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Mooney: Congress wastes energy

There are better things it could do than pass Keystone legislation

The Columbian
Published: January 10, 2015, 4:00pm

It’s official: Congress’ first agenda item, under new Republican control, will be passing a bill to approve the Keystone XL pipeline. This maneuver failed late last year, but with Republicans now in control of the Senate, it’s expected they can get a bill to the desk of the president — who has said he will veto it.

There may be many reasons to object to another Keystone vote — including the fact that the Keystone XL legislation singles out one company for special treatment — but perhaps the biggest objection is that it is really just a symbol.

For environmentalists, it symbolizes the increasingly urgent need to keep fossil fuels in the ground. For Republicans, it symbolizes everything they hate about how environmentalists seek to block industrial projects.

But when Congress focuses on symbols rather than substance, everybody loses. The truth is that building Keystone is not economically essential to the U.S. (sorry, Republicans), but stopping it is also not, in the view of many scientists, going to do a ton to save the climate (sorry, greens). The last thing America needs is another Keystone debate, but there are really helpful things Congress could be doing to protect the environment and boost the economy. Here are four of them:

• Pass a national carbon tax

Later in this congressional session, we’re expecting a brutal fight over the Obama administration’s plans to regulate greenhouse gas emissions from coal-fired power plants. But here’s the thing: This fight could be easily avoided if Congress would simply pass a law to deal with these emissions, and thus pre-empt the Environmental Protection Agency’s activity. A growing economists’ consensus says the best way to do this is to put a tax on carbon, and then let the power of the market do its work.

By passing a carbon tax, we could not only avoid the fight over the regulations, we could actually generate new revenue that could be used for any number of beneficial purposes — including cutting every last American a monthly paycheck.

• Fix highway infrastructure

Nationally averaged gasoline prices are on a record plunge right now, having fallen for more than 100 days straight and over $1 per gallon of regular gas. That means that people are paying shockingly less than they’re used to for gas, which in turn creates a rare opening for raising the current 18 cent federal gasoline tax — which has not been raised in two decades, but which is vital to restoring the ailing Highway Trust Fund.

In fairness, some have suggested that a better way to find funds to take care of our roads is a mileage-based highway user fee. But the same story goes: Driving has just gotten a lot cheaper, yet our highway infrastructure is in rough shape. So now’s the moment for Congress to move to make driving a lot better in this country.

• Fix the ethanol mandate

The so-called Renewable Fuel Standard, created by the 2005 Energy Policy Act and expanded in 2007, is a mess. The standard requires a fixed volume of ethanol and other renewable fuels to be blended into gasoline, starting with 9 billion gallons back in 2008, and increasing over time to 36 billion gallons by 2022.

But Congress passed these requirements without knowing how much overall fuel drivers would use in the future, or how economic conditions would develop. Thus, it has been hard to blend in the required amounts of ethanol and other renewable fuels in the fuel supply. Meanwhile, another thing holding everything up right now is the failure to create enough refueling stations to support flex-fuel vehicles that can run on E85 gasoline, which contains 85 percent ethanol.

• Extend renewable energy

Meanwhile, America’s wind industry is also in a state of uncertainty — because late last year, Congress voted to extend a production tax credit that is vital to wind power, but only through the end of the year. And it only did so at the last minute, so that, literally, wind power folks had only two weeks to take advantage before the tax credit was gone again. That’s just a ridiculous way to treat a major sector of the energy industry.

So, in sum: Congress is going to hold a Keystone vote, and likely pass a bill that the president will veto — but there are many better things, on energy, that it might be doing.


Chris Mooney reports on science and the environment for The Washington Post.

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