Archive for category Good Ideas

See, they are not all shit

As a follow up to my previous post, I would like to add my thanks to Jim Hansen for his long service as a government employee upon his retirement.

He has a great body of work, has made a lot of sound predictions, and doesn’t shy away from controversy related to his science work. In fact, that is why he is retiring, so that he can work as an activist full time. So congratulations, goodbye and hope to see you soon, Jim.

In reading about his position on carbon pricing through the above link, I note that my opinion (which I developed over years in working in parallel) matches his for the precisely same reasons when it comes to a carbon tax vs. a trading scheme:

“In his 2009 testimony to the House Ways and Means Committee, Hansen laid out his basic critique of cap-and-trade: “(1) unpredictable price volatility, (2) it makes millionaires on Wall Street and other trading floors at public expense, (3) it is an invitation to blackmail by utilities that threaten “blackout coming” to gain increased emission permits, (4) it has overhead costs and complexities, inviting lobbyists and delaying implementation.”

Nice to know that I see things the same way as someone that smart occasionally.

Do what we did, kind of

The following is a copy of my submission to the group of Senators and Congressmen working on the design of carbon tax legislation in the USA. I figured they might want to use our experience here in Australia to produce a better one which should get an up or down vote in about 30 years. But hey, if you don’t play, you can hardly complain about the outcome. This input is to answer specific questions they raise on how to design a system.

Dear Congressman Waxman, Senator Whitehouse, Congressman Blumenauer, and Senator Schatz,

None of you are my elected representatives, but I thank you for your invitation to participate in the discussion on the formulation of a carbon tax as the economic instrument to assist in addressing CO2-e emissions in the United States. I chose to provide you some input because I have been working in the space you are now discussing for my entire career as an environmental engineer following the receipt of my degree (BS in Chemical Engineering in 1988 from Montana State University). My experience began with the completion of emissions inventories to address the Toxics Release Inventory (TRI) requirements on industry from 1987 legislation. I have published papers on the function of emissions trading programs, founded a start-up company to produce software for the completion of industrial emissions inventories, and I am currently the Technical Director of and led my current company to become the first engineering consultancy in Australia to be certified as carbon neutral under the National Carbon Offset Standard. We have been carbon neutral since 2008.

I want to provide answers to your specific questions, but prior to that, I want to take a position on a “carbon tax” as opposed to an “emissions trading market” as the economic instrument to achieve the outcome of internalising the cost of emissions of CO2-e. Having studied this issue in detail, and the practicalities of the implementation of these types of regulatory mechanisms, I have come to the following conclusion: An emissions trading system that is implemented using either a “cap and trade” model or a “baseline and credits” model is a more efficient long-term mechanism for driving reductions in CO2-e emissions. However, given the difficulties in educating people about how a trading mechanism works and the greater complexity of trading systems that means they are less transparent, more costly to setup initially and open to potential corruption of them, I believe that a simple, transparent carbon tax along the lines of the model you suggest is a better first step. At some point, conversion over to a more elegant solution involving trading of emissions credits may then be possible once the public is more inherently knowledgeable and accepting of a more complex but efficient solution.

With that as a background, I want to move on to your specific questions.

1. What is the appropriate price per ton for polluters to pay? The draft contains alternative prices of $15, $25 and $35 per ton for discussion purposes.

My guess on the record prior to its implementation in Australia was that the price should be A$23.50. It actually turned out to be A$23 on 1 July 2013, so I was pretty close. But was my number right? Well, here you are going to get a lot of debate based on where I draw the boundaries of my assessment of overall costs, what is and is not a cost, etc. and this is debated widely (and wildly) as in the background provided with your question. But I am going to stick with my original estimate not because I know its right, but because I don’t know that it isn’t. Environmentalists with an axe to grind will try to justify a price that is orders of magnitude higher, and people opposed to the tax (or trading system) at all will complain about whatever price is set, so the price set is not nearly as important as the reasoning for why you set it there. The economists’ work that has gone into your background seems to most closely support a $25 price, and that won’t make anyone happy so it’s probably good. It’s high enough that it provides a real incentive to reductions, but low enough after you cascade it through the economy that it will basically just be noise in the signal of prices of things like electricity.

Wherever you set it, be firm in sticking to it. Our experience here in Australia is that industry groups that were most opposed going to emissions trading (and helped bring down the government at the time) are now bitterly complaining about the carbon tax price when you can buy a ton of CO2-e on the market at about $2.50 at present. The answer to those people should be “tough, pay your tax. And next time I propose a better solution first, you might want to take me up on the deal.”

2. How much should the price per ton increase on an annual basis? The draft contains a range of increases from 2 percent to 8 percent per year for discussion purposes.

