. Weeds everywhere, water gulping, fertilizer stealing, machinery tangling weeds.

    3. Re:Should not be China by symbolset · · Score: 1

      Having half your population be starving rural subsistence farmers is how you get your emissions per capita so low as China. It should be the goal for every American who cares about global climate change to adopt this lifestyle. Rice and gruel in a yurt for all!

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
    4. Re:Should not be China by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      China's per capita emissions are the same as Europe's. Read the linked IPCC WGIII report. http://www.ipcc-wg3.de/assessm... You have to read the actual report, not the Summary for Policy Makers. China wanted the facts about its emissions buried.

    5. Re:Should not be China by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > "The per capita argument is a cop-out ..."
      No it isn't. What's a cop-out is asking a lot of poor people already emitting very little CO2 to cut back even further while fat Western consumers in their SUVs wait for those reductions to happen before making any effort themselves.
      If you want to target a subgroup of Chinese high emitters, that's fair too.
      We should target *all* individuals who contribute more CO2 than their fair share, regardless of country.

    6. Re:Should not be China by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a 2001 report no? Newer ones are available.
      Furthermore, refering to *European* per capita emissions is quite abstract. There are significant variations in per capita emissions from one country to the next.
      It would be more relevant to compare per capita emissions between different *countries* or between *parts* of different countries.

  41. Methane (hydroelectric) much worse than CO2 by raymorris · · Score: 1

    > without greenhouse gas emissions. States with access to Hydro

    Methane, which hydroelectric dams produce thousands of tons of, is a much worse greenhouse gas than CO2. You do go hydroelectric to protect the atmosphere, you do it because it'll never run out. Natural gas is a better choice in terms of greenhouse gas emissions. See ex Fearnside for details, or International Rivers links to good to sources of detailed info. (International Rivers is not objective, but they link to reliable sources).

    1. Re:Methane (hydroelectric) much worse than CO2 by penguinoid · · Score: 1

      The reason people don't worry much about methane, is because it doesn't accumulate in the atmosphere as much as CO2 does, because methane will eventually oxidize into water and CO2. So while in the short term it is 20X worse than CO2, in the longer term it's only a little worse.

      --
      Don't waste your vote! Vote for whoever you want, unless you live in a swing state it won't matter anyways
  42. How about this? by mark_reh · · Score: 2

    Let's get our own act together before we try forcing other to do the same.

    That applies equally to carbon emissions and democratic elections. We produce about 3X as much CO2 per capita as China, but we're going to try to tell them how not to spoil the air we breathe? Our elections are a joke- held periodically to give the general populace the illusion of living in a democracy, yet we send advisers and observers to other countries to tell them how to do it right.

    It's no wonder the rest of the world hates Americans.

    1. Re:How about this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are a terrorist...

  43. Do == don't by raymorris · · Score: 1

    Typo. That should read "you don't go hydroelectric to protect the atmosphere, you go hydro because it is renewable". Hydro is probably worse for global warming than natural gas. Naturally gas will eventually run out, though.

  44. China already has incentives by sjbe · · Score: 2

    That's a good idea. China needs an economic incentive to clean up their air pollution problem.

    They've already got one. How expensive do you think it is going to be to treat the health problems of over a billion people caused by pollution? They also have a political motivation. The ruling party wants to stay in power and if the people get sufficiently pissed off about the pollution their continued rule might come into question.

    I've been to China. They are WELL aware of the problem. The trick for them is dealing with it without causing massive economic damage in the process of dealing with it. China is trying to drag tens of millions of people out of poverty through economic growth. They have more poor people than the entire population of the US.

    1. Re:China already has incentives by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a good idea. China needs an economic incentive to clean up their air pollution problem.

      They've already got one. How expensive do you think it is going to be to treat the health problems of over a billion people caused by pollution? They also have a political motivation. The ruling party wants to stay in power and if the people get sufficiently pissed off about the pollution their continued rule might come into question.

      I've been to China. They are WELL aware of the problem. The trick for them is dealing with it without causing massive economic damage in the process of dealing with it. China is trying to drag tens of millions of people out of poverty through economic growth. They have more poor people than the entire population of the US.

