| The forthcoming Conference...on Climate Change...in
Kyoto...is the next occasion where the Environmentalists will seek
to build their Berlin Wall. That Wall will take the form of an
international institution...empowered to monitor, and regulate, the
CO2 emissions of the countries who sign
the Kyoto Protocol, and, presumably impose penalties upon those
countries.... |
| -NR Evans, Executive Officer, WMC
Resources Ltd., Australia2 |
Chicken Little is back and the sky is falling. Or so suggeststhe
Clinton Administration, poised to finalize the elements of a new,
far-reaching international agreement on "greenhouse gas" emissions
in Kyoto, Japan, in December. The United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), signed by over 150 countries
following the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, attempts to
prevent a climatic catastrophe brought on by global warming.
However, the Administration is planning on inserting restrictions
on emissions3 that will lock the
United States in a costly and lopsided agreement that will affect
every aspect of the U.S. economy-from how Americans feed their
families and heat their homes to what cars they will drive.
Ultimately, the treaty's restrictions will force Americans to
sacrifice their personal and economic freedom to the whims of a new
international bureaucracy. The long-range economic and political
consequences will be devastating.
On October 1, 1997, President Bill Clinton told more than 100
meteorologists that he was convinced by scientific theories that
the climate is warming because of increased emissions, and that the
consequences "won't be good."4 By
championing the global warming treaty, the Administration seeks to
pacify a vociferous lobby which frequently has made unsubstantiated
predictions of environmental doom, but only rarely has been
challenged to justify them. Perhaps the most disturbing aspect of
this rush to impose the UNFCCC's economically devastating, legally
binding, and internationally enforceable limits on the American
people, however, is that there is still no consensus in the
scientific community either on the causes of global warming or on
the extent to which it may threaten future generations. For
example:
-
A 1992 Gallup poll found that only 17
percent of the members of the Meteorological Society and the
American Geophysical Society think global warming in the 20th
century has been the result of greenhouse gas emissions,
principally carbon dioxide from burning fossil fuels.5
-
Only 13 percent of climate scientists
polled in a 1992 Greenpeace survey believe that runaway global
warming will occur as a consequence of continuing current patterns
of energy use.6
-
Scientists in a May 1997 article in
Science estimated that it will be a decade or longer before they
will know whether human activity is, in fact, causing climate
changes.7
Despite such admissions from the scientific community,
environmentalists continue to espouse the need to cut back on
man-made emissions of greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide or face
deadly consequences later. Do it, they exhort, or the atmosphere
will warm to the point where melting ice caps cause devastating
floods and drought-induced crop failures trigger global famine. Do
it, they admonish, so that future generations will not be forced to
live in a world permanently damaged by environmental recklessness
and an obsession with economic growth at the expense of all else.
Do it, they promise, because the costs are minimal and the benefits
incalculable.
But Americans and Congress should be responding: Is it really
this simple? Is the science behind the global warming phenomenon
this precise? Will the economic costs really be minimal? Will
countries be judged equally and fairly in the quest for "safer"
skies? Who will write the new regulations? The Kyoto Protocol to
the UNFCCC to be considered in December will impose economically
devastating, legally binding limits on U.S. citizens and
businesses. Considering the far-reaching consequences of the
treaty, the facts about climate change, greenhouse gases, and
international emissions regulations must be brought to light.
Congress, as the most accurate reflection of the will of the
American public, needs to take action now. Specifically, it
should:
-
Reaffirm and enhance the principles
outlined in Senate Resolution 98. The United States should not
sign any global climate change treaty with mandatory emission
reduction targets that fails to hold developing countries to the
same standards or results in serious harm to the U.S. economy. The
Administration should be required to submit a cost-impact statement
and an explanation of the legislative and regulatory requirements
resulting from any global warming accord requiring Senate
approval.
-
Hold the Administration accountable
through public hearings on the scientific, economic, and political
issues surrounding global warming. Well-publicized hearings
would shed light on such issues as the scientific assumptions
behind the global warming theory, the economic ramifications of
binding emissions reductions, and national sovereignty. The Clinton
Administration should be made to explain to the American people its
rationale for moving forward with negotiations on the treaty in
light of the profound lack of scientific evidence on global
warming.
-
Attend, monitor, and as much as
possible participate in international negotiations to ensure that
U.S. interests are protected. Experience shows that the Clinton
Administration cannot be trusted to be forthright with Congress on
the position it will take in treaty negotiations. Clearly, the
Administration feels free to contradict its statements before
Congress when it is negotiating abroad. Members of Congress should
attend the negotiating sessions to ensure that the Administration
adheres to all its commitments.
-
Do not agree to any treaty that is
unfavorable to U.S. interests. Any global warming treaty that
binds the United States to specific, mandatory emissions reductions
and is enforced by bureaucrats at the United Nations (U.N.) is
unacceptable. The Senate should use its constitutional power of
advice and consent to block further moves toward finalization of
the global climate treaty.
How Real is the Global Warming Threat?
As recent articles have indicated,8 it may take scientists more than a
decade to determine whether, and how, human activity may be causing
changes in the climate. Global warming and global cooling are
general historical trends. The global warming theorists believe
that man-made gases will warm the Earth's atmosphere to dangerous
levels, thereby endangering life on the planet. Although many
Americans are familiar with the topic of global warming, few
understand its scientific elements, and their understanding is
complicated by a general confusion between global warming and what
is known as the "greenhouse effect."
The term greenhouse effect refers to the Earth's release
of certain gases, called greenhouse gases, which enable the
atmosphere to retain some of the heat received from the Sun instead
of reflecting all of it back into space. These gases, which include
carbon dioxide, methane, nitrogen oxide, and water vapor, have the
same effect as the glass exterior of a greenhouse: They are able to
maintain a higher average temperature and a more even temperature
on the Earth's surface than otherwise would be the case. The
temperature created by this greenhouse effect makes plant and
animal life possible. Contrary to popular belief, all
scientists agree that the greenhouse effect is desirable. Without
it, life as it exists today would end because global temperatures
would plummet to an average of -18 degrees Celsius, or 0 degrees
Fahrenheit.
The theory of global warming (technically known as the
"enhanced greenhouse effect"), however, rests on a claim that
certain gases released by human activity will warm the planet
significantly beyond normal greenhouse levels. These gases include
carbon dioxide, other gases released naturally into the
atmosphere,9 and
chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), the man-made gases associated chiefly
with refrigeration. The supposed need for an international global
warming treaty is based on a belief that the human-released gases
so enhance the greenhouse effect that undesirable changes in
weather patterns will ensue, leading to crop failures, flooding,
and other disasters that will take decades to reverse. Thus, the
Clinton Administration would argue, to prevent the "sky from
falling," action must be taken now.10
The Lack of Scientific Consensus
The scientific community is not so certain of imminent climatic
disaster. Extensive polling of the scientific community has
revealed a continuing, deep skepticism about the looming
environmental catastrophe predicted by the media, extremist
environmental organizations, and allies of the "public interest."
In fact, over 100 noted scientists, including the former president
of the National Academy of Sciences, signed the 1995 Leipzig
Declaration stating that costly actions undertaken to reduce
greenhouse emissions are not justified by the available scientific
evidence.11
There are two major reasons that such skepticism is
justified:
First, the educated opinions of scientists increasingly
take a back seat to the agenda of politicians on this issue. In
1995, after months of extensive scientific debate and a lengthy
peer review process, a U.N. appointed commission produced an
initial draft report on the issue of global warming which concluded
that "None of the studies cited above has shown clear evidence that
we can attribute the observed changes to the specific cause of
increases in greenhouse gas emissions."12 This clearly stated conclusion must
not have pleased U.N. officials. As noted by James Sheehan of the
Competitive Enterprise Institute, between the writing of this
initial draft and the release of the final edited version, a number
of significant alterations substantially transformed the report's
tone.13 Sentences questioning
global warming theory had been deleted or changed, and new lines
inserted that pointed to a very different conclusion: "Implicit in
these global mean results is a weak attribution statement-if the
observed global mean changes over the last 20 to 50 years cannot be
fully explained by natural climate variability, some (unknown)
fraction of the changes must be due to human influences."14
Such distortions in the report were quickly condemned by a host
of leading scientific authorities. In an article for The Wall
Street Journal, former National Academy of Sciences President
Frederick Seitz argued that the changes violated standard
scientific procedures and were "a disturbing corruption of the peer
review process" which could "deceive policymakers and the public
into believing that the scientific evidence shows human activities
are causing global warming."15
Second, the scientific community has learned from its own
past record on making predictions about global warming. All too
often, its own opinion was shaped by knee-jerk reactions to
short-term weather patterns. In the 1950s, for example, the
previously obscure global warming theory gained some prominence
when the country was faced with a string of unusually hot summers.
A decade later, as temperatures dropped, a fear arose that the
increased amount of dust generated by the rising level of human
economic activity would usher the Earth into a new ice age. As a
prominent producer of scientific television documentaries observed
in a July 1995 issue of International Wildlife, "The facts
have emerged in the recent years and months, from research into
past ice ages. They imply that the threat of a new ice age must now
stand alongside nuclear war as a likely source of wholesale death
and misery for mankind."16
Science Digest declared: "At this point, the world's
climatologists are agreed on only two things: That we do not have
the comfortable distance of tens of thousands of years to prepare
for the next ice age, and that how carefully we monitor our
atmospheric pollution will have a direct bearing on the arrival and
nature of this weather crisis."17
As temperatures began to climb again in the late 1970s, the
imminent threat of a new ice age was replaced by the threat of
global warming. In June 1988, physicist James Hansen, chief of
NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies, testified before the
U.S. Senate that the full force of human-induced global warming had
arrived.18 He argued that
"global warming is now sufficiently large that we can ascribe with
a high degree of confidence a cause and effect relationship to the
greenhouse effect." In support of this argument, he predicted that
1988 would be the warmest year on record, barring any "remarkable
and improbable" cooling. Ironically, almost immediately after
Hansen made his highly publicized remarks, the "remarkable and
improbable" did occur as a massive cold front settled over Siberia,
bringing average Northern Hemisphere temperatures downward.
