Bright Green Blog

Boston commuters board a bus. Mass transit got a boost from high gas prices – gains that seem to be holding. Cheap fossil fuel is a disincentive for energy efficiency, experts say.

(Mary Knox Merrill/The Christian Science Monitor/File)

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Is a bad economy good for the environment?

A recession may be a cruel remedy for environmental degradation. But some experts say the earth welcomes the breathing room.

By Gregory M. Lamb  |  Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor/ April 27, 2009 edition

Bill Zimmer/AP/File

Workers install solar panels on the roof of Willmar Junior High School in Willmar, Minn. President Obama’s stimulus plan includes funds for making public school buildings more energy-efficient.


The phrase “It’s not easy being green” may never seem truer than during this economic slide.

For the first time in 25 years of asking the question, the Gallup Poll recently found that a majority of Americans, 51 percent, say that economic growth should be given priority over environmental concerns.
As recently as 2000, only 23 percent of Americans wanted the economy considered first, with 70 percent saying the environment should rank higher.

That’s enough to make Al Gore want to hit “delete” on his slide-show presentation on global warming.

But a number of environmentalists and economists, while concerned about changing attitudes, say the picture is far from one of total gloom. For one thing, the downturn in worldwide industrial production has meant fewer greenhouse gases are being emitted, slowing their growth in the atmosphere and, in turn, the pace of global warming.

Other pockets of good news have emerged, too. A recent report on the state of the world’s forests, for example, suggests that pressure to clear stands of trees, which absorb carbon dioxide, has declined because of lower demand for wood products and for growing crops such as palm oil, soybeans, and rubber, which often displace forests.

And while low gasoline prices, as well as price-cutting by desperate car dealers, means that buying a huge SUV may be more attractive, low prices for crude also have slowed interest in projects such as extracting oil from Canadian tar sands and shale in the Rocky Mountains, projects whose potential environmental effects worry environmentalists.

By one set of calculations, for example, Europe will produce 7 percent fewer carbon emissions by 2020 than earlier thought.

In the US, the No. 2 emitter of greenhouse gases, demand for oil in January was down 7 percent from January of the previous year, says Trevor Houser, a visiting fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics and director of the Energy & Climate Practice at the Rhodium Group in New York.

In China, the world’s No. 1 greenhouse-gas emitter, power demand in January was down 14 percent, compared with the year before, Mr. Houser says. “That’s following five years where we’d seen 15 percent year-on-year growth.”

All the talk about China building two new coal-fired power plants a week is outdated, he says. “Existing power plants are losing business and new power-plant construction has slowed to a crawl.”
If that 15 percent decline in power persisted for all of 2009 – far from certain, he concedes – it would mean that China had cut its carbon emissions by an amount equal to the entire greenhouse-gas emissions of Germany over that period.

Environmentalists realize that a recession is a cruel remedy for climate change. “No one would argue that a recession is the way to solve our climate problems,” says Manish Bapna, executive vice president and managing director of the World Resources Institute. But, he allows, “it puts a little time back on the carbon clock.”

“It gives us a moment of breathing room,” says Rick Duke, director of the Center for Market Innovation at the Natural Resources Defense Council. “But it’s not something you can count on.”

“It’s not a blockbuster impact,” adds Frank O’Donnell, president of Clean Air Watch. “You would have to have a screaming downturn and no manufacturing at all to change that [worldwide greenhouse-gas emissions] in a huge, measurable way.”

Environmentalists are more encouraged about how efforts to stimulate economies, especially in China and the US, may have “green” effects. Japan and South Korea also have announced stimulus plans that contain “green” aspects.

China has pledged to spend roughly 4 trillion yuan (about $586 billion) to prime its economy. There are indications that some of its most energy-intensive heavy industries, such as steel and cement, may not be rebuilt in favor of less-polluting light industries that are more efficient job creators. And given its huge air pollution problems, China is committed to steering its flourishing auto industry toward nonpolluting electric vehicles.

“If China takes advantage of the crisis to consolidate heavy industry, improve its energy efficiency, and free up investment capital for lighter manufacturing and services, then it will emerge from the crisis with a growth model that pollutes less and employs more,” Houser says.

The US stimulus package includes a number of “green” provisions. “Much of the stimulus funding is going toward clean energy, and that is fantastic,” Mr. Duke says.

Among the most effective in both lowering energy demand and creating jobs, economists say, is funding to cut energy usage, including insulating homes and public buildings. “Such projects are highly labor-intensive, can be done quickly, and will save energy,” says Robert Stavins, director of the Environmental Economics Program at Harvard University. “And, importantly, they will reduce the long-term cost of meeting climate objectives.”

On average, concludes a report from the World Resources Institute, for every $1 billion invested in well-thought-out green programs, 30,100 jobs will be created, “saving the economy $450 million per year in energy costs.” (See chart for a program-by-program analysis.)

What is more difficult, environmentalists concede, is passage of carbon-reduction legislation in Congress. Also under pressure is the Obama administration’s commitment to reach an international agreement on carbon-cutting at a key meeting in Copenhagen, Denmark, in December.