      Umm, what if they plan on not treating the health care issues as a method of population control.

    2. Re:China already has incentives by cheesybagel · · Score: 1

      They have been working on it. Besides large hydroelectric projects like the Three Gorges Dam they are currently doing a massive ramp up of nuclear power plants in the large coastal cities. Then there is the natural gas deal they signed recently with Russia and prior deals they made with Turkmenistan.

      I expect air pollution in the major coastal cities to be a lot better in a decade. The rest of the country will probably continue burning low grade coal though.

  45. Er...how does this work, then? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We have had no warming for nearly 20 years now. So perhaps China is doing it right?

  46. RoHS by sjbe · · Score: 2

    RoHS stopped them putting hazardous substances in products just to keep costs down.

    RoHS isn't really about economics related to production costs. It's primarily about keeping six known toxins out of products, specifically lead, mercury, cadmium, hexvalent chromium, PBB and PBDE. While there is a economic price tag attached, the economic cost of RoHS compliance is pretty minimal in practice. The majority of electronic components sold these days are RoHS compliant already. For most companies the primary cost is in using lead free solder and providing a certificate stating that the product is RoHS compliant.

  47. Markets Don't Make Rules, Congress Does by WhatHump · · Score: 1

    I agree Paul Krugman is a expert in economics. However, he is completely ignoring the role of politics in his solution. Does he think big corporations like Wal-Mart, who profit handsomely from the flow of cheap goods from China, is going to allow such tariffs to be implemented? Is he oblivious to the existence of lobbyists? Sorry, but I've become very cynical in my middle age. In terms of slowing the effects of climate change by reducing fossil fuel emissions, I think we are done. Collectively we are too stupid to see we are shitting where we sleep. Now it is all about surviving the coming climate catastrophe. Unless we begin a massive program to look at alternative agricultural methods (giant greenhouse domes?) millions will starve to death as today's fertile land turns to desert or bog.

    --
    "Could be worse...could be raining." Igor
    1. Re:Markets Don't Make Rules, Congress Does by jcr · · Score: 1

      I agree Paul Krugman is a expert in economics.

      I don't. When someone has called for a real estate bubble as a remedy for the dot-com bubble, suggested that an alien invasion would help the economy, and now calls for fucking up relations with one of our country's biggest trading partners, I'd have to say he has disqualified himself as an economist quite thoroughly. He may have had some clever observations to make about world trade once upon a time, but today he is no economist at all. He is a court astrologer, and nothing more.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  48. Tarrifs can cause trade wars by sjbe · · Score: 2

    You would be taxing away the competitive advantage that companies in a polluting country would have against companies in those who restricts its carbon emissions.

    You are presuming that China would/could not tax US products equally in return. US companies want to do business in China. Ford and GM sell a lot of cars there for example. If the US (hypocritically) imposed a carbon tax on China then China would be virtually certain to impose on on US goods in return. Rather than cooperatively work together on the problem we would hurting both economies with a trade war that in the end would be very unlikely to solve the root problem.

    In the short term, it would promote domestic business.

    No it would not - at least not in the way you are thinking. It would make components in everything you buy more expensive. A lot of stuff is made in China and there is no alternative or domestic supply chain equivalent for much of it. Supply chains do not change overnight. It would take time (years) to shift substantial amounts of production elsewhere, even when such a thing is easily possible. Furthermore the main thing that people buy from China doesn't emit pollution. The #1 reason we make stuff in China right now is because of cheap labor.

    1. Re:Tarrifs can cause trade wars by Immerman · · Score: 1

      >. Furthermore the main thing that people buy from China doesn't emit pollution.
      And what would that be? Yes, the cheap labor is a big reason production moved there, but that production still produces a great deal of pollution, not to mention transporting the product halfway around the world.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    2. Re:Tarrifs can cause trade wars by symbolset · · Score: 1

      We suck oil from miles below the floor of the ocean, ship it halfway around the world to China where it is turned into a plastic fork. Then we ship it the rest of the way around the world and put it in a store. We do this because it is more convenient than washing the metal fork we already have.