Considering this shaky record on forecasting global climate
changes correctly, it is understandable that caution is now the
watchword in scientific attempts to identify the problem of global
warming-if indeed there is one. As J. Murray Mitchell of the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration noted in 1976, "The
media are having a lot of fun with this situation. Whenever there
is a cold wave, they seek out a proponent of the ice-age-is-coming
school and put his theories on page one.... Whenever there is a
heat wave...they turn to his opposite number, [who predicts] a kind
of heat death of the earth."19
Taken together, these statements from the scientific community
show there is little professional consensus on global warming.
Those who wish to take a cool, critical look at the global warming
theory and the science behind climate change would do well to tune
out the hysterical predictions in the media and the gloomy warnings
of the environmental movement.
The Nebulous Myths About Global Warming
Currently, there are only two universally accepted facts that
address the theory of global warming:
First, since the dawn of the pre-industrial age around
1750, atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases such as carbon
dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide have increased by roughly 30
percent, 145 percent, and 15 percent, respectively.
Second, over the past 120 years, the average global
temperature has risen approximately 0.5 degrees Celsius, or 0.9
degrees Fahrenheit.20
There still is, however, no conclusive evidence-either
historical or scientific-linking these facts together or indicating
that they necessarily serve as a prelude to any unnatural
temperature increases in the future. Several key observations
reinforce this point:
-
Almost two-thirds of the global
temperature variation over the past 100 years actually occurred
before the post-World War II increase in CO2
emissions.21
-
Global satellite technology and
data-the most reliable measurement of climate change-have shown
that over the past 18 years, there actually has been a global
cooling of 0.09 degrees Celsius.22
-
The temperature increases already
experienced over the past 120 years are well within the natural
range of known temperature variation for the previous 15,000
years.23
|
The Use of Computer Modeling to
Predict Warming Trends
Uncertainties surround the use of
computer modeling to simulate trends in the Earth's climate in
order to predict climatic changes in the future. Currently, climate
forecasters predict global warming trends by constructing
mathematical models which recreate the global climate process as
closely as possible. After running the model, they test it by
comparing its results with the traditional climate record.
Two unresolved problems raise questions
about the validity of predictions resulting from this modeling:(1)
the lack of computer power to run a complete model and (2) an
incomplete base of knowledge of how the real climate system works.
According to an article in the May 1997 issue of Science,
there are no fewer than 14 orders of magnitude of scale in the
climate systems, ranging from the planetary scale down to the scale
of one of the little aerosol particles on which water vapor can
change phase to a liquid (or cloud particle). Currently,
researchers are only able to model the two largest orders of
magnitude: the planetary scale and the scale of weather
disturbances. In order to construct a complete climate system model
incorporating all 14 scales, researchers will need much greater
computer power than is now available. In fact, it has been
estimated that they will need 1036 to 1037
more power before the global climate change models will be
complete.
Even if there were enough computer
power available to run a complete model, researchers would still
disagree over vital climate change questions, such as the overall
impact of clouds on the Earth's climate. Robert Cess, a modeler and
cloud specialist from the State University of New York at Stony
Brook, has stated that "it's not clear to me that we have clouds
right by any stretch of the imagination."* For example, a climate model
developed at the British Meteorological Office's Hadley Center for
Climate Prediction and Research predicted that an Earth with twice
the pre-industrial level of carbon dioxide would warm by a
potentially devastating 5.2 degrees Celsius. But when the Center's
modelers subsequently made two alterations in the model's
clouds-how fast precipitation fell out of differing cloud types,
and how sunlight and radiant heat interacted with clouds-the
model's response to a doubling of carbon dioxide dropped
dramatically, from 5.2 degrees Celsius to a far more modest 1.9
degrees Celsius.
* Richard A.
Kerr, "Greenhouse Forecasting Still Cloudy," Science, Vol.
276 (May 16, 1997).
|
Indeed, the history of global climate change has always been one
of significant temperature fluctuation. The last major ice age
ended only a few thousand years ago and was followed by a series of
much warmer centuries. In the 11th century, when the Vikings
colonized Greenland, it was a thriving, verdant land with an
extensive forest covering. Only 300 years later, the Vikings
abandoned their colony as icebergs surrounded the island. An era of
cooler global temperatures lasted until the mid-19th century, when
the current period of warming began. Thus, global patterns of
temperature fluctuation are common and are very likely to
continue.
One apocalyptic claim advanced by the most obstinate advocates
of stricter emissions standards is that human-caused global warming
will create an environmental catastrophe along coastal regions
through higher sea levels and increased hurricane activity. But
this claim, too, has been called into doubt by a number of
reputable scientists, including those appointed to the U.N.
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) to study the
causes and effects of global climate warming. These scientists
pointed out that, although sea levels are indeed rising around the
globe (albeit not uniformly), they have risen over 300 feet over
the past 18,000 years-long predating any possible human impact.
Rising sea levels are a natural occurrence between ice ages; in
fact, the current rate of increase is slower than the average rate
over an 18,000-year period.
Recent data also undermine the theory that human-caused climate
changes will lead to frequent tropical cyclones or intense
hurricanes. Since the 1940s, the National Oceanographic and
Meteorological Laboratory has documented a decrease in the
intensity and number of hurricanes. From 1991 to 1995, relatively
few hurricanes occurred; even the intense 1995 hurricane season did
not reverse this downward trend.24 A 1996 IPCC report on climate change
predicted that a significant worldwide increase in tropical storms
is unlikely.25 Factors other
than ocean temperature, including wind speeds at various altitudes,
play a much larger role than previously thought. Therefore, while
some regions may experience an increase in storm activity in the
future, others are just as likely to experience a decrease.26
A report published in the U.N.'s Climate Change Bulletin
said that of 400 climate scientists surveyed in Germany, Canada,
and the United States, the vast majority could not agree with the
statement that "global warming is a process that is already
underway." In Canada, 67 percent of the climate scientists could
not agree with that statement; in Germany, 87 percent of the
scientists could not agree with it; and in the United States, 97
percent could not agree with a statement that global warming is
already occurring.27 With such
uncertainty surrounding the theory on which international global
warming policy is based, the wisdom of committing the United States
to a potentially economically debilitating course of action is at
best questionable. Considering that a 1995 analysis by
climatologists T. M. L. Wigley, R. Richels, and J. A. Edmonds
concluded that world governments could wait up to 25 years to take
action without inflicting any additional harm on the
environment,28 the Clinton
Administration's pressure to sign on to the Kyoto Protocol should
be a concern. Congress should insist that the government take the
time necessary to perfect the science of measuring the impact of
emissions on climate before it accepts the new global agreement's
emissions standards.
The Current Governing Agreements
Since 1992, the driving force behind the international movement
to impose further restrictions on emissions of carbon dioxide and
other greenhouse gases has been the United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). Signed by the United States,
the European Economic Community (EEC), and the representatives of
over 150 countries following the U.N. Conference on Environment and
Development (the Rio Earth Summit), the Convention entered into
force in March 1994. Its ultimate goal was to stabilize the
atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases at levels that will
prevent interference in the climate system.
The U.N. Framework Convention on Climate
Change
The 1992 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
committed 36 "Annex I" countries (generally, the industrialized
world) and the European Community29 to a non-binding goal of reducing
greenhouse gas emissions to 1990 levels by the year 2000
(seeAppendix). "Annex II" countries, however, including India,
China, Brazil, Indonesia, and South Korea, were not given any
specific emissions reduction goals. Instead, Annex II countries
would be required only to report "emissions inventories" of
greenhouse gases. Furthermore, only Annex I countries would be
responsible for financing the implementation of the UNFCCC and for
providing developing nations with the necessary technical
assistance to reduce their greenhouse gases as they industrialize
their economies.30 Althoughthe
UNFCCC instituted only voluntary goals, the Clinton Administration
and various environmental groups have acted as if they were
binding.
The Administration's U.S. Climate Change Action Plan
In October 1993, the Clinton Administration unveiled the U.S.
Climate Change Action Plan (CCAP), the domestic policy blueprint
for U.S. compliance with the UNFCCC. Though the goal of reaching
1990 emissions levels by the year 2000 was non-binding, the CCAP
established the government's intention to meet this goal. The CCAP
requires both increased federal spending and increased federal
regulatory activity and includes a broad range of initiatives
designed primarily to encourage companies and households-by
persuasion, by education, and in some instances by compulsion-to
reduce greenhouse gas emissions such as carbon dioxide and methane.
These reductions would be accomplished by such means as reducing
energy consumption (which produces greenhouse gases) and limiting
methane releases from dumps or landfills.
In all, the CCAP included 44 different initiatives ranging from
mandates that household appliances and buildings be more energy
efficient to increased government funding of the Green Lights
Program, an educational program of the Bush Administration to show
companies how they could reduce energy consumption and save money.
Other initiatives aimed at persuading companies to reduce emissions
without legislative mandates included federally funded programs on
Source Reduction, Pollution Reduction, and Recycling. One
initiative even sought to reduce methane emissions by regulating
cow flatulence (through improved techniques of beef
production).31
The costs of the Administration's Climate Change Action Plan
have been estimated to be much higher than the official
Administration estimates of $63.4 billion.32 It is also projected that emissions
will be 13 percent or more above the promised target.33 Yet in spite of the government's best
efforts, it is becoming more likely that the United States, along
with most of the other Annex I countries, will be unable to reach
the goal of 1990 emissions levels by the year 2000.
