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Letter to Michelle and Barack Obama on Global
Warming Policy
Dear Michelle and Barack,
We write to you as fellow parents concerned about
the Earth that will be inherited by our children,
grandchildren, and those yet to be born.
Barack has spoken of ‘a planet in peril’ and noted
that actions needed to stem climate change have
other merits. However, the nature of the chosen
actions will be of crucial importance.
We apologize for the length of this letter. But your
personal attention to these ‘details’ could make all
the difference in what surely will be the most
important matter of our times. Jim has advised
governments previously through regular channels. But
urgency now dictates a personal appeal. Scientists
at the forefront of climate research have seen a
stream of new data in the past few years with
startling implications for humanity and all life on
Earth.
Yet the information that most needs to be
communicated to you concerns the failure of policy
approaches employed by nations most sincere and
concerned about stabilizing climate.
Policies being discussed in national and
international circles now, which focus on ‘goals’
for emission reduction and ‘cap and trade’, have the
same basic approach as the Kyoto Protocol.
This approach is ineffectual and not commensurate
with the climate threat. It could waste another
decade, locking in disastrous consequences for our
planet and humanity.
The enclosure, “Tell Barack Obama the Truth — the
Whole Truth” was sent to colleagues for comments as
we left for a trip to Europe. Their main suggestion
was to add a summary of the specific
recommendations, preferably in a cover letter sent
to both of you.
There is a profound disconnect between actions that
policy circles are considering and what the science
demands for preservation of the planet. A stark
scientific conclusion, that we must reduce
greenhouse gases below present amounts to preserve
nature and humanity, has become clear to the
relevant experts. The validity of this statement
could be verified by the National Academy of
Sciences, which can deliver prompt authoritative
reports in response to a Presidential request (i).
NAS was set up by President Lincoln for just such
advisory purposes.
Science and policy cannot be divorced. It is still
feasible to avert climate disasters, but only if
policies are consistent with what science indicates
to be required. Our three recommendations derive
from the science, including logical inferences based
on empirical information about the effectiveness or
ineffectiveness of specific past policy approaches.
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Moratorium and phase-out of coal plants that do
not capture and store CO2.
This is the sine qua non for solving the climate
problem. Coal emissions must be phased out
rapidly. Yes, it is a great challenge, but one
with enormous side benefits.
Coal is responsible for as much atmospheric carbon
dioxide as the other fossil fuels combined, and its
reserves make coal even more important for the long
run. Oil, the second greatest contributor to
atmospheric carbon dioxide, is already substantially
depleted, and it is impractical to capture carbon
dioxide emitted by vehicles. But if coal emissions
are phased out promptly, a range of actions
including improved agricultural and forestry
practices could bring the level of atmospheric
carbon dioxide back down, out of the dangerous
range.
As an example of coal’s impact consider this:
continued construction of coal-fired power plants
will raise atmospheric carbon dioxide to a level at
least approaching 500 ppm (parts per million). At
that level, a conservative estimate for the number
of species that would be exterminated (committed to
extinction) is one million. The proportionate
contribution of a single power plant operating 50
years and burning about 100 rail cars of coal per
day (100 tons of coal per rail car) would be about
400 species! Coal plants are factories of death. It
is no wonder that young people (and some not so
young) are beginning to block new construction.
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Rising price on carbon emissions via a “carbon
tax and 100% dividend”.
A rising price on carbon emissions is the
essential underlying support needed to make all
other climate policies work. For example,
improved building codes are essential, but full
enforcement at all construction and operations
is impractical. A rising carbon price is the one
practical way to obtain compliance with codes
designed to increase energy efficiency.
A rising carbon price is essential to “decarbonize”
the economy, i.e., to move the nation toward the era
beyond fossil fuels. The most effective way to
achieve this is a carbon tax (on oil, gas, and coal)
at the well-head or port of entry. The tax will then
appropriately affect all products and activities
that use fossil fuels. The public’s near-term,
mid-term, and long-term lifestyle choices will be
affected by knowledge that the carbon tax rate will
be rising.
The public will support the tax if it is returned to
them, equal shares on a per capita basis (half
shares for children up to a maximum of two
child-shares per family), deposited monthly in bank
accounts. No large bureaucracy is needed. A person
reducing his carbon footprint more than average
makes money. A person with large cars and a big
house will pay a tax much higher than the dividend.
Not one cent goes to Washington. No lobbyists will
be supported. Unlike cap-and-trade, no millionaires
would be made at the expense of the public. The tax
will spur innovation as entrepreneurs compete to
develop and market low-carbon and no-carbon energies
and products. The dividend puts money in the pockets
of consumers, stimulating the economy, and providing
the public a means to purchase the products.