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
    3. Re:Tarrifs can cause trade wars by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      Because China has already agreed to Article XX of the GATT, retaliation would not be allowed.

  49. Cost increases cannot always be passed on by sjbe · · Score: 1

    Manufacturers will still take the same revenue per unit sold, but they would sell fewer units with higher prices.

    VERY unlikely and grossly oversimplifying the issue. I'm guessing you aren't actually in manufacturing. I run a manufacturing company. Manufacturers are very often not able to pass on cost increases to customers. The biggest product my company sells goes into some GM cars. If our costs go up, we have very limited ability to pass on that price increase to our customer. The customer in this case could decide to either take production in house or to find an alternative source. They buy it from us because we can do it cheaper but as material costs rise our ability to do that is reduced. All we do is assemble the product so there are no manufacturing techniques that could dodge or reduce the tariff. Not for us or for anyone else. Our material costs would rise and our profits (meager already) would fall.

    1. Re:Cost increases cannot always be passed on by Immerman · · Score: 1

      And where would people go to get cheaper products if *everyone* is paying carbon taxes?

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
  50. Plenty of incentives already by sjbe · · Score: 2

    Does China currently have any incentive to buy the cleaner technology?

    Sure they do. Same incentives we have. Pollution has very big health care costs, food supply costs, and if it goes on long enough, climate change costs. There are quality of life incentives. There are political incentives too - if enough people get upset enough about the pollution it can become a threat to the ruling party. The Chinese are acutely aware of the problem. It's just harder to deal with than you seem to think.

    In fact implementing this tariff could be the thing that convinces them to start buying the cleaner tech.

    China has more poor people than the entire population of any country in the world, save India. They are perfectly well aware of the need for pollution control but they also have the problem of trying to raise tens of millions of people out of poverty through economic growth. There is no easy answer to this.

    Furthermore the US and other western countries pollute plenty themselves and it would be HUGELY hypocritical to impose a carbon tax when we emit plenty of the stuff ourselves. To a non-trivial degree the reason our carbon emissions are as low as they are is due to us outsourcing our emissions (along with product production) to China and elsewhere.

    Want to cut down carbon emissions? Promote the use of nuclear, wind, solar and hydro power. Coal is plentiful and cheap in China and the US and it will not stop being used until other energy sources are competitive, even taking into account the fact that coal is not being forced to pay for much of the pollution it causes.

  51. Re:Rights tariffs, then? by Rei · · Score: 2

    I've been proposing this for ages - it's just VAT for carbon ("CAT"), or even pollution in general ("PAT"). People inside the "PAT" zone pay taxes based on the added embodied polluition at each step of the manufacturing process. Goods leaving the PAT zone get a PAT rebate. Goods entering the PAT zone get their estimated embodied pollution charged to them at the point of entry. As a consequences, countries can't cheat and get a competitive advantage by gutting their environmental regulations (including carbon) - the world competes on a level playing field.

    --
    Very well; let this abomination unto the Lord begin!
  52. War tariffs on the USA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think we should also impose war tariffs on the USA, because they invade foreign countries on false premises for their own political and economical gains. So as long as the USA gov wields the US military like a state-sponsored terrorist organization and kills farmers, children, wedding parades, the whole country should be imposed sky-high tariffs.

    1. Re:War tariffs on the USA by symbolset · · Score: 1

      If the US has been invading countries for economic gains, we have been doing it wrong. Maybe we should have sold Iraq to Qatar or Kuwait. Or Israel.

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
  53. Read TFA by MarkWegman · · Score: 2
    The actual op-ed column by Krugman is mostly celebrating that the US is finally doing something. He then goes over all the excuses used to justify inaction. One of those is that we can't do anything because China might... He then points out that if that happens, China could be pressured by us.

    In other columns and particularly his blog, which usually has much more data (and visualizations of the data etc) http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.c... Krugman is well aware that the US must act before the rest just because we are one of the biggest offenders here with much more CO2 use per capita than others.