The Road to Kyoto
The Berlin Mandate
Despite progress toward the voluntary emissions goals, the
representatives at the first Conference of Parties to the UNFCCC
(COP-1), which had convened in Berlin in 1995 to track progress
under the terms established at Rio de Janeiro in 1992, decided that
voluntary provisions were not effective and began to consider
legally binding commitments. Though no substantive changes in the
UNFCCC were adopted in Berlin, several significant steps toward
legally binding emissions requirements were taken. Under the new
guidelines, Annex I countries reaffirmed their goal to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions to 1990 levels by the year 2000. Further,
the Annex I countries pledged to implement policies sufficient to
meet specific limitation and reduction objectives within declared
deadlines. The Berlin Mandate also chastised Annex I countries for
not sending financial and technical assistance in support of treaty
objectives to the Annex II countries as previously agreed.
The Berlin Mandate created a subsidiary Convention body-the Ad
Hoc Group on the Berlin Mandate, or AGBM-and tasked it with
negotiating the terms of the post-2000 treaty and setting the
agenda for future meetings on the UNFCCC. Since its inception, the
AGBM has met every few months to reach an agreement for
presentation at the upcoming third Conference of Parties (COP-3) in
Kyoto on December 1, 1997.
The Clinton Administration officially announced U.S. support of
mandatory, legally binding emissions controls at the July 1996
COP-2 meeting in Geneva, convened to consider the Second Scientific
Assessment Report of the IPCC. This support for legally binding
commitments essentially ended any possibility of keeping emissions
controls voluntary. As a result, any UNFCCC agreement reached in
Kyoto is likely to contain language that would impose mandatory
emissions restrictions on Annex I countries. These controls could
include carbon taxes or new regulations created to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions. Despite growing levels of emissions from
Annex II countries, as part of the developing world, these
countries would be exempt from mandatory emissions controls.
The Clinton Administration's Compulsory Emissions Controls
Proposal
The Ad Hoc Group negotiations have created a new series of
divisions, both within the United States and with its traditional
European allies. At home, the Clinton Administration caused a stir
by abandoning a long-held U.S. position supporting voluntary
emissions reductions in favor of a new proposal including
compulsory emissions controls. Currently, the Administration
insists that five key components must be included in any global
warming treaty emerging from the Kyoto conference. These
components, based on a series of principles announced at COP-2 and
elaborated in early 1997, require:
-
The creation of compulsory "emissions
budgets"for industrialized countries. Details such as the size or
duration of these budgets are not clear, although multiple
emissions budget periods would be created and would include a
second period in which emissions must be equal to or less than the
first period to ensure continued progress toward the Convention's
objective.
-
The ability of countries to "bank,"
"borrow," or "trade" emissions under an international emissions
permit system. "Joint implementation" would be provided to allow
countries without emissions budgets to create and transfer
emissions reduction "credits" achieved by qualified projects.
-
Strengthening the obligations of
developing countries by encouraging them to adopt the emissions
budgets voluntarily; requiring them to identify and adopt measures
to mitigate net greenhouse gas emissions (the so-called no-regrets
measures that can be justified without regard to their role in
reducing greenhouse gas emissions); and establishing a process for
reviewing country reports and improving emissions reduction
strategies.
-
Setting a specific date by which all
parties, including developing countries, would incur emissions
obligations.
-
The establishment of both a long-term
goal and an occasional review of the agreement as scientific
understanding of the issue of global climate change expands.34
Although it is comprehensive, the Administration's proposal does
not address several crucial details, perhaps because its staff
failed to reach consensus on those issues. The most glaring
omission pertains to the question of the size and duration of
emissions budgets-a major point of contention within the
Administration as well as with various member states of the
European Union (EU). Although such agencies as the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) and member states of the EU push for a
shorter three-year budget period, economic agencies within the U.S.
government such as the Treasury and Energy Departments promote a
longer timetable of, say, ten years in order to provide the maximum
level of flexibility as countries attempt to adapt to the new
climate change requirements. The EU has proposed an eventual
reduction of carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide emissions
to 15 percent below 1990 levels by 2010. The Administration has not
supported this proposal, and is more likely to push for fewer
mandatory reductions.
Meanwhile, members of the Alliance of Small Island States
(AOSIS) want to go even further than the EU, claiming they will
face the most severe danger if global warming leads to higher ocean
levels. AOSIS members are pushing for stabilization of greenhouse
gases at 20 percent below 1990 levels by 2005, a scenario which is
highly improbable given the costs it would force on Annex I states.
Finally, such countries as Australia and Norway take an entirely
different route, proposing a system of differentiated targets for
reducing greenhouse gases, which would mean that overall reduction
targets would be allocated among the developed states according to
their individual circumstances.35 Thus, even at this late point, there
is no consensus on how to proceed in finalizing the UNFCCC.
What's at Stake for the United States
Despite a combination of low inflation, increased productivity,
and relatively low unemployment, the U.S. economy is holding at a
stable but historically low growth rate of 2 percent. However, even
this modest economic growth could not be maintained under the
UNFCCC. New emissions control standards would raise electricity
prices by from 40 percent to 50 percent, the price of gasoline by
70 cents per gallon, and the cost of primary metals from 4 percent
to 10 percent, in addition to causing massive layoffs.36 The economic consequences of moving
forward on the proposed post-2000 global warming treaty would be
devastating for Americans. In fact, a study performed by the
Argonne National Laboratory for the U.S. Department of
Energy37 in February 1997
predicted that the protocol now being discussed would cause:
-
20 to 30 percent of the basic chemical
industry to move to developing countries within 15 or 20 years;
-
All primary aluminum smelters to close
by 2010;
-
A 30 percent decline in the number of
steel producers at a cost of 100,000 jobs;
-
Domestic paper production to be
displaced by imports;
-
A 20 percent reduction in the output of
petroleum refiners; and
-
The closing of between 23 percent and
35 percent of the cement industry, which is significant because
many cement plants are major employers in small communities.
The Clinton Administration suppressed this study for several
months, and it continues to be ignored. The Clinton Administration
is trying to debunk the use of economic modeling to capture the
magnitude of the treaty's economic impacts. Recently, the
Administration's Interagency Analytical Team released a draft
report entitled "Economic Effects of Global Climate Change
Policies." The study was supposed to determine the economic impact
of the Kyoto Protocol, but the team failed to reach any
conclusions. Janet Yellen, chairman of the President's Council of
Economic Advisers, testified before Congress that "the effort to
develop a model or a set of models that can give us a definitive
answer as to the economic impacts of a given climate change policy
is futile."38 Amazingly, even as the
Administration is dismissing the use of economic models because
their output is a function of the assumptions put into them, it
holds up its own global warming models-which function precisely the
same way, with output dependent on assumptions-as gospel truth, not
subject to question or debate.
The Treasury Department, however, recently raised concerns about
the economic impact of the Administration's plan to achieve
mandatory reductions in greenhouse gas emissions by establishing
emissions budgets for the UNFCCC parties and allowing them to buy
and sell emissions rights among themselves. It is also concerned
about the amount the United States would have to pay for emitting
carbon dioxide and about the potential financial costs of
purchasing permits.39 Regardless
of how the Administration chooses to implement the emissions
targets, it will be a no-win proposition for the U.S. economy.
The Economic Fallout: Higher Costs, Lower
GDP
The Administration has proposed using tradable permits as the
mechanism for allocating a targeted level of greenhouse gas
emissions. The permit system could be an entirely domestic program
or an international program. An alternative to a tradable permit
structure would be a direct tax on the carbon emitted from each
unit of fossil fuel used. If the tradable permit scheme and the
carbon tax system are able to limit emissions to the same level,
then the market price of a permit should equal the carbon tax.
Based on this supposition, several studies have tried to
estimate the economic impact of a permit scheme. According to a
recent analysis completed by WEFA, Inc.,40 for example, in order to meet the
targeted emissions level, domestic tradable carbon permit fees of
$200 per metric ton would be required by 2010. More
specifically:
Achieving a dramatic reduction in carbon emissions would require
substantial investments by both consumers and businesses to improve
energy efficiency and to substitute low carbon energy sources for
higher carbon energy sources. Because energy-using equipment and
facilities have a long life, a great deal of equipment would be
replaced long before it would have been without carbon permit fees.
These investments would require the diversion of funds from savings
and/or investments, which would have provided other benefits such
as education, health care, or new productive equipment, etc.41
Based on its analysis, WEFA concludes that under the
Administration's plan:
-
Lost aggregate income (GDP) in the year
2010 alone would be more than $227 billion (in 1992 dollars),
approximately equal to the country's total federal, state, and
local expenditures on elementary and secondary education.
-
The cumulative loss in real GDP to the
United States from 2001 to 2020 would amount to $3.3 trillion.
Rising energy costs would put the economy on a permanently lower
growth path.
-
Carbon emissions are projected to be 27
percent above 1990 levels by 2010 and 46 percent above 1990 levels
by 2020. Stabilizing U.S. carbon emissions would have only a
"minuscule" impact on global concentrations of carbon (see Chart
1).

To meet target emissions levels,
intra-country tradable carbon permit fees of $200 per metric ton
would be required in 2010. Consumers would see price increases of
30 percent to 5 percent over baseline projections by 2010 and 40
percent to 90 percent by 2020 (see Table 1).

Whether on a per-person or
per-household basis, the cost of adopting the Administration's
carbon reduction policy would be great. Real GDP loss would peak in
2010 at $838 per person and $2,061 per household (see Table 2).