Experience would suggest that the price should be close to CPI, but adjusted upward based on how rapidly you want incentives to grow. I would say that a model that uses CPI+0.5% would provide a ramping up of incentive that would be sensitive to economic conditions in the US at the time, but also allow for more rapid take up of existing energy efficiency technologies along side the expansion of renewable energy sources.

3. What are the best ways to return the revenue to the American people? The discussion draft proposes putting the revenue toward the following goals, and solicits comments on how to best accomplish each: (1) mitigating energy costs for consumers, especially low-income consumers; (2) reducing the Federal deficit; (3) protecting jobs of workers at trade-vulnerable, energy intensive industries; (4) reducing the tax liability for individuals and businesses; and (5) investing in other activities to reduce carbon pollution and its effects.

The model here is essential, because you want to make absolutely sure here that you get maximum buy-in from a public that doesn’t want to have to sift through a lot of details to understand it. We know that all costs applied in the form of the tax will be passed on to consumers (primarily of electricity). So what you want to do is make sure that the tax that is collected is redistributed to the people who will get the revenue from it in a clear form, either as a credit on their income taxes, or in a form such as the reduction of payroll taxes that each individual person can see easily and compare; my taxes went down this much to offset my electricity prices that went up that much. This should be very transparent, because I want each and every person to start internalising his or her decisions about energy use in particular. Someone may get back $300 a year from the carbon tax, and only pay $150 in additional energy costs because they practiced easy energy efficiency rules and made purchases with energy efficiency more in mind. Another person may get $300 back, but spend $600 more on energy every year because they choose to drive a massive SUV and don’t even care what their energy use is like. We need to engrain this in the mentality of every person, regardless of his or her economic status; you are free to live your life and use energy as you see fit but you have to pay for your inefficiency.

Do not let the money simply go into general revenue and come out as means tested welfare programs as was done in Australia, because here (already) people have lost the connection between what they get and what they pay, leading many to forget that they actually have control.

The best model I can think of for the US would be to collect $25 a ton for emissions, and return 75% of all money collected directly back to the population on a per capita (or better yet per household) basis. Then use 12.5% for supporting energy efficiency improvements in the national grid and to equip it for more micro generation and renewable input. The final 12.5% should be put into supporting R&D and commercialisation of renewables and energy efficiency technologies. In doing so, make sure that you design the programs such that the market and not government pick the winners and losers, as government has a particularly bad record of picking winners and losers where innovation is concerned.

Finally, don’t address trade exposed energy intensive industries in the context of this tax. I say this for two reasons. First, business will look after itself and we don’t need another federal program of money transfers to industry that will invariably be corrupted or put the government in a position of picking winners and losers. Second, there are existing means of dealing with economic system failures related to trade exposure of industries where costs will go up under a carbon tax. For instance, after the US has a pricing mechanism in place for the internalisation of CO2-e emissions costs and that causes your aluminium costs to go up, you use existing trade mechanisms to make any foreign aluminium producer that wants to sell its aluminium into the US to either pay the tax or be able to demonstrate in a transparent manner that the CO2-e emissions costs are included. Initially they won’t be and they will just have to pay the tax, but eventually they will also get on board with a similar program. And isn’t that the long term goal for the developing as well as developed economies.

4. How should the carbon fee program interact with state programs that address carbon pollution?

Where an entity already participates in a scientifically valid economic instrument to internalise the cost of CO2-e emissions (whether state, federal or international), they should be excluded from paying the tax for emissions from that source, regardless of what they pay to offset their emissions under that program. This is the way that you eventually get to the use of the more elegant instrument (carbon trading) for emissions reduction in place of the crude instrument (the carbon tax). Over time, companies will see that they can reduce their cost of compliance significantly through a trading system, and early adopters are rewarded. For instance, my company offsets its emissions at about A$2.00 a ton as compared to the A$23.00 per ton carbon tax. If we were a mandatory (rather than voluntary) participant in the system, that difference would be a huge incentive for us to do an emissions inventory, identify reductions, and participate in an emissions trading market.

Finally, let me share a bit of my experience as an environmental engineer that will illuminate why I think this issue is so important for the US not only as an existential environmental issue, but also as an economic one. In my experience, I have never seen a more effective piece of legislation at reducing emissions than the TRI requirements of the Superfund Amendments and Reauthorisation Act of 1987, and the act required no emissions reductions at all. What it said is that if you are large enough and you emit certain substances, you have to quantify all of your emissions of a list of toxics and simply inform your neighbours of what they are. This required us (in industry) to look at emissions sources we never examined before as significant, and in doing so, we identified and reduced millions of tons of toxic emissions (along with other associated emissions that were not toxic) because we could do so relatively easily, wanted to do so for our own public relations purposes, and often saved millions of dollars in the process. I personally invented a system for the reduction of VOC emissions from my employer at the time that saved them a few million dollars while I was doing the source testing to quantify the fugitive emissions from a previously unregulated area of their facilities. I wouldn’t have been on that factory roof to stumble across my invention unless the TRI regulations had required me to be up there.