  54. Also do that to India, Africa etc. by KramberryKoncerto · · Score: 2

    So there would soon be no more sweatshops for corporate America. Watch your economy crumble.

    Krugman spouts nonsense at times, but this one is appalling. Pollution in China involves a lot of forces, including the `clean' countries, acting in their own interests and he can't possibly fail to understand that. Neither the Chinese government nor the US corporations would like such a change. The root of the problem is that some people like to earn money by messing up the world.

    This proves he's just a propaganda mouthpiece, to help the US make a handsome profit from polluting activities around the world, while shedding every single bit of responsibility.

  55. he is doing it wrong by WindBourne · · Score: 2

    This should not be directed at China but all nations and states.
    Basically, America can solve this since we are the world's largest importer. But it needs to be done right.
    First, we can not go with estimates. They are mostly in non-western nations. So use oco2 to measure the co2 flow in and out of nations. This way nations are not held responsible for others pollution.

    Second, it needs to be normalized. Doing it per person is a joke. Instead, u want the tax to be based on co2 / $ of GDP. IOW, you want nations to grow, but u want the to do it efficiently.

    Third, it is then applied as a VAT upon a whole seller selling to the retailer. Full tax is charged, unless the item is submitted to web app in which parts are described and where from. If u make to good in a nation like Sweden or costa Rica where emissions are low, then no tax.

    Fourth, all delivery systems like FedEx that imported have to collect the tax. They can add some amount more to cover their costs.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  56. Glow ball warmism is dead pseudo science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's a good idea.

    Glow ball warmism is long dead pseudo science.

    10 beellion tons of CO2 emitted every year can hardly
    grow 75 miles x 75 miles patch of forest excluding what is under
    the ground. The last 100 years hardly counts for 100 patches
    or 750 x 750 miles square of forest.

    Doh!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Ganging up on China to protect fuel consumption habbits in USA
    through glow ball warming climate trolling is honestly a disgusting idea.

  57. Glow ball warmies trolling sci.physics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Glow ball warmies now trolling sci.physics
    to win their failed climate warmism trolling.
    Apart being off topic, it doesn't work either.

  58. Re: False: Sveriges Riksbank Prize by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Still, Krugman being awarded the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel is like... Barry being awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. Although not as extreme in that case, it's just obvious how it's a sham. Only the most faithful are blind to it.

  59. Before you guys get too giddy ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    ... check out the chart on the following page --- compiled by the United Nations Millenium Development Goals Indicators

    http://cotap.org/per-capita-ca...

    Just in case you do not trust anything from the United Nations, how about a chart compiled by the U.S. Department of Energy ?

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L...

    Compare for yourself the carbon footprint per capita of China versus that of the United States of America

    If Paul Krugman is so eager to impose a tax on China, why don't he impose a more hefty tax on the US of A first ??

    1. Re: Before you guys get too giddy ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but... That's 1990 to 2009, a range that predates much of China's recent economic growth. What is the instantaneous rate in China compared to the US now?

    2. Re:Before you guys get too giddy ... by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      There is inherent bias in that graph. It goes along the lines of this solution to your per capita carbon problem:

      Step 1: Increase your population to 1bn people.
      Step 2: Kick the majority of them out into the country and don't provide them with power or other energy.
      Step 3: Profit.

      No ??? involved in this case.

      The fact that China's per capita emissions are low are irrelevant when you realise they have 10% higher emissions than the next dirtiest country. Then you look at graphs like this which show that China's emissions are growing at an extra-ordinary rate. Finally take a look at China's environmental policy, if you can find one.

      Saying the worlds biggest polluter, fastest growing polluter, and polluter with no clear plan of slowing down pollution is not too bad because they have a large population is absurd.

  60. Starting a trade war with China by russotto · · Score: 1

    All this proposal would really amount to would be starting a trade war with China. That's not going to help anyone (and no, it doesn't matter whether the treaty says China won't retaliate or not; words on paper rarely trump perceived national interest).

    1. Re:Starting a trade war with China by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      Well, retaliation would lead to consequences with the WTO. It would be easier for China to cut emissions (or just announce a plan to do so) and get out of the tariffs that way.

