Opinion
Getting Real About Coal and Climate
A document from the United Mine Workers offers reason
to hope.
Paul
Krugman
By Paul
Krugman
Opinion
Columnist
April 22,
2021
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/22/opinion/coal-mine-workers-climate.html
“Change is
coming, whether we seek it or not.” So declares a remarkable document titled
“Preserving Coal Country,” released Monday by the United Mine Workers of
America, in which the union — which at its peak represented half a million
workers — accepts the reality that coal isn’t coming back. Instead, it argues,
the goal should be “a true energy transition that will enhance opportunities
for miners, their families and their communities.”
It’s good
to see this kind of realism. Remember, back in 2016 Donald Trump promised that
he would restore coal to its former greatness, reopening shuttered mines — and
voters in coal country believed him. Many of them probably still imagine that
something like that is possible.
The union,
however, understands that it isn’t. What killed the mines wasn’t a “war on
coal”; it was technological progress, first in the extraction of natural gas,
then in solar and wind power. Generating electricity from coal would be
economically unviable even if we didn’t have to worry about climate change.
Of course,
we do need to worry about climate change, which is an existential threat to
civilization. The question is how to address this threat.
The union’s
document is in effect an endorsement, at least in principle, of the Biden
administration’s plans to make action against climate change a centerpiece of
its boost to infrastructure spending — something I guess we’re now supposed to
call Build Back Better rather than the Green New Deal, but whatever. It’s also
a small but encouraging vindication of the thinking behind Build Back Better,
the belief that climate action is most likely to be politically feasible if it
eschews economic purism and relies more on carrots than on sticks.
Some
background: Conventional economics suggests that the best way to limit
greenhouse gas emissions is either to impose a carbon tax or to create a
cap-and-trade system in which polluters must buy permits for their emissions.
This
argument underlies high-profile initiatives like the Climate Leadership
Council, whose founding members included a wide array of business leaders and
economists — including Janet Yellen, now the Treasury secretary — and a number
of major corporations. The council, whose creation was announced in 2017, calls
for carbon fees whose proceeds would be redistributed to families. This plan is
part of a “bipartisan road map” for action.
This is,
however, not the path the Biden administration is taking. Why?
First, the
economic case for relying almost exclusively on a carbon tax misses the crucial
role of technological development. The reason large reductions in emissions
look much easier to achieve now than they did a dozen years ago is that we’ve
seen spectacular progress in renewable energy: a 70 percent fall since 2009 in
the cost of wind power, an 89 percent fall in the cost of solar power.
And this
technological progress didn’t just happen. It was at least partly a result of
investments made by the Obama administration. These investments were ridiculed
by conservatives; back in 2012 Mitt Romney declared that all of the money went
to “losers” like Solyndra and, um, Tesla. In retrospect, however, it is clear
that government spending provided a crucial technological lift. And this
suggests that public investment, as well as or even instead of a carbon tax,
can be a way forward in fighting climate change.
Second, the
idea that a carbon tax can achieve bipartisan support is hopelessly naïve. Only
14 percent of Republicans even accept the notion that climate change is an
important issue. And redistributing the proceeds of such a tax to families in
general won’t win over voters who believe that climate action will threaten
their jobs and communities.
What might
win over at least some of these voters, however, is the kind of program the
United Mine Workers is calling for: targeted spending designed to help retrain
former miners and support development in coal country communities.
I don’t
want to be overly optimistic about the Biden strategy. For one thing, while
there’s a compelling case against relying exclusively on a carbon tax to fight
climate change, public investment alone also probably isn’t enough. Eventually
we will almost surely have to put a price on greenhouse gas emissions,
politically difficult though that will be.
On the
other side, while it’s great to see the mine workers’ union call for policies
that support “coal country,” not coal jobs — that is, communities rather than a
specific industry — that’s still a tall order. Although Covid-19 created
temporary disruptions, it remains true that the 21st-century economy “wants” to
concentrate good jobs in major metropolitan areas with highly educated work
forces. Promoting job creation in West Virginia or eastern Kentucky won’t be
easy, and may be impossible.
But we can
and should make a good-faith effort to help workers and regions that will lose
as we try to avoid environmental catastrophe, and in general to make climate
policy as politically palatable as possible, even at some cost in efficiency.
Climate action is too important a task to insist that it be done perfectly.
Paul
Krugman has been an Opinion columnist since 2000 and is also a Distinguished
Professor at the City University of New York Graduate Center. He won the 2008
Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences for his work on international trade
and economic geography. @PaulKrugman


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