Cumulatively, between the years 2001 and 2020, the loss of
aggregate income per household would average almost $30,000.

Because average household expenditures
on energy are regressive, lower income groups spend a higher
proportion of their income on energy. Energy price hikes will hit
these families the hardest. Absent any changes in current
consumption patterns, the average increase in home energy
expenditures would be around $600 per year.
In addition to the WEFA report that analyzes the impact of
carbon permit fees, other studies show the economic impact of a
carbon tax. For example, Dr. Lawrence Horowitz of DRI/McGraw Hill
calculates that under a carbon tax of $200 per metric ton, an
option necessary to ensure that carbon dioxide emissions stabilize
below the 1990 levels, GDP would decline by 4.2 percent, or $350
billion a year in reduced production of goods and services. In
human terms, this translates into the loss of 1.1 million U.S. jobs
each year over a 15-year period.Even
if the carbon tax or the tradable permit price were cut in half to
$100 per metric ton (which still would leave U.S. emissions
considerably above 1990 levels in the year 2010), the result would
be painful. It would reduce GDP by 2.3 percent, or $203 billion,
and cost 520,000 jobs annually.43 Rising energy costs will put the
economy on a permanently lower growth path.
Huge Pains, But No Environmental Gain
All Pain
Increased carbon taxes or tradable permits for energy use will
increase the cost of fuel and translate into higher prices for
food, clothing, shelter, medical needs, education, appliances and
household goods, savings, and insurance. Fewer dollars will be
available for daily needs as more money is spent on utilities and
transportation. The annual electric bill would increase from about
$858 to $1,166. The annual consumer cost of gasoline would increase
from $913 to $1,106.44 The annual
consumer grocery bill would increase from $8,424 to $8,677.
Wesleyan University economist Gary Yohe has predicted that under
the carbon tax, consumers might "feel like" they were living
through the oil price shocks of the 1970s all over again. Global
warming policies will cause "relatively large losses" of real
income in the poorest 20 percent of the population because the poor
pay a larger share of their income for utilities and fuel
costs.45
The effects across the United States will vary in severity, with
a greater impact on the regions that depend heavily on fossil fuels
for energy production. Texas, for example, would be hit
particularly hard because the fossil fuels of coal, oil, and
natural gas supply 96.2 percent of its total energy needs. Average
per capita energy consumption in Texas in 1994 was 65.2 percent
higher than the national average, largely because of the state's
energy-intensive industrial and agricultural activities. Increases
in taxes on motor fuels of 50 cents per gallon would add at least
$5.368 billion to Texans' annual transportation costs. The higher
costs of these fuels for businesses, government agencies, and
schools also would be passed on to the consumer through higher
prices and taxes. People over the age of 65 and on fixed incomes
would be especially hard-hit. Texas would be forced to reduce its
85 percent dependence on coal and natural gas to generate its
electricity without having economical alternative sources of energy
available. Other sources are not likely to become available in the
foreseeable future.46 Hence, in
considering the economic impact of the global treaty, Congress
should pay special attention to the impact it is likely to have on
each state.
As alarming as the economic consequences are, the United States
also stands to suffer substantial loss of life if this treaty is
adopted. Studies linking income to mortality find that every $9
million to $12 million drop in income induces one statistical
death. As noted earlier, the WEFA study concluded that the U.S.
economy would suffer a cumulative $3.3 trillion loss of income
between 2001 and 2020 if the treaty is adopted. Thus, the estimated
loss of income from this treaty would lead directly to between
275,000 and 366,666 lives lost. There also are indirect costs in
lives from such an agreement. For example, assuming that treaty
restrictions on greenhouse gas emissions will affect automobile
fuel efficiency standards and result in higher gas mileage
standards, auto makers will be forced to build increasingly smaller
and lighter cars and trucks. As experience in the wake of the
Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) standards has shown, such
"fuel-efficient" vehicles offer far lower safety protection for
their occupants. The current 27.5 miles per gallon fuel economy
standard already has been linked to the deaths of between 2,700 to
4,700 Americans a year.47 Raising
the standard to 45 miles per gallon as Vice President Albert Gore
and greenhouse activists propose may increase the number of
needless deaths as vehicles become far more unsafe for their
occupants.
No Environmental or Economic Gain
As Americans are forced to suffer under a strict energy diet
and the economic burden of mandatory emissions reduction targets,
the lack of binding emissions requirements on developing countries
means they cannot be guaranteed that their sacrifices will prove
beneficial to themselves or the environment. A February 20, 1997,
statement from the AFL-CIO Executive Council speaks to this
point:
[T]he parties to the Rio treaty made a fundamental error when
they agreed to negotiate legally-binding carbon restrictions on the
United States and other industrialized countries, while
simultaneously agreeing to exempt high-growth developing countries
like China, Mexico, Brazil, and Korea from any new carbon reduction
commitments. As much as 60 percent of global carbon emissions are
expected to come from such countries in the next few decades, with
China becoming the single-largest emitter in the near future. The
exclusion of new commitments by developing nations under the Berlin
Mandate will create a powerful incentive for transnational
corporations to export jobs, capital, and pollution, and will do
little or nothing to stabilize atmospheric concentrations of
carbon.48

Indeed, instead of curbing greenhouse gas emissions, a carbon
tax that is restricted to developed countries alone may actually
increase emissions. A recent report from the Center for the Study
of American Business (CSAB) concludes that placing a carbon tax
solely on industrialized states and not on developing states will
result in a net increase in total worldwide greenhouse gas
emissions.49 There is a sound economic
rationale behind this statement: If stricter emissions reduction
standards become law in the industrialized nations, the total
consumption of carbon-emitting goods will decline. Therefore, the
price of goods such as oil can be expected to decline as well. The
lower prices of these goods, however, will encourage the poorer
developing countries with much less fuel-efficient technology to
increase their use of fossil fuels. This increased consumption,
combined with the anticipated relocation of fossil fuel intensive
industries to Annex II countries-a process referred to as "carbon
leakage"-will result in the anticipated net increase.
As the CSAB report points out, the U.S. share of greenhouse gas
emissions is expected to shrink from 20 percent to 10 percent.
Moreover, under current conditions, it is expected that annual
emissions from Annex II countries will exceed emissions from Annex
I countries by 2016. It is further projected that Annex II
emissions will amount to 52 percent of all global emissions by 2020
and that, by the year 2100, developing countries will emit 75
percent of all greenhouse gases.50
This trend will be exacerbated by the terms of the agreement now
under negotiation. If the proposals being negotiated by the U.N.
and promoted by the Clinton Administration are implemented, the new
requirements would place the United States at a competitive
disadvantage because the specific emissions reductions levels are
not equally binding on developing countries like China, Mexico, and
South Korea that have lower labor and production costs.51 Industries will rush to these countries, to
Brazil, and to the rest of the unregulated world.52 Therefore, excluding Annex II countries
from the legally binding requirements of the proposed treaty is
fundamentally unfair to American workers and will be economically
devastating to all the economies of the developed world.
Renewable Energy Sources: No "Magic
Bullets"
The Clinton Administration clearly tries to indicate that taxes
and regulation can be implemented with little pain. According to
this view, implementing emissions trading, conservation measures,
and technology will make economic costs disappear as if by magic.
But this ignores reality: Alternatives to fossil fuels cost more to
use. If conservation measures were cost-effective, the market would
need no encouragement from government to adopt them.53
A three-decades-long environmental crusade in Washington known
as "eco-energy planning" upholds the premise that government
intervention in the energy market is necessary to maximize
environmental protection, improve the choices of millions of
economic agents in the free market, and, in the end, increase the
nation's economic vitality. Eco-energy planning requires taxpayer
and ratepayer subsidies as well as government mandates for
renewable energy generation. But the broad assumption underlying
this crusade is faulty. According a recent report published by the
Cato Institute, today's renewable energy plants produce electricity
that is, on average, twice as expensive as electricity from
the most economical fossil-fuel alternative and three times
as expensive as surplus electricity. Not only are renewable energy
sources not economically efficient, but every major renewable
energy source has drawn criticism from environmental groups: hydro
for river habitat destruction, wind generators for avian mortality,
solar for desert overdevelopment, biomass for air emissions, and
geothermal for depletion and toxic discharges.54
Wind Power at Triple the Cost
The baby of the eco-energy planners is wind power. Marketed as
the renewable energy source with no air pollution, this source has
been deemed worthy of regulatory preference and taxpayer and
ratepayer subsidy. However, the price for wind power in the
mid-1990s is around six to seven cents per kilowatt hour when the
production tax credit and other subtle cost items are included.
This is approximately twice the cost of new gas-fired
electricity generation and three times the cost of existing
underused generation.55 Wind-generated
power is a noisy and aesthetic blight, land and material (concrete
and steel) intensive, and deadly to thousands of birds that fly in
the path of the high-speed blades.56
Although wind generators are not without promise, market forces,
not government subsidies, should bring the cost of wind power
generation down to the point where it is both an environmentally
attractive and viable source of energy.
Solar Power at Quadruple the Cost
New solar-power capacity is even more costly than wind
power-three times as expensive as new gas-fired electricity
generation and four times as expensive as surplus
power.57 Central-station solar
requires between five to 17 acres per megawatt generated, compared
with gas-fired plants that a decade ago required only one-third of
an acre per megawatt and today average as little as 0.04 acre per
megawatt.58 The Department of Energy
has spent approximately $5.1 billion (in 1996 dollars) on solar
energy since fiscal year 1978, or over $12 million per megawatt.