  61. Re:Rights tariffs, then? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The USA has a history of imposing tariffs to protect it's internal producers. The one that comes to mind is the tariff on Australian Lamb to help protect the USA farmers that they imposed just after they negotiated a free trade agreement (that was very one-sided in the give and take department I might add, damn Johnny)...

  62. perhaps he knows a lot, and what he knows is wron? by raymorris · · Score: 1

    Perhaps it's not that he doesn't know anything, it's just that what he knows happens to be wrong?

  63. his words, not mine. Green mandates =~ liberal by raymorris · · Score: 1

    He's not pushing for balanced trade. He's pushing to force China to reduce carbon emissions. According to him, he calls his own agenda liberal. Conservatives have their own separate concerns about our relationship with China .

  64. Re: False: Sveriges Riksbank Prize by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How would you explain Janet Napolitano a President of the University of California and former Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security...

  65. Re:Rights tariffs, then? by wiggles · · Score: 5, Informative

    Umm, you do realize that the constitution specifically provides for the government to levy tariffs in Article 1 Section 8, right? Tariffs were the main source of revenue for the federal government until the income tax was established.

  66. EPA: methane 20 times worse by raymorris · · Score: 1

    The EPA says:
    CH4 (methane) is more efficient at trapping radiation than CO2. Pound for pound, the comparative impact of CH4 on climate change is over 20 times greater than CO2 over a 100-year period.

    As you said, in thelong term methane becomes co2, so if you're worried about co2, you should also be that much more concerned about methane. Therefore, one who is concerned about global warming would be concerned about hydroelectric. Not that it matters much - there are only a certain number of places that can be flooded by building hydroelectric dams. Hydro is self-limiting.

  67. Propaganda mouthpiece for whom? by bussdriver · · Score: 1

    Who is Krugman a propaganda mouthpiece for?? Aside from the fact the Nobel for economics is a sham to promote ideas those bankers like, just who is promoting him to shill for?

    You would think there was no history at all... The economy in the past was different than it is today; just saying that ANY change will destroy it is ludicrous. This is the age old conservative argument by the successful who benefit from whatever is going on currently and FEAR that change could upset a good thing (for them.) It came from the emperors, the robber barons, the bankers, the dictators, the slave owners, etc. Time and time again they have been proven wrong as better systems have resulted from change (not every time, eventually in some places-- which then served as examples to others. The USA having been previously one itself.)

    If the race to the bottom STOPS, the economy will obviously change; not necessarily for the better for some. The transition will not likely be smooth either, especially if things get too entrenched and fragile (like massive Ponzi schemes are.) As long as transportation costs continue to rise, the "benefits" of globalization will shrink and there will be increased pressure to compensate for those costs by removing other expenses. So we drop tariffs using trumped up arguments, cut taxes, subsidize (corporate welfare) so the true costs are externalized... but ultimately still are paid by the populations-- it's just robbing from more people, future generations, and the ecosystem to benefit the upper classes of today.

    China's pollution is largely the USA externalizing pollution and labor costs. Previously, the USA did pretty well (#1 economy) by NOT doing that stuff (Yes, we still did some but nowhere near the level today.)

    The USA is too corrupt to even debate Krugman's proposal. I can't see how his advocacy of accountability is helping the US profit from polluting the 3rd world; when it would effectively be punishing the USA's current practices of exploiting the world and moving it towards something more ethical (not ethical, just more ethical. There is no way a culture that doesn't give a rip about non-Americans is going to be ethical.)

  68. Re:Rights tariffs, then? by jcr · · Score: 0

    So fuck you, Krugman, and your Nobel prize, too.

    Not a Nobel prize. It's a swedish bankers' prize that they pretend is a Nobel prize.

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  69. The man's arrogance and idiocy are boundless. by jcr · · Score: 2

    It would appear that Krugman wants to do all he can to promote every possible cluster-fuck to deepen and worsen the current depression, including attacking world trade with his rehash of the Smoot-Hawley tariff.