We know that countries that signed up to the Kyoto Protocol can meet 80% of their targets through energy efficiency using technologies that have existed for 50 years. But what incentive do they have to examine their emissions or energy efficiency? A carbon tax will provide the incentive for all major energy users to have a first look at what their emissions actually are, and never in my experience as an environmental engineer have we had a first look at a problem area and not found a majority of the solution easily.

Happy Birthday Paul Krugman

His birthday should be recognised as the second most important in Feb after J Willard Gibbs, of course.

If you have been living under a rock and not read his regular an repeated thesis about New Keynesian economic theory, and operation of macroeconomics through the GFC, Great Recession, and current asinine austerity being pursued, do yourself a favour and read his book, or blog.

He makes me wish I had taken economics and not chemical engineering as a degree on a regular basis in the last several years.

They asked, and I said I would, so . . .

. . . so I started a State Petition in Montana to challenge Citizens United. And I am supposed to publicise the link on all my portals, so here it is Challenge Citizen’s United Decision

Let’s see if anyone is listening in.

Fantastic food for thought

Take the time to read this 27 page summary of the discussion of 4 prominent economists with regard to the appropriate responses to the economic problems to the world economies at present, and what they have learned since the GFC. Three thoughts come to mind following my review of this article:

1. Thanks for the internet. I am grateful each and every day that I have access in nearly real time to the output of really great researchers and thinkers that would be unimaginable. I am still very disappointed that I never had the opportunity to go to UC San Diago, Princeton or someplace like that, but having access to the information coming of of these places through the internet really is almost like being there.

2. I found myself laughing out loud 3 times in the reading. Maybe this shouldn’t be as surprising to me as it is. These are smart people, and the basis of humour is intelligence, and making a point through humour is an effective way to make an argument. But getting a good laugh 3 times in a 27 page summary of the deliberations of a conference on macroeconomics was a pleasant surprise.

3. I think that Valerie Ramey may be on to something truly insightful through her studies. What if the US is being significantly hindered in its ability to come out of the recession caused by the GFC due to aggregate demand loss caused by a combination of the inefficiency of its private health system in conjunction with the behavioural response of people to the shock of the GFC (e.g. spending less, saving more and preparing for things to get worse rather than better). What if they are really willing to take less and be less mobile in their employment decisions due to the fear over loss of health care coverage? Isn’t structural reform of health care in the US (particularly a single payer system) then one of the best things that could be done with respect to stimulus OR efficiency, whether you are a salt water or freshwater economist?

Rational gun control, unless it’s too late

So, I think I have the gun control issue partly solved in the USA, if anyone is still listening, but possibly not.

I actually asked my buddy Otto whether or not we need to just admit that these kids in Sandy Hook Elementary just don’t mean that much in the overall scheme of things. Isn’t that right, and shouldn’t we just admit that and move on, unless you are really interested in seeing that this sort of thing gets reduced in the USA? Perhaps the statistics above prove that to be true, but direct discussion with gun advocates suggests otherwise. You see, my buddy Otto is one serious constitution reading libertarian, and he is not interested in giving up any of his guns at all.

And I am with him, to a point. But I see guns in America as another set of dangerous goods that must be managed. We could also have some discussions around just what is required to maintain a “well regulated militia”, how large a magazine, how many of them, and what rate of fire is required, but even if we don’t go there, I have a set of reasonable suggestions that don’t significantly impact on anyone’s 2nd Amendment rights, while making sure that everyone’s rights under the 1st Amendment aren’t jeopardised inadvertently in the move toward an armed camp in the USA. Because I honestly see it that way. I believe that my freedom of movement, association and pursuit of happiness are significantly diminished by having to worry if I am going to get shot trying to enjoy dinner and a movie, go to work, or school.

Through a bit of reading, and further discussions with Otto, I think I have an answer that appeals to the right, left, up and down in politics with a significant enough plurality amongst all that it works: personal responsibility. It’s always a good time in America to have a chat about personal responsibility, as it seems to be the answer to a number of the ills there, and everyone initially says they are all for it. The religious love it, despite the fact that they go all moral on you. The left can come to support it, because it finally gives them a chance to hold someone in power to account. And the right love it, because it has an emotional appeal to their both authoritarian and libertarian sides. The only people who couldn’t support it are the mentally defective, who by definition can’t be held personally responsible, so who gives a shit what they think.

