Five years ago, West Virginia senatorial candidate Joe Manchin fired a bullet — an actual bullet — through a copy of a bill that would have set a limit on greenhouse gas emissions and let businesses trade pollution permits.
He won the election. And the bill died a political death. But on Friday, President Obama fired back, albeit without the drama of a real bullet.
In a joint news conference in the White House Rose Garden, he stood with Chinese president Xi Jinping, who announced that China will start the world’s largest carbon trading market by 2017. The move shatters some of the beloved talking points of the fossil fuel lobby, and applies shock-paddles to the once-dead idea of a U.S. cap-and-trade system.
Could it be back on the table in America?
It never really left. In fact, cap and trade has been flourishing at the state level, winning plaudits for creating jobs, slashing electricity bills, and forcing down carbon emissions. The only reported losers so far are power plant owners — a group many voters seem primed to let fail if it forces a transition to clean, renewable fuels.
And now the idea once again has a push from the White House, which praised China for succeeding where the U.S. has so far failed.
“China is making great efforts to advance ecological civilization and promote green, low-carbon, climate resilient and sustainable development,” the White House said in a statement. “The two Presidents reaffirm their shared conviction that climate change is one of the greatest threats facing humanity and that their two countries have a critical role to play in addressing it.”
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That China and the United States are in this together has long been called into question by Republicans in Congress. Many of them believe that climate change is a fake problem invented by conniving liberal academics, and that any U.S. action would give China an upper-hand on the world stage. Friday’s announcement is yet more evidence that the opposite is true.
China and U.S. face similar circumstances in many ways. They’re both looking to slash emissions while ramping up renewable energy production. Cap and trade is considered a powerful tool for doing so, because it hangs a price on carbon dioxide, pushing big polluters to pay the real cost of emissions or find cleaner ways of doing business.
Both countries are working toward a big gathering in Paris this December. There, world governments hope to strike a deal, sucking the carbon out of the global economy without sacrificing growth. The United States is trying to slash greenhouse gas emissions 17% by 2020, and as much as 28% by 2025. China has promised to bend its own emissions curve by 2030, driving it downward toward zero.
Other countries have made similar promises, and all are free to pursue their particular pledge any way they want. But with Friday’s announcement, cap and trade may be on the brink of becoming the global standard. Such is the power of a joint U.S.-China announcement on climate.
The two nations are, after all, the largest annual and all-time polluters. Right now, China contributes nearly a third of annual carbon emissions worldwide. Other developing countries — especially India and the nations of Africa — could copy and paste whatever the big guys do to reform themselves.
At the same time, President Obama never really stopped the fight for cap and trade. He just hasn’t mentioned the words. But in trying to make good on his 2008 inaugural promise to slow the rise of the oceans and heal the planet, he has managed to set up a scenario where cap and trade could succeed state by state.
That’s thanks to his administration’s new Clean Power Plan, which puts a hard limit on emissions, leaving it up to the states to come up with a plan under the budget. Nine states comprising 25% of Americans already have mandatory cap-and-trade programs. And they’re working.