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  70. Cheap labor by sjbe · · Score: 1

    And what would that be?

    Cheap labor is China's biggest export. I should have thought that was clear from the earlier post.

    Yes, the cheap labor is a big reason production moved there,

    It's not "a big reason", it is THE big reason. If labor costs in China had parity with those in the US (or were even close) then the manufacturing would occur elsewhere. Products with a higher material content and relatively lower labor content tend to stay domestic.

    but that production still produces a great deal of pollution, not to mention transporting the product halfway around the world.

    Producing steel for example is polluting no matter where you make it. China now leads the world in production of a lot of goods (like steel) thanks to their low labor costs but if those goods were produced in a different country then that country would suffer from much of the same pollution problems.

    We have NO technology that can filter carbon in large quantities from burning fossil fuels. As long as we continue to burn large quantities of coal, oil and gas this problem will continue. The only technological solution we have for reducing carbon right now is nuclear and renewables like solar and wind and nuclear comes with its own set of serious problems. Carbon tariffs on any country will not solve the incentives problem - at most if will force the carbon emissions problem to occur elsewhere. Furthermore the US has a huge carbon footprint as well so it smacks of hypocrisy to insist that China reduce their emissions when we're even worse on a per-capita basis.

  71. Global carbon tax will never happen by sjbe · · Score: 1

    And where would people go to get cheaper products if *everyone* is paying carbon taxes?

    Strawman argument. Such a carbon tax is not going to happen. There is simply too much economic incentive against it.

    The only way a carbon tax will become feasible is if some other form of technology (say solar+fusion) becomes cheap enough that it can compete with fossil fuels even allowing for the fact that fossil fuels aren't required to pay for their carbon emissions. Then people will be able to still get their energy without costing jobs and reduced economic output.

    Honestly I'd be pleased if we would even just stop subsidizing fossil fuel extraction. Big oil companies are absurdly profitable. They do not need tax incentives of any kind and yet they get lots of them.

  72. Satistism breeds inequality and war by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is depressing the short shortsightedness expressed in these comments. From an economic perspective the self deprecating posters should rethink themselves. Paul Krugman knows far less about economics than you! He is a radical NYT hack that is famous for making the gullible masses believe what their masters want them to believe - primarily that you can print and borrow your way to national prosperity.

    Which is actually the 2 trillion pound gorilla in the ice box! Sure, start your pissing contest with tariffs. If China stops buying US Treasury bonds the game is up. Like for real kind of up. Forget about global warming! American's in particular and the West in general has no concept of hardship. Without China the dollar would instantly lose it's reserve currency status and probably experience 50% inflation within 2 years. After that shit would get REAL. And what happens next? When medicare/medicade/obamacare bills can't be paid? When unemployment reaches 30,40,50 percent? The same thing that always happens in the end days of an empire. W-A-R.

    There is no other alternative. Governments start wars to drum up patriotism and thin the population. Only problem this time is the only people to fight with are asymmetrical actions in Africa or the Middle East - these cost a fortune and do NOT make good TV, and of course nuclear war. I can hear it now "With a limited nuclear exchange the US can bring China, North Korea, and Iran into line. We will stop proliferation of WMDs to irresponsible nations and finally have the power to save the world from AGW!!!" You think our leaders are too smart do do that? Do you really?

    1. Re:Satistism breeds inequality and war by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      I think you mean China would dump US treasuries. With the prosperity the tariffs bring to the US, there likely would be lower bond sales. China's leverage would be in dumping. However, confidence in the US would be higher when it is leading an effort to get China to cut emissions, and we'd see buyers willing to take up the US bonds to protect that effort. I think you've raise a good point, but I don't think you've thought the whole thing through. These environmental exceptions in GATT are there to promote peace and prosperity. They are a step away from war, not towards it.

  73. wrong by slashmydots · · Score: 1

    Whoever wrote this doesn't know China. They will simply lie about it. Lie, cheat, steal, and copy - those are the 4 cornerstones of any successful Chinese business.

