Dem Plan: Free Money For The Coal Industry!

Written by David Frum on Monday April 27, 2009

Democrats and liberals often divide the world between industries they like (Hollywood, Wall Street, Silicon Valley) and industries they don't like (coal, oil, pharmaceuticals). Industries they don't like get the word "Big" prefixed to their name: Big Coal, Big Oil, Big Pharma.

Big Coal you might think would be the very most detested industry. It emits climate-distorting carbon dioxide, chews up mountains and spews runoff into lakes and rivers, causes Black Lung disease etc. All very bad. Democrats object to all these things. But still ... that's no reason to deny these industries free money when they ask for it!

President Obama’s budget plans rest on the assumption that his carbon emissions plan will raise hundreds of billions of dollars over the next 10 years. The president's plan envisions a limit or cap on the total amount of greenhouse gases that can be emitted. Rights to emit such gases, notably carbon dioxide, will be auctioned off, with proceeds collected by the federal government. The plan assumes that the largest sector purchaser of such rights would be coal-burning electrical utilities. Electricity generation accounts for about 40% of the nation’s carbon emission, with 93% of that 40% coming from coal.

But guess what? Democrats from coal-producing states are stepping up for their industry. I’m looking at a letter to the House Energy and Commerce Committee from coal-state Democrats requesting a

free allowance allocation to the utility sector of 40 percent, consistent with the sector’s share of CO2 emissions … [plus an additional free allowance for coal users in the] industrial sector …

Both these free allowances are to be permanent.

In other words, while the rest of the economy would have to pay for the right to emit carbon dioxides, coal users would not.

But wait: the deal gets better!

The right to emit can be sold. It’s not quite cash, but very nearly as good. Under “pure” cap and trade, emitters can resell any quota they purchase but do not use. That’s supposed to incentivize innovation and conservation. But under the coal Democrats scheme, where emissions quotas would be allocated for free, these quotas would amount to a free grant of commercially valuable rights.

Now that’s what you call constituent service.

Category: News