newrepublic.com
If Not the Green New Deal, Then What?
By Emily Atkin
6-8 minutes
February 13, 2019
As momentum for the Green New Deal grows, so do its
detractors. The ambitious plan to fight climate change introduced by
Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Senator Ed Markey last week has been
called everything from “brainless” to “delusional” by conservatives. President
Donald Trump said it sounded like “a high school term paper that got a low
mark.” Some Democrats have criticized the Green New Deal, too, saying that its
goal of net zero carbon emissions by 2030 is unachievable. Others believe the
plan doesn’t go far enough.
What, then, do these critics propose instead? What should
America do to drastically reduce greenhouse gas emissions and slow catastrophic
global warming?
Most Republicans don’t have an answer to that question
because they deny that anything needs to be done at all. But as New Yorker
staff writer Osita Nwanevu noted on Twitter, those who accept the dire reality
of climate change aren’t helping by offering empty critiques.
Some conservatives are getting frustrated with the lack of
alternative proposals from the Republican Party, too. “The ‘Green New Deal’ is
a bad idea,” Eddie Scarry wrote recently for the Washington Examiner. “But it’s
an idea, nonetheless. And the country has shown it’s willing to try new things
if it might make lives better. Republicans should learn that quickly, or lose.”
Mike Cernovich, the male supremacist and conspiracy theorist, made a similar
argument on Twitter.
It’s a strange day when an alt-right troll admits that
climate change denial is a losing strategy. But Cernovich is right. Americans
increasingly recognize that the world needs to decarbonize quickly. To prevent
the planet from warming by 2 degrees Celsius, which many scientists consider
the tipping point, the world must become carbon neutral by 2070. How can it meet
that goal without the kind of massive government intervention that the Green
New Deal proposes? I put that question to the plan’s critics.
The Green New Deal is based on the idea that the only way to
solve a problem as enormous as climate change is to change the way society
works: to reform American capitalism itself. That’s why, in addition to
transitioning the country to 100 percent renewable energy and installing a
high-speed rail system to reduce our reliance on cars, Ocasio-Cortez and
Markey’s resolution calls for universal health care, a federal job guarantee
program, and affordable housing for all. It also says the public should have
“an appropriate ownership stake” in the achievements of the Green New Deal.
The latter policies are what bother Joseph Majkut, the
director of climate policy at the Niskanen Center, a think tank that describes
itself as a group of “globalists” who support “economic and social inequality”
but also a “belief in the wealth creating power of free markets.” “[The Green
New Deal] is a whole portfolio of things that aren’t necessarily aimed at
reducing greenhouse gas emissions,” he said. “I understand the perspective that
this is supposed to be a reorganization of the social and political economic
order, and climate is a part of that. But to me it feels like climate is just
one part of this larger progressive reorganization of society.”
Majkut and the Niskanen Center argue that a federal climate
plan should stick to climate-specific policies. He advocates for a nationwide
carbon tax; investment in “advanced research and development” for reducing
carbon emissions from industry and agriculture; more government subsidies for
low-carbon energy sources like wind and solar; and stricter efficiency rules on
buildings.
But will those policies be enough to achieve net-zero carbon
emissions within several decades? Majkut said he’s not sure, but added that
he’s not sure how the Green New Deal would do it, either. “I don’t see how
having Medicare for All makes it easier to achieve decarbonization,” he said.
How, I asked, can we make it easier to achieve
decarbonization?
“I have absolutely no idea, man,” Majkut said. “Climate
change is really hard.”
Ramez Naam, who lectures on energy and environment at
Silicon Valley’s Singularity University, outlined similar policy ideas to
Majkut in a viral Twitter thread on Friday. But he argued that significant research
investments in zero-carbon agriculture and zero-carbon manufacturing—along with
government incentives for the technology that emerges—would be enough to
achieve decarbonization. “We can figure out how to take agriculture, which is
currently 25 percent of our emissions, and do it in a zero carbon way,” he told
me. “Then government policy can shape the market and encourage deployment of
this new technologies.”
Decarbonization is possible, Naam argued, if the U.S.
government invested enough resources in low-carbon agriculture, manufacturing
research, and new technologies. “American companies would be the ones exporting
the technology for carbon-free cement, carbon-free steel, carbon-free
factories, and that would be a huge opportunity,” he said. “I think it will
have even more impact than the Green New Deal, because the Green New Deal only
decarbonizes the United States. We would only reduce global carbon emissions by
15 percent, and that’s not enough.”
Critics of Naam’s plan might argue that it’s far too risky
for a problem as dire as climate change. It relies on scientists’ developing
miracle cures for our highest-emitting sectors within just a few years—and then
it relies on industry to successfully deploy those cures across the planet. The
plan does not seek to reduce excessive consumption, but to somehow make
excessive consumption sustainable.
The Green New Deal seems less risky by contrast, since it
would mandate the transition to low-carbon energy sources that already exist.
The are a lot of questions surrounding the Green New Deal—first and foremost
whether it could ever become law—but at least it doesn’t rely on miracle cures.
It’s an almost impossible solution to an almost impossible problem.
And yet, even the Green New Deal may not be enough. “We
can’t just seek to decarbonize America,” Naam said. “The ultimate climate
policy is policy that makes it easier for other countries to decarbonize.” He
cited a tweet by Vox’s Matthew Yglesias that called not for a Green New Deal,
but a Green Marshall Plan. That frame isn’t exactly right, Naam said: “We
shouldn’t be going to countries and building their infrastructure for them.”
But it’s the seed, at least, of a potential alternative to the Green New Deal.
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