That investment per unit of capacity is some 20 times greater than
today's capital cost of modern gas-fired plants.59
Other Renewable Energy Sources at Greater Cost
Biomass is electricity generated from burning a variety of
sources, such as wood, sludge, municipal solid waste, and other
waste products. Today, wood accounts for over 60 percent of input
for biomass-a figure that ordinarily would outrage
environmentalists. But since biomass combustion is a renewable
energy source, thanks to reforestation efforts, its use is
acceptable to environmentalists.60
Biomass is economically inefficient, however. Even the projected
research and development goal of four cents to five cents per
kilowatt hour is higher than the cost of the new gas-fired
electricity generation and roughly double the price of
surplus electricity.61 Like wind and
solar power, biomass currently is an economically inefficient
alternative to fossil fuel.
Geothermal refers to steam energy generated by the Earth's core.
It has been proclaimed by many as the environmentally sound
alternative power source for the next 30 years.62 Currently, geothermal accounts for 0.5
percent of national power production, far below anticipated output.
It not only is a scarce source, but also has negative environmental
consequences despite the absence of combustion. Geothermal sites
are often located in protected wilderness areas, and depletion can
occur where more steam is withdrawn than is naturally
rechargeable.63
The Importance of Competition
Although the current costs of generating power through
alternative energy technology are high, the argument is frequently
made that current subsidies eventually will bring prices to a level
competitive with conventional sources. This is unlikely, however,
because market competition is far stronger than protectionism as a
motivating factor in technological advance and price reduction.
Competitive energy resources consistently have provided lower
prices than protected sources.64
Changes in consumer demand and technology make what is uneconomical
today economical in the future. As a study by Shell International
predicts, the primary source of energy in the next 50 to 100 years
will be renewable sources.65 If
central-station power from wind, solar, or other renewable sources
becomes economically viable on its own merits, businesses and
consumers will embrace it.
The ideal way to achieve energy affordability, environmental
benignity, and resource security is simply to remove government
intervention from the marketplace. Allowing the market to favor the
types of energy that meet society's needs most economically will be
the best incentive for developing truly economical alternatives to
the power sources in use today.
Economic Winners and Losers Around the World
A global climate change treaty with enforceable restrictions on
emissions would impose massive economic hardship on the global
economy. For example, the Australian Bureau of Agricultural and
Resource Economics (ABARE) has estimated that adopting such a
treaty would curb global GDP growth and result in a 0.8 percent to
1.1 percent reduction in total world output in 2020 below the
baseline. The World Bank estimates that the global economy will
grow at an average of 2.9 percent from 1992 to 2020.66 Based on ABARE estimates, including legally
binding emissions restrictions in the UNFCCC would cause a
reduction in economic growth in 2020 by one-third. In dollar terms,
this would be a loss of between $463.3 billion and $637.1
billion.67
The actual costs of the treaty's implementation, however, will
be much greater. The treaty will retard economic production every
year after it is implemented. Assuming that reduction in production
remains constant at 1.1 percent of global GDP growth from 1998 to
2020, the cumulative effects could exceed $10 trillion.68 ABARE's economic analysis shows that the
economic effects on the industrialized countries will be
particularly severe. Annex I (industrialized) countries would
suffer a 1 percent to 1.5 percent decrease in GDP growth, while the
developing countries of Annex II would experience only a 0.2
percent to 0.5 percent reduction in output in 2020 from the
baseline.
Different economic configurations and reliance on trade,
however, will make the effects deviate from country to county
within the two country categories. Decreases in production result
from several sources. As the Annex I countries reduce fossil fuel
consumption, costs of production and consumer prices will increase
and trade in fossil fuels and fossil-fuel-intensive products, such
as steel, will decrease. The resulting reduction in economic
activity decreases consumption, wages, and demand for labor and
capital. In addition, fossil-fuel-intensive industries will
relocate to Annex II countries. Annex I countries that export
fossil fuel (particularly coal) and have significant
fossil-fuel-intensive manufacturing sectors will need to modify
their power generation facilities to reduce emissions. Large
exporters of products that emit high levels of greenhouse gases
would be affected more detrimentally than those that export less or
not at all.
The United States is only one of the countries that would endure
sharp economic penalties from implementation of this treaty. Other
major losers include Australia, New Zealand, and Japan. The ABARE
analysis indicates that Australia would experience the worst
economic damage from the treaty. Australia exports large quantities
of fossil-fuel-intensive products, such as steel and aluminum, and
relies heavily on coal for electricity. As a result, its projected
growth in greenhouse gas emissions would exceed the Annex I country
average, generating greater costs for treaty compliance than for
all other countries. The Australian economy would be hurt by the
decreasing demand for fossil fuels-especially coal, one of
Australia's largest exports.69
New Zealand and Japan also would be affected adversely. New
Zealand's coal-intensive electricity sector would be hit hard by
the increasing prices for fossil-fuel-intensive imports.70 Japan already has invested large amounts of
capital in renovating its industrial sector to reduce its
dependence on fossil fuels. The treaty would require additional
investment and render new facilities obsolete.71
The Annex I countries least affected would be the former Soviet
Union and countries in the European Community. For example, ABARE
estimates that the welfare loss for a European is one-sixth that of
an American and 1/22 that of an Australian.72 Furthermore, although wages in the European
Community would be required to fall by 4 percent to absorb
unemployment generated as a result of the treaty, wages in
Australia would have to fall 19 percent below the baseline. These
comparatively lower economic costs for the European Community and
the former Soviet Union may explain their support for the treaty.
Annex II countries also would suffer from the higher costs of
production in industrialized countries, which would increase the
prices of Annex I exports. And interest rates would likely
increase, thereby raising the debt burden of Annex II
countries.
The detrimental effects of the treaty, however, will be
mitigated by industrial relocation from the Annex I countries.
Under the terms of the treaty, the developing countries will have a
competitive advantage over industrialized countries because of the
exemption from greenhouse gas emissions restrictions. This
exemption will lead Annex I greenhouse gas emissions-intensive
industries, such as steel, chemical, and mineral refining, to
relocate to Annex II countries. This shift will increase both their
domestic production and exports of fossil-fuel-intensive
products.73
As with Annex I countries, there will be winners and losers
among the Annex II countries. An independent study conducted by
WEFA74 demonstrates that the treaty
will benefit the Asian Tigers and other relatively wealthy
developing countries and cripple the economies of fossil fuel
exporters in the developing world. Specifically, if the treaty were
implemented in its current form, South Korea, Taiwan, and Mexico
could be expected to experience an increase of 5 percent in annual
GDP growth. Argentina, Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, Hong Kong,
the Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand would experience increases
of as much as 2 percent in annual GDP growth. Meanwhile, the WEFA
model also indicates that Algeria, Chile, Colombia, Egypt, and
Venezuela would suffer 2 percent to 5 percent reductions in annual
GDP growth, and Ecuador, Nigeria, Peru, and Saudi Arabia would
suffer a decrease of more than 5 percent.75
Economic predictions show that the overall impact of the treaty
will be a net decline in global economic growth, resulting in
massive loss of wealth and a decline in general welfare. However,
these damaging effects will not be distributed equitably.
Specifically, the European Community, the former Soviet Union, and
most of the wealthier developing countries would suffer minor
effects relative to other countries. These other countries, which
stand to be hurt the most by the global climate treaty, should
recognize the support accorded the treaty by the EC, the former
Soviet Union, and wealthy developing countries for what it is: pure
self-interest.
Sacrificing U.S. Sovereignty to an Unknown International
Bureaucracy
The Kyoto conference will consider the issues of monitoring,
regulation, and enforcement of emissions targets. The Berlin
Mandate altered the focus of emissions goals for Annex I
countriesfrom voluntary reductions to mandatory reductions subject
to enforcement. Treaty participants have yet to specify what
mechanisms for enforcement of these reductions would be used or
what system of incentives for compliance would be created. This is
a critical shortcoming because enforcement would have a direct
impact on the practical effects of the treaty; yet no consensus has
been reached on how to address the problem, even though it is a
major agenda item in Kyoto.
The Unworkable U.S. Proposal
Recognizing the shortcomings in the UNFCCC, the Clinton
Administration has recommended that the treaty operate on an "honor
system" with respect to monitoring and enforcement. This proposal,
which would be adopted in Kyoto, essentially would set up a panel
of independent experts to review the required reports submitted by
the countries. The panel would evaluate the information provided by
states on treaty compliance and progress in reducing greenhouse gas
emissions, and issue its own reports with performance summaries and
recommended action for cases of non-compliance. The Administration
has suggested that these actions include either predetermined
penalties, such as fines, or leaving the action up to the
discretion of individual countries.
The Administration's proposal on monitoring and compliance is
unlikely either to enforce treaty restrictions or to create
sufficient disincentives if violations are reported because it
relies on nations to police themselves-an obvious conflict of
interest. Countries that were in violation of their targets could
not be expected to provide accurate information; they or their
domestic industries would be punished. They would be more likely to
understate a violation or refuse to report it. This likelihood is
greater with the increasing austerity of the penalties. For this
reason, predetermined penalties are less likely to be severe;
countries that fear they may be subject to them are not going to
suggest severe penalties.
A Powerful New International Bureaucracy
Although the U.S. proposal on monitoring, regulation, and
enforcement of emissions standards is weak, the alternative would
work against the best interests of the United States. Under the
present agreement, the United Nations will have the authority to
dictate U.S. energy policy. It may be given the authority to
monitor U.S. industries for compliance and to enforce its policies
as well. If nations are not to monitor and enforce greenhouse gas
emissions restrictions, either a new international bureaucracy must
be established to perform these duties or the duties must be given
to an existing international institution. In all likelihood, the
institution would be affiliated with the U.N.