A carbon tax is honest, clear and effective. It will
increase energy prices, but low and middle income
people, especially, will find ways to reduce carbon
emissions so as to come out ahead. The rate of
infrastructure replacement, thus economic activity,
can be modulated by how fast the carbon tax rate
increases. Effects will permeate society. Food
requiring lots of carbon emissions to produce and
transport will become more expensive and vice versa,
encouraging support of nearby farms as opposed to
imports from half way around the world.
The carbon tax has social benefits. It is
progressive. It is useful to those most in need in
hard times, providing them an opportunity for larger
dividend than tax. It will encourage illegal
immigrants to become legal, thus to obtain the
dividend, and it will discourage illegal immigration
because everybody pays the tax, but only legal
citizens collect the dividend.
“Cap and trade” generates special interests,
lobbyists, and trading schemes, yielding non
productive millionaires, all at public expense. The
public is fed up with such business. Tax with 100%
dividend, in contrast, would spur our economy, while
aiding the disadvantaged, the climate, and our
national security.
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Urgent R&D on 4th generation nuclear power with
international cooperation.
Energy efficiency, renewable energies, and a
“smart grid” deserve first priority in our
effort to reduce carbon emissions. With a rising
carbon price, renewable energy can perhaps
handle all of our needs. However, most experts
believe that making such presumption probably
would leave us in 25 years with still a large
contingent of coal-fired power plants worldwide.
Such a result would be disastrous for the
planet, humanity, and nature.
4th generation nuclear power (4th GNP) and
coal-fired power plants with carbon capture and
sequestration (CCS) at present are the best
candidates to provide large baseload nearly
carbon-free power (in case renewable energies cannot
do the entire job). Predictable criticism of 4th GNP
(and CCS) is: “it cannot be ready before 2030.”
However, the time needed could be much abbreviated
with a Presidential initiative and Congressional
support. Moreover, improved (3rd generation) light
water reactors are available for near-term needs. In
our opinion, 4th GNP (ii) deserves your strong
support, because it has the potential to help solve
past problems with nuclear power: nuclear waste, the
need to mine for nuclear fuel, and release of
radioactive material (iii). Potential proliferation
of nuclear material will always demand vigilance,
but that will be true in any case, and our safety is
best secured if the United States is involved in the
technologies and helps define standards.
Existing nuclear reactors use less than 1% of the
energy in uranium, leaving more than 99% in
long-lived nuclear waste. 4th GNP can “burn” that
waste, leaving a small volume of waste with a
half-life of decades rather than thousands of years.
Thus 4th GNP could help solve the nuclear waste
problem, which must be dealt with in any case.
Because of this, a portion of the $25B that has been
collected from utilities to deal with nuclear waste
justifiably could be used to develop 4th generation
reactors.
The principal issue with nuclear power, and other
energy sources, is cost. Thus an R&D objective must
be a modularized reactor design that is cost
competitive with coal. Without such capability, it
may be difficult to wean China and India from coal.
But all developing countries have great incentives
for clean energy and stable climate, and they will
welcome technical cooperation aimed at rapid
development of a reproducible safe nuclear reactor.
Potential for cooperation with developing countries
is implied by interest South Korea has expressed in
General Electric’s design for a small scale 4th GNP
reactor. I do not have the expertise to advocate any
specific project, and there are alternative
approaches for 4th GNP. I am only suggesting that
the assertion that 4th GNP technology cannot be
ready until 2030 is not necessarily valid. Indeed,
with a Presidential directive for the Nuclear
Regulator Commission to give priority to the review
process, it is possible that a prototype reactor
could be constructed rapidly in the United States.
CCS also deserves R&D support. There is no such
thing as clean coal at this time, and it is doubtful
that we will ever be able to fully eliminate
emissions of mercury, other heavy metals, and
radioactive material in the mining and burning of
coal. However, because of the enormous number of
dirty coal-fired power plants in existence, the
abundance of the fuel, and the fact that CCS
technology could be used at biofuel-fired power
plants to draw down atmospheric carbon dioxide, the
technology deserves strong R&D support.
Summary
An urgent (iv) geophysical fact has become clear.
Burning all the fossil fuels will destroy the planet
we know, Creation, the planet of stable climate in
which civilization developed.
Of course it is unfair that everyone is looking to
Barack to solve this problem (and other problems!),
but they are. He alone has a fleeting opportunity to
instigate fundamental change, and the ability to
explain the need for it to the public.
Geophysical limits dictate the outline for what must
be donev. Because of the long lifetime of carbon
dioxide in the air, slowing the emissions cannot
solve the problem. Instead a large part of the total
fossil fuels must be left in the ground. In
practice, that means coal.
The physics of the matter, together with empirical
data, also define the need for a carbon tax.