  74. You do know how we cleaned it up, right? by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    we offshored most of our manufacturing. XBoxes are made in Mexico because they can dump the waste in that country and nobody cares. Google "Cancer Village" too sometime...

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  75. Re:Rights tariffs, then? by hallkbrdz · · Score: 0

    And the problem with that is?

    Elected officials should always do what is best for their country's citizens, not someone else's. The problem is, most of the time they just do what is best for themselves instead.

  76. Re:Rights tariffs, then? by hallkbrdz · · Score: 1

    ...and I'd take tariffs on imports over the IRS any day of the week.

  77. But we've emitted more carbon! by gordm · · Score: 2

    I don't understand Krugman (who I respect) saying... "United States accounts for only 17 percent of the world’s carbon dioxide emissions, while China accounts for 27 percent — and China’s share is rising fast." ...when per-capita we're emitting far more than them. Not even counting historical carbon, emitted so that we could build roads and infrastructure then even total carbon emissions still dwarf China. If we're not AT LEAST recognizing that we emit WAY more GHG more per-capita TODAY, then this is... this is terrible coming from Krugman. http://data.worldbank.org/indi...

    1. Re:But we've emitted more carbon! by buybuydandavis · · Score: 1

      You think rationalizations for more government regulatory power will actually make sense. That's cute.

    2. Re:But we've emitted more carbon! by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      China's per capita emissions are way above our target per capita emissions. They should be cutting to the same target. They won't have to cut as much which makes it easier for them. I think it is a little silly to count cumulative emissions unless you count them from when climate change turned dangerous. China is clearly ahead of the US in that. If we follow your argument, then two people practicing at the rifle range, one who's been there for a while and one who has just come would be in an odd situation. Children run into the range, and the first shooter stops shooting and the second does not. The children get killed. It is the fault of the first shooter because he shot more bullets cumulatively even though he took precautions not to shoot when the children ran on to the range.

      So, I think you've got it a little confused.

  78. Re:Rights tariffs, then? by MouseTheLuckyDog · · Score: 2

    Hey. People work real hard to earn these things. Just look at Obama. He ... uhm ...ooo... let me see ... nevermind.

  79. Re:Rights tariffs, then? by buybuydandavis · · Score: 1

    Because paying more for lamb was so important to American citizens.

  80. by a strange coincidence by buybuydandavis · · Score: 1

    Tariffs help protect entrenched local interests against foreign competition, and empower government regulators to reward their friends and punish their enemies.

    But I'm sure it's all about love for Mother Gaia, who the Lorax says just hates CO2.

  81. China is not very high on the pre capita list. by AgNO3 · · Score: 1

    China produces less CO2 per person the most of the rest of the industrial world. Why do you guys go bash on Luxembourg who is 9th on the list. Tax those CO2 producing jerks. China is in the 50's on the per capita list. What do you expect them to reduce? Now Sulfur Dioxide is a whole other ball of acidy wax.

    --
    OMG Ponies!!! with Glitter!!!! I miss Pink :-(
    1. Re:China is not very high on the pre capita list. by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      You may be working with old data. China came in around 32nd in 2009 and has probably moved up since then. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L...

    2. Re:China is not very high on the pre capita list. by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      In 2012, China ranked above 3 Annex I countries in per capita emissions. http://www.pbl.nl/sites/defaul...

    3. Re: China is not very high on the pre capita list. by AgNO3 · · Score: 1

      Do you not grasp per capita?

      --
      OMG Ponies!!! with Glitter!!!! I miss Pink :-(
    4. Re:China is not very high on the pre capita list. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From the pbl. So again they are increasing but they are still not per captia surpassing per capita.

      "Chinese citizens, together representing 20% of the world
      population, on average emitted about the same amount
      of CO
      2
      per capita in 2012 as the average European citizen."

      So go tell the EU to what? That The average Eurpean is just as bad as the Average chinese in CO2 production.

    5. Re: China is not very high on the pre capita list. by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      Certainly, do you?

    6. Re:China is not very high on the pre capita list. by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      The EU is cutting emissions. China is increasing emissions. There is a difference.