To carry out its duties, the designated institution would need
access to the sources of greenhouse gas emissions in Annex I
countries-namely, businesses and even national defense
bases.76 This would be a costly
undertaking. For instance, annual operation expenses for the
inspection regime instituted by the Chemical Weapons Convention are
estimated at approximately $200 million.77 Although the UNFCCC would require a similar
system for carrying out inspections, it would have to be much
larger and more expensive because greenhouse gas emissions are much
more prevalent than potential sources of chemicals for warfare.
The UNFCCC would place an expensive regulatory burden on
business-in addition to the already huge costs of capital
investment or relocation that the treaty would require-because of
the numerous reports and inspections required for accurate
monitoring. Estimates of the annual regulatory cost to businesses
because of the CWC inspection regime, for example, range from $20
million to $200 million.78 Because the
scope of the UNFCCC is much greater than that of the CWC, its
regulatory costs are likely to be much greater as well.
Finally, the fact that an international inspection regime might
be exempt from U.S. constitutional restrictions on search and
seizure of private records of businesses should alarm policymakers.
So should the fact that industrial secrets will be at greater risk
of espionage since international inspectors would have free access
throughout a business or military facility. Neither of these
concerns is addressed adequately in the treaty.
By creating an international institution charged with enforcing
the treaty and empowered to mete out punishments, the signatory
states imply that they are willing to sacrifice their supreme
authority on the global stage. They would subsume national
sovereignty to an institution that is responsible neither to any
nation nor to any individual. As one chief executive officer told
the International Conservative Congress in Washington, D.C., in
September 1997, "The crucial issue at Kyoto is not an agreement on
1%, 5%, or 15% [reduction in greenhouse gas emissions]. It is
whether or not the OECD nations will agree to establishing an
institution which will super-cede the authority of the
nation-state."79
Neither of the options for enforcement is desirable. Relying on
nations to monitor and punish themselves is undermined by conflict
of interest. Establishing an international institution with the
power to dictate and compel action by nation-states is the first
step toward establishing a global government and, ultimately,
destroying the nation-state. Therefore, agreeing to the treaty
without a concrete statement of how the treaty will be enforced
would be a mistake.
Jeopardizing U.S. Military Readiness
The treaty's likely impact on the ability of the United States
to defend itself does not appear to have been considered fully by
the Clinton Administration. The U.S. Department of Defense is the
largest domestic consumer of fossil fuels. Under the treaty, U.S.
military bases could be subject to U.N. inspection. Opportunities
for military espionage increase if international representatives
are allowed to inspect U.S. planes, ships, and tanks to ensure that
they meet emissions standards.
As Center for Security Policy Director Frank Gaffney, Jr.,
recently pointed out, this mandate could have several serious
consequences for the United States: (1) U.S. military readiness
would have to be subordinated to ozone impact; (2) realistic
training, already suffering from the cumulative effects of budget
cuts, would be cut further to keep emissions down; and (3) military
hardware would have to be redesigned with fuel efficiency as a
major concern. "For example," notes Gaffney, "the thickness of a
tank's armor, the size of its gunor the speed with which it can
maneuver will no longer be the critical criterion. From now on the
Army will have to buy smaller, lighter weight machines in the
interest of reducing emissions."80
Moreover, the use of fossil fuel by the military increases when the
United States engages in conflict. Would the United States have to
ask the U.N. for permission to go to war if such action involved
emissions in violation of the UNFCCC? Despite such concerns and
warnings, the Clinton Administration is thinking of issuing an
executive order to require federal agencies, including the
Department of Defense, to reduce their greenhouse gas
emissions.
Feeding an Insatiable Appetite for Power
Both the desire to be the ultimate authority on any number of
matters and a distaste for being held responsible to any individual
nation are endemic in many U.N. institutions. For example,
Elizabeth Dowdeswell, executive director of the U.N. Environment
Programme (UNEP), recently demanded that UNEP "be equipped and
empowered to assume the role as the authoritative voice for the
environment. For this to happen, the debate on governance must be
resolved-and resolved quickly. Until it is, financial contributions
from some governments may be withheld and UNEP's work for the
environment would suffer."81 It is
clear from this statement that UNEP does not believe that nations
should be able to influence its "work" or have a voice in whether
funding is provided. The fact that a country can hinder UNEP by
rescinding its financial support is perceived as an affront to
UNEP's authority rather than as an expression of that country's
sovereign right to discourage activities it deems undesirable.
This desire for power and access to the funding necessary to
dictate to nation-states is frequently accompanied by an agency's
ever-expanding agenda. For example, the agenda at the 19th session
of the UNEP Governing Council included plans to expand the Global
Programme of Action for the Protection of the Marine Environment
from Land Based Activities to all regional seas, create an
instrument to force reductions in organic pollutants, and create
another instrument to supervise international trade in "hazardous
chemicals and pesticides."82
U.N. involvement in environmental matters is on the rise, and
the organization is using the current series of international
treaties, conventions, and agreements to expand its influence into
domestic affairs. According to James Gustave Speth, executive
director of the U.N. Development Program, "global governance is a
powerful and growing reality [that] will inevitably expand."83 There currently are 12 multilateral
environmental treaties registered at the U.N. (see Table 3). The
crown jewel of these arrangements is the U.N. Framework Convention
on Climate Change, which, as Speth observes, will become more
far-reaching and powerful than the World Trade Organization.
The U.N. and other advocates of global governance, however,
cannot act unilaterally. The active support (or careless
indifference) of national governments is necessary. States, as
representatives of their citizens, are the sources of sovereignty
and all global power. Unless they grant some of this power to
international institutions like the U.N., dreams of global
government remain only dreams.

What Congress Must Do
Considering the devastating economic consequences that can be
expected to flow from adoption of this treaty, and without clear
evidence that global warming is, in fact, taking place, Congress
should strive to bring common sense to the planning process. It
makes no sense to place the United States and other developed
countries under legally binding mandates while developing countries
are excused with only a promise to negotiate their terms later.
Over the next 20 years, these countries will become the world's
greatest producers of greenhouse gas emissions. By the year 2015,
China will be the world's largest producer of greenhouse gas; yet
it faces no restrictions under the UNFCCC. This is
unacceptable.
The problem with discussing global warming in general is that no
one knows whether it truly poses either a national or global
threat; if it does, no one can agree on how large that threat may
be. Congress will react to legitimate threats, even if distant; but
it should not impose personal and economic hardships on U.S.
citizens in response to a "threat" the very existence of which is
not yet supported by the evidence. The issues surrounding global
warming-whether scientific, political, or economic-are of enormous
magnitude, and they deserve the full and undivided attention of the
federal government. Yet Congress, the branch of the federal
government closest to the American people, has been conspicuously
absent from the debate thus far.
The Administration's Strategies
Faced with a potentially uncooperative legislative branch, the
Administration increasingly has focused its time and energy on this
issue beyond the borders of the United States. It chooses to use
the more receptive confines of international and non-governmental
organizations (NGOs) to achieve its favored policy goals-goals that
otherwise stand little chance of enactment. Under the active
encouragement of senior Administration officials such as Vice
President Gore, even the State Department plays an increasingly
vital role in this strategy. In April, the State Department issued
a 10,000-word report on "Environmental Diplomacy." In this report,
it stated that "environmental problems are often at the heart of
the political and economic challenges we face," and pledged close
cooperation with a wide array of international organizations in
pursuing a series of initiatives designed to tighten restrictions
on activities pertaining to climate change, toxic chemicals,
species extinction, deforestation, and marine degradation.84
Action on these initiatives has been proceeding swiftly in the
second Clinton term. Henry Miller, a senior research fellow at the
Hoover Institution, has written that the Administration
already is implementing the State Department's environmental
initiatives in a number of ways-in negotiations of treaties and
other agreements; in bilateral and regional diplomacy; in foreign
aid from the State Department and the U.S. Agency for International
Development; in the CIA's commitment to "environmental
intelligence"; and in new "regional environmental hubs" within
certain U.S. embassies, which will preach the gospel according to
Mr. Gore.85
Even as the role of elected legislators is bypassed in this new
era of aggressive environmentally based foreign policy, the role of
non-elected environmental activists working in so-called
non-governmental organizations has been expanded dramatically.
Environmental groups like the Sierra Club, the World Wildlife Fund,
the World Resources Institute, the National Audubon Society, and
the Nature Conservancy have forged close associations with the
Administration and with a number of organizations within the United
Nations; as a result, they wield a growing coercive influence over
the policymaking process. One of the largest NGOs-the International
Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources-receives
over $1 million annually from the State Department as well as
(through executive order) a host of diplomatic privileges and
immunities. Other NGOs, such as the Environmental Defense Fund and
Zero Population Growth, are represented prominently on the
President's Council on Sustainable Development, which has
recommended the increased use of administrative and executive
orders in the domestic implementation of "Agenda 21," the
40-chapter action blueprint developed at Rio de Janeiro in 1992
which calls for increased wealth and technology transfers in the
name of an eco-friendly future.
Congressional Responsibilities
The balance between assuring national sovereignty and reducing
global warming is sharply skewed because of such Administration
strategies. As national sovereignty is eroded under an increasingly
cumbersome web of international regulations, it is time for the
people's elected representatives to step forward and exercise their
legislative duties and prerogatives under the U.S.
Constitution.
At the very least, Americans should find it extremely disturbing
that NGOs and international organizations working under the
auspices of the United Nations currently exercise more influence
than their own elected members of the Senate and House of
Representatives in the debate over what Under Secretary of State
Timothy Wirthhas called "the most important issue facing the
world." In the name of saving the planet from a global warming
"crisis," a series of regulations with potentially devastating
economic consequences now looms on the not-so-distant horizon.
