"In 2010, at the signing ceremony for
the Affordable Care Act, Joe Biden, the vice president at the time, could be
overheard telling President Barack Obama that “this is a big something deal.” OK, that’s almost
what he said. And he was right.
Now, as president himself, Biden has
presided over three big deals. After several years during which “It’s
infrastructure week!” became a punchline, he passed a major infrastructure
bill. He pushed through legislation to promote U.S. production of sophisticated
semiconductors. And most important, Congress enacted the Inflation Reduction
Act, which despite its name is mainly a climate bill; we’re finally taking
serious action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
Yet many observers, myself included,
have wondered whether Biden’s climate policy is a big enough deal.
The media often uses hyperbolic
language about any program that involves spending hundreds of billions of
dollars, so Biden’s climate initiative, which the Congressional Budget Office estimates will
involve roughly $400 billion in climate spending, gets described as “massive.”
But that’s spending over the course of a decade. And the budget office expects cumulative
gross domestic product over the next decade to be more than $300 trillion.
So we’re talking about spending only
a bit more than one-tenth of 1 percent of G.D.P. Can this possibly be enough to
make a real difference in facing an existential threat?
Well, there are two important
reasons to believe that Biden’s climate policy may be a much bigger deal than
the numbers might suggest. But there are also reasons to worry that the policy
may fall short, not because the spending is inadequate, but because of one
crucial limiting factor: an inadequate power grid.
The first reason to believe that
Biden’s policy may be a big deal is that it comes at a crucial technological
juncture.
There was a time, not that long ago,
when it seemed as if limiting greenhouse gas emissions would require hard
choices — that it would have to be achieved largely through conservation and
increased energy efficiency, which in turn would require putting a substantial
price on carbon, either via carbon taxes or via a cap-and-trade system in which
emitters would have to purchase permits. In fact, there would still be a good
case for a carbon tax, if it were politically feasible.
But huge progress in renewable energy and related
technologies, notably batteries, means that it now looks almost easy to achieve
a low-emission economy. We can now easily envision a society in which people
drive electric vehicles and cook on induction ranges, using power generated by
solar panels and wind turbines, and experience no sense of sacrifice.
The role of policy then becomes to
accelerate this transition — to push us over the tipping point into a
sustainable economy. And this need not involve huge amounts of public money,
just enough to act as a sort of catalyst for change.
A second, somewhat related reason to
think that Biden’s climate policy is a big deal is that it doesn’t actually
mandate $400 billion in spending. What it does, mainly, is set conditions under
which consumers and businesses can receive tax credits for adopting green
technology. That $400 billion is based on an estimate of how many people will
actually take advantage of these tax credits — and given the spectacular rate
of technological progress, that estimate may well turn out to be low.
A report from Credit
Suisse suggests that the credits might “propel much higher activity levels”
than the budget office projects — that in practice federal climate spending
might be $800 billion or more. And there may also be a multiplier effect as
private firms make investments complementary to those directly subsidized, so
Credit Suisse suggests that the true size of the climate plan may be more like
$1.7 trillion.
So Biden’s deal may be bigger than
it looks. Which is a good thing, given the importance of the issue.
Now for my concern. America finally
has a serious climate strategy. However, it depends not just on a rapid
expansion of solar and wind power, but also on linking these new energy sources
to the electrical grid. But the U.S. power grid doesn’t have enough capacity,
and it is in general a mess.
Part of the reason is that there
isn’t really a U.S. grid: Investment in electricity transmission is, as a Reuters report put
it, “controlled by a Byzantine web of local, state and regional regulators who
have strong political incentives to hold down spending.” And this regulatory
system wasn’t designed to handle the sudden influx of new energy sources; as a
result, simply getting permission to connect to the grid can take years.
Here’s how I think of it: A
clean-energy future suddenly looks eminently possible thanks to a technological
miracle — incredible cost declines for renewable energy — and a political
miracle — Democrats’ success, despite the narrowest of congressional
majorities, in enacting legislation that looks even better when examined
closely.
But we may need a third,
bureaucratic miracle to fix the electricity grid and make this whole thing
work.”
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