Green | June 15, 2008 | 2 comments

Environmental Justice Coalition blasts cap-and trade, backs carbon tax

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JanforGore
Condemning carbon trading as “fraught with uncertainties, lack[ing] transparency and creat[ing] large opportunities for emitting facilities to engage in fraud,” a national coalition of environmental justice organizations has called for a federal carbon tax to address “the most critical issue of our time” — the climate crisis.

The June 2 statement from the Climate Justice Leadership Forum is the latest sign of mounting disaffection with the top-down push for carbon cap-and-trade. It is particularly significant because the 28 signatory organizations, which span the country from Anchorage to New Orleans and from Oakland to New York City, have been the spearhead of a rising movement by communities of color to crack open the historically affluent and white U.S. environmental lobby, much of which has backed the cap-and-trade approach to pricing carbon emissions.

Moreover, CJLF’s endorsement of “an equitable carbon tax” serves notice that lower-income and “minority” constituencies are concluding that the disproportionate impacts of carbon taxes and other user fees can (and must) be reversed through progressive use of the tax revenues. Indeed, the group’s statement declares that:

An equitable carbon tax must be set high enough to encourage emissions sources to make financial investment in technological controls and energy efficiency, and to begin researching and developing clean, renewable energy options.

A carbon tax cannot remain static and should not merely track inflation but should rise over time so that resource conservation and development of clean renewable energy can continue to be an attractive alternative to fossil fuel use.
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I have always been wary of cap and trade, particularly since so many politicians are for it as well as the World Bank. I agree with a carbon tax and believe it can be more effective in providing funds for alternate energies and also be more effective in weaning us off fossil fuels. Al Gore is also a proponent of a carbon tax as he reiterated in his testimony on Capitol Hill last year. It would be revenue neutral, more transparent to track and enforce, and provide a sure means for funds to wean us off dirty energy sources while also sparking employment.
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