“If the Obama administration had come into office with a thriving economy, I think it would have been easier for them to get a cap-and-trade or [carbon] tax bill through Congress,” says Peter Wilcoxen, director of the Center for Environmental Policy and Administration at Syracuse University.

Congressional Republicans already have attacked the administration’s proposal for a cap-and-trade plan, in which industries would buy and trade among themselves permits to emit CO2. They call it a burdensome tax on consumers in a time of economic hardship.

The Obama cap-and-trade plan would generate more than $600 billion in revenue, by some estimates. Some of it would fund programs to fight climate change and the rest would be returned as tax cuts to offset higher prices for electricity and other goods and services.

Despite the worldwide recession, the urgency of reaching an international agreement on reducing carbon emissions “cannot be overstated,” Mr. Bapna says. “The science has been increasingly unequivocal that the world is warming at a pace that is even faster than projected” by a UN-sponsored report from the world’s top scientists issued in 2007, he says.

Yet “the challenge of striking a deal should also not be underestimated,” he says. “It is a tall order.”

Any agreement among nations to cut greenhouse-gas emissions now would not take effect for several years, Duke points out. That means that the recession could be long over before any drag on economic growth would be felt.

If an international agreement can be made by 2010, “we can still solve this problem,” he says. “But we can’t let things slip any further…. We have just enough time…. We just don’t have another five years to wait.”

Both a cap-and-trade plan in the US and an international pact must be addressed regardless of the economic situation, Professor Wilcoxen says.

One thing matters above all in climate policy, he says: “The price of fossil fuels needs to go up.” That’s the only thing that will send the right signals to the private sector to boost energy efficiency and take other steps to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions.

The key question, Houser concludes, is, “Do we emerge from this crisis in a more globally sustainable pathway?”

( More stories )

Comments

1. Richard Witty | 04.27.09

One problem with the damaged economy and the environment, is that many of the changes needed to lighten our footprint require at least moderate personal, enterprise, and governmental capital investment.

For example, insulating a home thoroughly (as well as taking care of indoor air issues that result from insulating too well) takes moderate capital investment.

Or, developing frequent mass transit routes that actually enhance a family’s ability to function with less vehicles, cost the state some investment in vehicles and drivers.

Or, expanding trolley like systems (low weight, zero emissions, better than electric cars on weight) take more significant capital investment for the land to site the trolley lines, electric infrastructure and vehicles.

In an environment in which housing prices are still declining pretty rapidly, whose going to put $20,000 into a home if they’re not sure they’ll be able to stay there?

2. CASSE | 04.28.09

The fact that there is a fundamental conflict between economic growth and environmental protection is finally being clarified for the public and policy maker. By signing the CASSE position on economic growth, you too can help to refute the exceedingly dangerous rhetoric that “there is no conflict between growing the economy and protecting the environment.” The position is here:

http://www.steadystate.org/CASSEPositionOnEG.html

Brian Czech, Ph.D., President
Center for the Advancement of the Steady State Economy

3. Thomas Goss | 04.29.09

Here in the Philippines, the public is bearing up well against this alleged “Global Warming”. The biggest problem her is the pilleging of the natural resources, such as the forests, by ht eFirst World nations. A great deal of headway would ;be made if they taught the Chinese and Japanese to use their chopsticks for more than one meal. Countless acres of forest have be ravaged so that Chang and Takai can have the luxary of a new pair of chopsticks each time they eat. The same is true with the mineral resources here. In the Third World, the main problem is not Gullible Warming, but First World Nations and the solution lies on their backs, not on the Third World backs.

4. JP | 04.30.09

It’s a sad state of affairs when economic well-being and environmental well-being are at odds with each other. We (or “they”) have developed a warped economic system where Consumption is the linchpin. There is more profit in making things that are designed to break (i.e. cell phones), than there is in finding ways to ‘reduce, reuse, recycle.’ We must spend and borrow and consume more resources to have stability.

5. Bad Economy | 05.01.09

A recession has as much effect to the environment as population control does for the environment. Both can be effective but it’s not exactly something you want. Going green in a bad economy is just the trendy thing to do. Our only hope is that some of the trends stick in our daily lives, like conservation and reducing waste.

6. Donna Demmery | 05.03.09

EXCELLENT! Just the type of article needed for up-and-coming green businesses that need current and relevant information in our fight to introduce green ideas as solutions to municipalities and households. I live in a metropolitan area where there is not one single location a consumer can go and cash in her recyclable waste; nor in any of the ten surrounding counties. We have to pay to take it to our landfills (already separated); but we still get nothing in return for their value. It is the goal of Recycle Safe Services to bring education and training to the community outlining the benefits of recycling. This article has given me a few more tools for my belt. Please keep it flowing!
Donna Demmery, Founder, Recycle Safe Service, Douglasville, GA recyclesafeservices121@gmail.com

7. green man | 05.04.09

sooner or later we are going to be forced by globel competition and prices to go green for or manfacturing and our homes.

8. briansmith | 07.13.09

global warming is the biggest hoax since 911

9. sydney | 09.18.09

i love the environment i want to make it cleaner thouh i always pick up trash. i need more people to care so can you help me get the word out? i really need you help to make it a better place for the beautiful animals and invironment.

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