Congress, as the most accurate reflection of the will of the
American people, needs to act now before President Bill Clinton and
the Department of State commit the United States to new
restrictions in December at the Kyoto Conference.
Specifically, Congress should:
- Reaffirm and enhance the principles outlined in Senate
Resolution 98. S. Res. 98, sponsored by Senators Robert Byrd (D
WV) and Charles Hagel (R-NE), is a sense of the Senate resolution
passed on July 17, 1997, by a vote of 95 to 0. It is a
well-intentioned effort, but any agreement that addresses an
as-yet-to-be-substantiated problem with mandatory targets to reduce
emissions cannot be justified at this time, for any reason. S. Res.
98 stipulates that the United States should not be a signatory to
any global climate change treaty that either omits binding
reductions for non-Annex I countries or results in serious harm to
the U.S. economy. It also requests the inclusion of a cost-impact
statement and an explanation of the legislative and regulatory
requirements which will result from any global warming accord
requiring the approval of the U.S. Senate. Considering the
tremendous uncertainties and significant economic impact of the
global warming treaty, for the United States to go only so far as
supporting the extension of bad policy to as many countries as
possible in the guise of "fairness" simply is not good enough.
- Hold the Administration accountable through public hearings
on the scientific, economic, and political issues surrounding
global warming. The public has been ill-served by the lack of
attention paid to this issue. It is time for Congress to invite
representatives from the Department of State, the EPA, and the
White House to Capitol Hill to explain the rationale behind
"environmental diplomacy" and the decision to move forward with the
Kyoto negotiations. A series of well-publicized hearings designed
to shed light on the scientific assumptions behind the global
warming theory, the economic ramifications of further binding
emissions reductions, and questions of national sovereignty which
arise from these international "solutions" must be conducted to
help Americans understand exactly what is at stake.
- Attend, monitor, and as much as possible participate in
international negotiations to ensure that U.S. interests are
protected. Experience shows that the Clinton Administration
cannot be trusted to be forthright with Congress on its position in
treaty negotiations. At hearings before the Subcommittee on Energy
and Power of the House Committee on Commerce in March 1995,
Department of Energy Assistant Secretary for Policy Susan Tierney
stated definitively to Representative Frank Pallone (D-NJ) that the
Administration opposed inclusion of mandatory restrictions on
greenhouse gas emissions in the treaty. During that same hearing,
the State Department's Deputy Assistant Secretary for Environment
and Development, Rafe Pomerance, assured Representative John
Dingell (D-MI) that the Administration would not support an
agreement that exempted any country from restrictions affecting the
United States.86 Yet one month later,
in Berlin, the Administration supported mandatory reductions
exempting over 120 developing countries from the very requirements
the United States would be forced to follow.
At a subsequent hearing in May 1995, Representative Thomas
Bliley (R-VA) criticized the seemingly duplicitous testimony of the
Administration's representatives at the March hearing, and Chairman
Dan Scheafer (R-CO) expressed concern that the Administration was
"committing first, and asking questions about cost, trade impacts
and feasibility later."87 This
criticism and concern had little impact, however. Before the COP-2
meeting in Geneva, the Subcommittee held another hearing on climate
change. Under Secretary of State for Global Affairs Wirth announced
that the United States supported a legally binding emissions target
only weeks after Deputy Assistant Secretary Pomerance had stated
unequivocally: "Are we going to agree to a legally binding
instrument in Geneva? No way."88
Apparently, the Administration feels free to contradict its
statements before Congress when it is negotiating abroad. Members
of Congress should attend these negotiating sessions to ensure that
the Administration adheres to its commitments.
- Do not agree to any treaty that is unfavorable to U.S.
interests. Any global warming treaty that binds the United
States to specific emissions reductions enforced by U.N.
bureaucrats is unacceptable. The most conservative Senate in recent
memory cannot stand by as the interests of the American public are
steamrolled by an increasingly unreasonable and extremist
environmental movement. But this need not happen. The President
cannot commit the United States to this radical course of action
alone. The Senate's power to advise and consent is not merely
constitutional window dressing. It is the source of congressional
authority on treaty-making that is vital in the checks-and-balances
system of the U.S. government. The Senate should use this power to
block this anti-American initiative.
Conclusion
Time Is Running Out
On December 1, 1997, the third Conference of the Parties to the
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change will meet in
Kyoto, Japan. It is almost impossible to overstate the number of
personal and national liberties, to say nothing of the economic
impact, at stake for Americans. Any agreement finalized will affect
the U.S. economy, American jobs, the environment, the standard of
living, energy costs and use, global competitiveness, the balance
of trade, and-perhaps most important-national sovereignty. By
allowing such decisions to be decided halfway around the world
without a comprehensive and well-publicized national debate at
home, the country's elected officials are abdicating their
responsibilities to their constituents.
The way the Clinton Administration has decided to address the
issue of global warming is troubling. It is yet another example of
the Administration's willingness to circumvent the U.S. Congress
and throw the country's economic and political future into the arms
of international bodies when its own efforts to implement its
agenda through conventional methods are frustrated.
"Environmental Diplomacy" (which has been described as a mixture
of Greenpeace manifesto and Vice President Gore's Earth in the
Balance89) places global
environmental concerns at the heart of the political and economic
challenges facing the nation. But giving priority to
environmentalism over traditional U.S. foreign policy concerns-such
as containing tyrannical governments, preventing state-sponsored
genocide and terrorism, promoting free markets, and spreading
freedom and liberal democracy-is dangerous. The promotion of the
Administration's new agenda through unelected, unaccountable
activists should raise the most fundamental political questions:
Who really governs the United States, for example, and who
will answer to the people when the bill for this unnecessary
experiment comes due?
There is still time for Congress to change course, but it is
running out. Disagreements over timetables and future greenhouse
gas stabilization levels continue to divide representatives of the
Clinton Administration, Europe, Australia, the developing
countries, and the smaller island states scattered around the
globe.
Congress should hold hearings now to expose the faulty science
behind the global warming mirage and demonstrate the economic
consequences of following the Administration's politically correct
but faulty course of action. As much as possible, Members of
Congress also should monitor the treaty proceedings. Congress
should exercise its constitutional power to advise and consent.
Finally, if necessary, it should withdraw the United States from
the entire process.
Responsible governance demands no less.
APPENDIX
| Annex I Countries |
Australia
Austria
Belgium
Canada
Denmark
European Community
Finland
France
Germany
Greece
Iceland
Ireland |
Italy
Japan
Luxembourg
Netherlands
New Zealand
Norway
Portugal
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland
Turkey
United Kingdom
United States of America |
Economies in
Transition
Belarus
Bulgaria
Czech Republic
Estonia
Hungary
Latvia
Lithuania
Poland
Romania
Russian Federation
Slovak Republic
Ukraine |
|
| Annex II Countries |
Albania
Algeria
Antigua and Barbuda
Argentina
Armenia
Azerbaijan
Bahamas
Bahrain
Bangladesh
Barbados
Belize
Benin
Bhutan
Bolivia
Botswana
Brazil
Burkina Faso
Burundi
Cambodia
Cameroon
Cape Verde
Central African Republic
Chad
Chile
China
Colombia
Comoros
Congo
Cook Islands
Costa Rica
Cote d'Ivoire
Croatia
Cuba
Democratic Republic of the Congo
Djibouti
Dominica
Ecuador
Egypt
El Salvador
Eritrea |
Ethiopia
Fiji
Gambia
Georgia
Ghana
Grenada
Guatemala
Guinea
Guinea Bissau
Guyana
Haiti
Honduras
India
Indonesia
Iran
Israel
Jamaica
Jordan
Kazakstan
Malaysia
Maldives
Mali
Malta
Marshall Islands
Mauritania
Mauritius
Mexico
Micronesia (Fed. States of)
Moldova (Republic of)
Monaco
Mongolia
Morocco
Mozambique
Myanmar
Namibia
Nauru
Nepal
Nicaragua
Nigeria
Niger |
Niue
Oman
Pakistan
Panama
Papua New Guinea
Paraguay
Peru
Philippines
Qatar
Republic of Korea
Saint Kitts and Nevis
Saint Lucia
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
Samoa
San Marino
Saudi Arabia
Senegal
Seychelles
Sierra Leone
Singapore
Slovenia
Solomon Islands
South Africa
Sri Lanka
Sudan
Swaziland
Syrian Arab Republic
Thailand
Togo
Trinidad and Tobago
Tunisia
Turkmenistan
Tuvalu
Uganda
United Arab Emirates
United Republic of Tanzania
Uruguay
Uzbekistan |
Endnotes
1 The authors wish to thank
research intern Alan Silverleib, a 1996 graduate of Johns Hopkins
University, for his significant contribution to this paper. Alan
has since left Heritage to begin graduate studies at Harvard
University. We also wish to acknowledge the untiring efforts of
Janice A. Smith and Evelyn Elmers of The Heritage Foundation's
Domestic Policy staff.
2 NR Evans, "Conservatives and
Environmentalism," statement before the International Conservative
Congress, Washington, D.C., September 28, 1997.
3 Timothy E. Wirth, Under
Secretary of State for Global Affairs, remarks before Subcommittee
on Energy and Power, Committee on Commerce, U.S. House of
Representatives, July 15, 1997.
4 Randall Mikkelson,
"Forecasters Get a Day at the White House," Reuters News Service,
October 1, 1997.
5 H. Sterling Burnett, "Myths
of Global Warming," National Center for Policy Analysis Brief
Analysis No. 230, May 23, 1997, p. 1.
6 Ibid.
7 Richard A. Kerr, "Greenhouse
Forecasting Still Cloudy," Science, Vol. 276 (May 16, 1997),
p. 1042; also available on the Internet at .
