"A small portion of the receipts generated by auctioning [cap and trade] allowances ($15 billion per year) will be used to support the development of clean energy, invest in energy efficiency improvements, and help develop the next generation of biofuels and clean energy vehicles – measures that will help the economy and help meet the emissions reduction targets. It will also be used to provide new funding to state and federal land and wildlife managers to restore habitat, create wildlife migration corridors, and assist fish and wildlife to adapt to the effects of a warming climate. All remaining receipts will be used for rebates and other transition relief to ensure that families and communities are not adversely impacted by the transition to a new energy, low carbon economy."
The possibility of passing cap-and-trade legislation ended for the foreseeable future when the Republican Party took control of the House of Representatives after the 2010 midterm election.
The term 'cap-and-trade" refers to emissions-reduction scheme wherein the federal government caps the amount of carbon a company may emit. Each company is allotted a number of permits that allows it to emit a specific amount carbon. The individual company must buy additional permits from the federal government, or unused permits from other companies, to go over this cap. Ideally carbon emissions will decline because the free market rewards those who lower their emissions most effectively.
Republicans said cap-and-trade would hurt the economy and destroy jobs, and the opposed the additional costs it would put on the energy industry. So it"s unlikely any sort of cap-and-trade legislation will make its way to the President Obama"s desk in the current Congress. For these reasons we rated Obama"s promise to pass cap-and-trade as Broken and the GOP"s pledge to oppose cap-and-trade as Promise Kept.
In the previous update, we rated this promise Compromise since there existed some hope that funding measures would be included in a renewable energy bill that did not contain a cap-and-trade provision. Yet no bill of this sort has come to pass.
Since the federal government never implemented a nationwide cap-and-trade initiative, there is naturally no revenue that can be garnered from it. As a result, this promise -- to use the funds collected from the auctioning of cap-and-trade permits for environmental and clean energy initiatives -- cannot be fulfilled. Due to the failure of of Congress to pass cap-and-trade we rule this promise as Broken.
While on the campaign trail, then candidate Barack Obama promised to use revenues generated by auctioning off pollution credits to pursue cleaner sources of energy.
We last reviewed the status of this promise in August 2009, when we rated it In the Works. The House had passed a comprehensive energy bill in June 2009. In the Senate, Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., and Joe Lieberman, I-Conn., released their own version of a cap-and-trade bill in May 2010.
As the November elections get closer, however, it has become more difficult for Congress to pass controversial legislation, so we wanted to see how things have been moving along on the cap-and-trade front.
As it turns out, cap-and-trade has hit a major roadblock. On July 22, 2010, Democratic leader Harry Reid told reporters that Democrats simply "don"t have the votes" to pass a comprehensive bill that would put caps on greenhouse gas emissions. Instead, Reid, D-Nev., introduced a scaled-down energy bill that would remove the $75 million liability cap on economic damages from an oil spill, increase funding for the Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund and fully fund the Land and Water Conservation Fund. It would also would provide $5 billion in rebates to encourage homeowners to make energy efficiency upgrades and encourage the retrofit of the nation's heavy vehicle fleet to use natural gas, according to the bill summary. The bill does not contain any cap-and-trade provisions.
Talking to reporters August 31, 2010, Reid said that cap-and-trade "doesn"t have the traction that a lot of us wish it had."
So let's recap. Obama said that he will use revenues from cap and trade to support clean energy and environmental restoration. The Democratic leadership has acknowledged that it does not have the votes to pass legislation that includes cap and trade. Still, the whole point of this promise is to use the money generated by cap and trade to invest in energy efficiency improvements, help develop the next clean energy vehicles and provide new funding to restore environmental habitats. The Reid energy bill addresses all of those goals in some way. We'll keep watching, but for now, we rate this a Compromise.