Here’s how gun control works based on personal responsibility. Guns are a dangerous good that (peculiarly) if used as intended or not can cause the death of people, animals and some potentially significant property damage. They are also required to be available in the population to allow for the forming of militias to overthrow a despotic government, should that come to pass. In order for the government to unsure the maintenance of this potential to removal of itself by force, we need to know what the numbers are, and ensure that there is sufficient distribution and numbers that they can be called to use (I assume by the States individually) to overthrow the federal government. So the States really need the information, but what we really want to focus on is personal responsibility, so we need not write much regulation, that way the law can be cost efficiently implemented, and also generate some friendly competition in service providers for the information.

The law will say this: If you want own a gun in the future, you will be required to register it’s storage location with your state police, and commit to storing and maintaining it in a safe and secure manner. You are personally responsible for the safety and security of your firearm to prevent its being used by anyone who cannot be held personally responsible for its use in the killing of any human inadvertently or with malevolent intent, or in the negligent or wilful killing or damage to any property, unless that killing or damage is found to be lawful through a jury trial. That’s it. It’s also pretty much already law in most jurisdictions in the USA, following the implementation of registration.

You are already responsible if your 7 year old child takes your car and runs down a grandmother during a joy ride, or uses your gun to shoot 10-15 sheep on your neighbour’s property for sport. The only reason I want to make sure you register your gun is so that I can hold you responsible in the event you don’t maintain your dangerous good in a fashion that is safe and secure, and you have tons of leeway in defining “safe and secure” in your particular situation, because there is going to be no “prior restraint” in the implementation of my law. No one is going to be around to check, and no standards are going to be published to define “safe and secure” for you. If you make your guns kept for home protection, hunting or whatever safe and secure such that they are never used in a killing by your children through education or sheer intimidation, great. If you use a trigger lock, safe or concealment to secure your guns, cool. Whatever you want to do, you decide. And if a person breaks into your house, steals your .45 from under your pillow and commits a murder later, we aren’t going to hold you civilly or criminally responsible for his criminal acts. But if you are going to raise a sociopath, psychopath or a person who cannot control their anger, and they get ahold of your gun and use it to kill a bunch of people, you will likely have to pay, and potentially be held criminally responsible for gross negligence. So, you might want to consider some disaster insurance if you want to own an assault rifle and a dozen clips of ammo, or even an automatic weapon, which by the way I am pretty much OK with under my new legal regime. Just be fucking responsible.

Unless they refuse to register their guns, the only time the average gun owner is going to have any brush up against the law is forensically in the investigation of homicide, just like they are now, and even identification of the recalcitrants will be through forensic investigation, as there is no need for proactive audit or inspections. 2nd Amendment supporters are often quick to site how rare the cases of a person who cannot be held responsible is responsible for significant killing, so there should be almost imperceptible impact to those people. If you fail to register your guns and they are identified forensically, but not in relation to a killing or significant damage incident, you will be required to register them at that time and face some administrative penalty. In the cases where an unregistered gun is identified in the course of a criminal investigation, it will be forfeited, registered by the police and recycled for some beneficial use or materials.

For those paranoid of registration, let this be some comfort. Any incremental damage done by this perceived encroachment on your 2nd Amendment Rights is far offset by the benefit of the elimination of incidents like Sandy Hook, Aurora, the temple, Virgina Tech and Columbine. Because those incidents all involve damage to the life, liberty and pursuit of happiness of all those involved as victims. And in my world 1 comes before 2, especially if I can prove no significant reduction in 2 through regulation of my well organised militia.

Getting the word out there

The one minute introduction to Synaptor is now available here

My company is a part owner of Synaptor, and we supplied the technical HSE backing to the IP in its products.

If you want to try the App on your iPhone or iPad it is a free download on the iTunes store. Also Android “soon” apparently. I would be appreciative of any feedback you have on the theory or application of the tool, or (as it turns out) your particular use for the tool beyond its original intention. A consultant in QLD is using it to keep a “live” hazard register on multiple sites that change every few months. My office manager keeps our whole hazards and effects register on it. I want to see some environmental ngo use it to make observations to keep tabs on big oil or big banks somewhere in the world.