8 Ibid.
9 Water vapor, the primary
greenhouse gas, is not increased by human activity. Water vapor and
clouds account for 98 percent of the greenhouse effect.
10 John Shanahan, "Clinton's
'Voluntary' Global Warming Plan: Expensive, Ineffective, and
Unnecessary," Heritage Foundation Backgrounder No. 995,
August 3, 1994, p. 3.
11 Frances B. Smith, "The
Global Warming Treaty: For U.S. Consumers-All Pain, No Gain,"
National Center for Policy Analysis, August 20, 1997, p. 2.
12 Draft Report, IPCC
Working Group I, Fifth Session, Detection of Climate Change and
Attribution of Causes, October 9, 1995, pp. 8, 13.
13 James M. Sheehan, "The
Global Warming Hype Is Purely Political," The Orange County
Register, October 11, 1996.
14 Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change, "Detection of Climate Change and Attribution of
Causes,"Climate Change 1995: The Science of Climate Change
(Cambridge University Press, 1996),p. 430. Contribution of Working
Group I to the Second Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change.
15 Sheehan, "The Global
Warming Hype Is Purely Political."
16 Nigel Calder, former
editor, New Scientist, from "In the Grip of a New Ice Age,"
International Wildlife, July 1975, quoted in Anna J. Bray,
"The Ice Age Cometh: Remembering the Scare of Global Cooling,"
Policy Review No. 58 (Fall 1991), p. 82.
17 Douglas Colligan, "Brace
Yourself for Another Ice Age," Science Digest, February
1973.
18 Testimony before
Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, U.S. Senate, June 23,
1988.
19 Bray, "The Ice Age
Cometh."
20 Business Roundtable,
"Rush to Judgment: Understanding Global Climate Change," April
1997, pp. 2-3.
21 William F. O'Keefe,
chairman, Global Climate Coalition, quoted in "Administration's
Climate Policies Could Kill 500,000 Jobs Annually," Business
Wire, March 25, 1997.
22 Robert C. Balling,
"Calmer Weather: The Spin on Greenhouse Hurricanes," CEI
Environmental Studies Program, May 1997, p. 14.
23 Burnett, "Myths of Global
Warming."
24 Jonathan H. Adler,
"Hurricane Hype," Competitive Enterprise Institute, CEI
Update, Vol. 10, No. 6 (June 1997).
25 Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change, "Summary for Policymakers: The Science of
Climate Change-IPCC Working Group I," available on the Internet at
.
26 Burnett, "Myths of Global
Warming."
27 Henry Lamb, "Climate
Change Policies Cost More Than Money," Presentation of the
Environmental Conservation Organization to National Mining
Association Mining Convention, September 30, 1997.
28 Burnett, "Myths of Global
Warming."
29 Annex I countries include
the members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development (OECD) and East European states.
30 Business Roundtable,
"Rush to Judgment," p. 7.
31 Shanahan, "Clinton's
'Voluntary' Global Warming Plan," p. 3.
32 Ibid.
33 Fred Hiatt, "No Credible
Goal for Global Warming," The Washington Post, June 11,
1997, p. A23.
34 Business Roundtable,
"Rush to Judgment," p. 8.
35 Ibid., p. 7.
36 Richard L. Lawson,
"Global Warming Treaty Could Freeze U.S. Economic Growth,"
Washington Legal Foundation Legal Backgrounder, Vol. 12, No.
16 (May 2, 1997).
37 Cheryl Hogue, "Raising
Energy Prices Dramatically Would Harm Six U.S. Industries, DOE
Finds," Bureau of National Affairs, July 15, 1997.
38 James M. Sheehan,
"Economies Be Damned," ecologic, July/August 1997, p.
15.
39 "Treasury Officials Cast
Doubt on Key Element of White House Climate Plan," Inside
EPA, Vol. 18, No. 39 (September 26, 1997), p. 8.
40 An econometric research
firm, known formerly as Wharton Econometric Forecasting Associates,
Inc.
41 Mary H. Novak, "Global
Climate Change, U.S. Living Standards, and Environmental Quality:
The Impact on Consumers," paper prepared for a symposium sponsored
by the American Council for Capital Formation Center for Public
Policy Research, Washington, D.C., September 24, 1997, p. 1.
42 Lawson, "Global Warming
Treaty Could Freeze U.S. Economic Growth."
43 Mary H. Novak, "Economic
and Energy Sector Implications of Adopting Global Climate Change
Policies," WEFA Group, February 5, 1997.
44 Center for Energy and
Economic Development, Kyoto Presentation, August 1997.
45 "Climate Change Policies,
the Distribution of Income, and U.S. Living Standards," Special
Report, American Council for Capital Formation Center for Policy
Research, November 1996.
46 Glenn R. Schleede,
"Global Warming Policies and Texas: Impact of Potential Greenhouse
Gas Emission Limits on the People and Economy of Texas," National
Consumer Coalition, September 17, 1997.
47 Richard J. Crandall and
J. Graham, "The Effect of Fuel Economy on Auto Safety," Journal
of Law and Economics, April 1989, p. 111.
48 "U.N. Climate Change
Negotiations," statement by AFL-CIO Executive Council, February 20,
1997.
49 Christopher Douglass and
Murray Weidenbaum, "The Quiet Reversal of U.S. Global Climate
Change Policy," Center for the Study of American Business, November
1996, pp. 9-10.
50 Ibid., p. 10.
51 Dean Kleckner, "Farm
Bureau: Agriculture and Global Warming," ecologic,
July/August 1997, p. 21.
52 Lamb, "Climate Change
Policies Cost More Than Money."
53 Sheehan, "Economies Be
Damned," p. 15.
54 Robert L. Bradley Jr.,
"Renewable Energy Not Cheap, Not 'Green'," Cato Institute Policy
Analysis, Executive Summary, August 27, 1997.
55 Ibid., p. 8.
56 Tom McClintock, "Draft
Paper on Government Subsidy of Renewable Energy Resources," The
Claremont Institute, August 22, 1996, p. 8.
57 Bradley, "Renewable
Energy Not Cheap," p. 28.
58 Ibid., p. 29.
59 Ibid.
60 Ibid., p. 33.
61 Ibid. According to
this article, a task force has estimated that $930 million in
future Department of Energy subsidies would be necessary to enable
biomass to approach commercialization.
62 McClintock, "Draft Paper
on Government Subsidy," p. 10.
63 Bradley, "Renewable
Energy Not Cheap," p. 35.
64 McClintock, "Draft Paper
on Government Subsidy," p. 11.
65 Shell International, "The
Evolution of the World's Energy System: 1860-2060," December
1995.
66 World Bank, Global
Economic Prospects and the Developing Countries 1997, p.
23.
67 This figure was reached
by using the World Bank's estimate of 2.9 percent annual GDP growth
from 1992 to 2020, yielding a world GDP of $57.9 trillion in 2020.
Real world GDP in 1995 was used as the base year.
68 This assumption is
conservative. Most economic models predict much greater economic
costs in the near term than in the longer term after the economy
has adjusted to regulatory shocks.
69 "International Climate
Change Policy: Economic Implications for Australia," Current
Issues No. 2 (April 1997), from Australian Bureau of
Agricultural and Resource Economics (ABARE) Web site at .
70 "International Climate
Change Policy: Economic Implications for New Zealand," 1997;
summary from Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource
Economics Web site at .
71 "International Climate
Change Policy: Economic Implications for Japan," Current
Issues, No. 3 (April 1997), from Australian Bureau of
Agricultural and Resource Economics Web site at .
72 "International Climate
Change Policy: Economic Implications for Australia," op.
cit.
73 "The Economic Impact of
International Climate Change Policy," Australian Bureau of
Agricultural and Resource Economics, ABARE Research Report 1997.4,
at .
74 "A Review of the Economic
Impacts of AOSIS-Type Proposals to Limit Carbon Dioxide Emissions,"
Global Climate Coalition and the WEFA Group, April 15, 1996, p.
23.
75 Ibid.
76 The Department of Defense
is the largest source of greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S.
government and would be subject to inspection and regulations
outlined in the treaty. See Frank Gaffney, Jr., "Risky
Eco-Disarmament...With Opiates," The Washington Times,
September 16, 1997, p. A15.
77 Baker Spring, "The
Chemical Weapons Convention: A Bad Deal for America," Heritage
Foundation Committee Brief No. 25, March 15, 1996.
78 Ibid.
79 Evans, "Conservatives and
Environmentalism," p. 6.
80 Gaffney, "Risky
Eco-Disarmament...With Opiates," op. cit.
81 "Ministers Call for
Stronger, Revitalized UNEP," UN Chronicle No. 2 (1997), p.
49.
82 Ibid.
83 Comments made during Rio
+5 Conference hosted by the Earth Council, ecologic,
July/August 1997, p. 16.
84 U.S. Department of State,
"Environmental Diplomacy: The Environment and U.S. Foreign Policy,"
April 1997, available on the Internet at .
85 Henry I. Miller, "Gore
Remakes Economics in His Own Image," The Wall Street
Journal, May 13, 1997, p. A22.
86 Hearings before the
Subcommittee on Energy and Power, Committee on Commerce, U.S. House
of Representatives, 104th Cong., 1st Sess., March 21, 1995, pp.
36-38, 59-64, 66-67.
87 Hearings before the
Subcommittee on Energy and Power, Committee on Commerce, U.S. House
of Representatives, 104th Cong., 1st Sess., May 19, 1995, pp.
111-113.
88 Hearings before the
Subcommittee on Energy and Power, Committee on Commerce, U.S. House
of Representatives, 104th Cong., 2nd Sess., June 19, 1996, p.
68.
89 Miller, "Gore Remakes
Economics," op. cit.