    7. Re: China is not very high on the pre capita list. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just read what you sent and never once does it put china above any body per capita and puts them just below the EU per capita. Might want to re read but I quoted the document already above.

    8. Re: China is not very high on the pre capita list. by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      Look at Spain, France and Italy.

  82. How about outsourcing tariffs for India? by Squidlips · · Score: 1

    Such tariff are way overdue for a variety of reasons.

  83. US industry will NOT pick up! by uslurper · · Score: 1

    Companies will just find a different oppressive country in which to manufacture their goods.
    Adding carbon tarriffs does not change the fact that it is expensive to manufacture in the US.

    --
    oldhack: "Security is a waste of money until shit hits the fan. 5 minutes later, it becomes waste of money again. "
  84. Re:Rights tariffs, then? by TheRealLifeboy · · Score: 1

    You're right.

    Global Warming / Climate Change / Whatever-you-want-to-call-it is a load of BS. Fortunately more and more people are waking up to the fact!

    Biggest science fraud ever?. The "evidence" is all made up. Almost entirely.

    Pollution, on the other hand, is a real problem that needs to be addresses and in China (and London) and what I do agree with is that creating incentives to reduce that is not a bad thing. However, basing that on a massive fraud like "Climate Change", is indefensible.

  85. Yes, China has a tremendous problem... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    China has a tremendous problem with air pollution from burning coal for electricity. Beijing reminds me of London is the 19th century.

    Their government is attempting to convert coal burning plant to natural gas plants. That is the reason why they recently signed the very significant agreement with Russia for massive imports of natural gas.

  86. Better Method: Export Surcharge On Coal Oil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A better method would be to remove the effective tax subsidies and exemptions enjoyed by Coal and Oil and recapture those on export from the US, EU, and Canada when shipping to Asia, so that $2 a metric ton becomes the real world cost of $100 a metric ton (or whatever it is today).

    Then use the money recaptured from that to build solar, wind, and other alternative energy sources for US, EU, and Canadian military bases and government installations.

  87. If we do this to China... by smithmc · · Score: 1

    ...we should do it to ourselves, too. The entire Western world should adopt a carbon tax, and implement it as a tarriff on any country that doesn't adopt it voluntarily. The money raised should be dumped into nuclear fusion development.

    --
    Downmodding is the refuge of the weak. Don't downmod, make a better argument!
    1. Re:If we do this to China... by Squidlips · · Score: 1

      The money raised will be wasted on pork barrel projects and patronage jobs. The government has an infinite capacity to spend all its income and then some, like my wife

  88. Cost per degree by iMactheKnife · · Score: 1

    Smog aside, CO2 emissions have a very small effect on global warming. I would like to see Krugman's analysis of the cost per degree of climate warming abeyance. I think it's a number with 15 zeros.

  89. Another nutty slashdot article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No cure for stupid, folks. China should handle their own problems. Yankee environmentalist wackos aren't going to save the world.

    1. Re:Another nutty slashdot article by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      We've already done that several times: WWI, WWII, Ozone Layer....

  90. Lets introduce Carbon Credits as currency by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Also why inflict this only on imports and from China?

    Lets get radical and implement a CAT (carbon added tax/tarrif) to every good everywhere along the production pipeline. If a firm buys goods from china they have a high CAT and final product will have a high CAT and becomes more expensive. If a firm has a wasteful production process that adds a lot of CAT too. Shipping long distance adds CAT so local products become more competitive.

    Lets take this one step further and make carbon credits a new currency. If consumers have to earn the rights to produce carbon emissions they will be more careful what they buy. Which also means people have to earn carbon credits. This should be different from traditional money in that the price should be set by how good the job is for the earth. E.g. a forester should get loads of carbon credits while a coal burner doesn't. And converting traditional money into carbon credits should be hard, maybe with a high tax on it that goes towards fighting greenhouse gas emissions and research into greener goods and production methods. Millionairs shouldn't be able to just buy their way out without it really hurting. The aim would be to balance the two instead of getting one in excess of the other.

  91. Re:Rights tariffs, then? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He was born black! Let's see you do that.