But what it really does is lead you through an excellent HSE observation, if you need help. But of course a useful observation is really based on the conversation rather than a technical argument. And the truth is, lots of people don’t have a good technique (or recognise one they do have) and need to learn how to identify what works and what doesn’t. We will have a training course streaming through another App that is coming soon that will handle training records and competency matrix related tasks, as well as deliver the training content (if you don’t want to keep any records) for free. We intend to keep building tools to assist with the implementation of ISO compliant HSE Management systems and deliver them for free, or next to nothing, until we take over the world apparently. But I don’t lead that company.

I keep the fires on in the boring old HSE consulting business to make sure we don’t starve before that little startup goes.

More evidence piles up

Additional information is working its way into mainstream media regarding the number and severity of weather events, and whether they are possibly the result of climate changes. Its a question I have raised and discussed a of times (here or number here).

This was also coincidentally the subject of a discussion between myself and my buddy Otto recently. The bottom line, that I think I got his buy in on, although he remains skeptical about pretty much anything if left alone long enough, is that an average rise in temperature worldwide will be more likely to manifest itself as chaos due to an increase in entropy. Therefore, these latest scientifically verifiable observations support my thesis.

Here’s what happened, and how it did

There is no way I can summarise what happened during the GFC, and provide an analysis of how it played out the way it did better than the Professor Krugman, so I won’t try. Read for yourself his remarks in Portugal last week. Read them critically, for the facts and for where he clearly identifies what his opinion is on the matter. Because the facts are the facts, and whether you agree or not with the hypothesis of the failure to respond, it is a fantastic summary of the events.

And then have a think and see if you can come up with an alternative explanation on why so many “very serious people” got the response to the crisis very wrong, because its important. It’s important because Europe still has a vast amont of private debt that it has to de-leverage from, not to mention the sovereign debt, and the currently proposed all-austerity approaches all smells like failure.

To me, the big failure I define in terms of efficiency. You can have an argument over what the role of government is in relation to an economy, but the argument about whether it can have an effect is over. The loss by not doing effective stimulus (a large amount of tax cuts aren’t stimulus) in the US and Europe is incredible. Imagine if the US had done a 1.2 trillion dollars of real stimulus (as opposed to 300 billion of stimulus and 400 billion of tax cuts mostly to the rich that then did not trickle down). Now imagine if the US had borrowed most all of that at 1% (which it still can by the way, check the US long term bond rate). Imagine how effective that borrowing would have been had it been ploughed into the infrastructure repairs needed countrywide, the teachers that need not have been laid off or not hired in the first place, and the beginning work to transform the transmission grid in the US to set it up for the energy efficiency and micro-generation improvements that could solve the vast majority of its greenhouse problems without anyone having to modify their lifestyle. Now think about the generation of people who have left or are leaving university in various disciplines in the past 4 years and the next two that would be employed in their chosen field.

I call the efficiency loss and failure to capitalise on the possible gain monumental. Personally I would love to be able to borrow all the money I wanted for 1% for 10 or 30 years. I bet I could do some good things all on my own.

Measures of devotion

An update on my post from Monday. Today we find out that Peter H. Gleick, founder and president of the Pacific Institute for Studies in Development, Environment and Security is the person that duped the Heartland Institute into releasing a number of its confidential documents regarding its funding and plans to attempt to refute the science of climate change and counter or attack those that believe in the scientific method and the weight of evidence in favour of the arguments regarding anthropogenic climate change.

The links to the above go to the Boards of the two organisations above so that readers can do their own research where it matters, at the top of the organisations. I encourage interested parties to also look further into the funding of both, as that information is as illuminating of the agendas of the two groups as anything published on their websites.

Based on his admission, Peter Gleick will now almost certainly face the full force of the best law money can buy from his adversaries, and the truth is that he should. He obtained the confidential information he released through deception, as he has admitted in his statement published by the Huffington Post. If that is a criminal act, or breaks a civil code, he should be tried, convicted and sentenced appropriately. However, that will not diminish the substance of what he collected, as was covered in my previous post.

In the progress of whatever trial ensues, we will find out for sure which of the documents are real and which are fake, as Heritage has claimed both. But you can’t have it both ways, either the documents are genuine and therefore the alleged theft substantive, or they are fake and there is essentially no case to answer.

Perhaps Peter Gleick wants it that way so that his legal journey is well publicised. If that is the case, it will be a demonstration of one of the only real ways to counter the climate deniers. Because the truth is that the climate deniers are funded by phenomenally rich arseholes and corporations they control, and the likes of the Pacific Institue and DeSmogBlog are funded on a pittance in comparison. The only thing the latter have to provide a balance to the war chest of the evil are the scientific facts being on their side and their devotion to the scientific method. I hope that the measure of devotion that Peter Gleick is demonstrating ends up being worth it to him, and worth all the money that Heritage can scrounge together to fund their side of the story to unfold.