Alternatives such as emission reduction targets, cap
and trade, cap and dividend, do not work, as proven
by honest efforts of the ‘greenest’ countries to
comply with the Kyoto Protocol:
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Japan:
accepted the strongest emission reduction
targets, appropriately prides itself on having
the most energy-efficient industry, and yet its
use of coal has sharply increased, as have its
total CO2 emissions. Japan offset its increases
with purchases of credits through the clean
development mechanism in China, intended to
reduce emissions there, but Chinese emissions
increased rapidly.
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Germany:
subsidizes renewable energies heavily and
accepts strong emission reduction targets, yet
plans to build a large number of coal-fired
power plants. They assert that they will have
cap-and-trade, with a cap that reduces emissions
by whatever amount is needed. But the physics
tells us that if they continue to burn coal, no
cap can solve the problem, because of the long
carbon dioxide lifetime.
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Other cases
are described on my Columbia University web
site, e.g., Switzerland finances construction of
coal plants, Sweden builds them, and Australia
exports coal and sets atmospheric carbon dioxide
goals so large as to guarantee destruction of
much of the life on the planet.
Indeed, ‘goals’ and ‘caps’ on carbon emissions are
practically worthless, if coal emissions continue,
because of the exceedingly long lifetime of carbon
dioxide in the air. Nobody realistically expects
that the large readily available pools of oil and
gas will be left in the ground. Caps will not cause
that to happen — caps only slow the rate at which
the oil and gas are used. The only solution is to
cut off the coal source (and unconventional fossil
fuels). Coal phase-out and transition to the
post-fossil fuel era requires an increasing carbon
price. A carbon tax at the wellhead or port of entry
reduces all uses of a fuel. In contrast, a less
comprehensive cap has the perverse effect of
lowering the price of the fuel for other uses,
undercutting clean energy sources. (vi) In contrast
to the impracticality of all nations agreeing to
caps, and the impossibility of enforcement, a carbon
tax can readily be made near-global. (vii)
A Presidential directive for prompt investigation
and proto-typing of advanced safe nuclear power is
needed to cover the possibility that renewable
energies cannot satisfy global energy needs. One of
the greatest dangers the world faces is the
possibility that a vocal minority of anti-nuclear
activists could prevent phase-out of coal emissions.
The challenges today, including climate change, are
great and urgent. Barack’s leadership is essential
to explain to the world what is needed. The public,
young and old, recognize the difficulties and will
support the actions needed for a fundamental change
of direction.
James and Anniek Hansen
Pennsylvania
United States of America
Footnotes
i
Given the brilliant scientists Barack has appointed
to his team, is there need for a National Academy of
Sciences meeting? Yes, his team surely would welcome
not only clarification of the urgency of the climate
situation, but also interdisciplinary (economics,
engineering, physics, biology…) discussion and
evaluation of policy options. Barack’s first year or
two in office is almost surely our last best chance
to get the climate and energy strategy right in time
to save the future of our children and
grandchildren.
ii
I am not referring to the DOE’s “Generation-4”
nuclear program, which is a diffuse program that
will not yield rapid payoff. Instead, as discussed
below, there would need to be a Presidential
directive to pursue a path(s) with the potential to
contribute to decarbonization of global energy
systems as rapidly as practical.
iii
4th generation reactors can include automatic
shutdown in case of an earthquake or other
interruption. It is noteworthy that, even with the
presence of poorly designed nuclear power plants in
the past, and in some cases demonstrably sloppy
operations, the waste from coal-fired power plants
has done far more damage, and even spread more
radioactive material around the world than all
nuclear power plants combined, including Chernobyl.
iv
Urgency derives from the nearness of climate tipping
points, beyond which climate dynamics will cause
rapid changes out of humanity’s control. Concern
about such behavior derives not from theory or
speculation, but from improving knowledge of how the
Earth responded to past changes of atmospheric
composition and from observations of ongoing
changes. Tipping points occur because of amplifying
feedbacks.
Feedbacks include loss of Arctic sea ice, melting
glaciers and ice sheets, release of ‘frozen’ methane
as tundra melts, and growth of vegetation on
previously frozen land. The surface changes increase
the amount of sunlight absorbed by Earth. Added
methane reduces heat radiation to space, amplifying
the warming effect of carbon dioxide produced by
burning fossil fuels.
Analysis of Earth’s history helps reveal the level
of greenhouse gases needed to maintain a climate
resembling the Holocene, Creation, the period of
reasonably stable climate in which civilization
developed. That carbon dioxide level, unsurprisingly
in retrospect, is less than the current 385 ppm
(parts per million). The safe amount for the
long-term is no more than 350 ppm, probably less.
Pre-industrial carbon dioxide amount was 280 ppm.
Precise definition of a safe range requires better
knowledge of all climate forcing mechanisms.
What is clear is that continuing fossil fuel
emissions will put Earth on an inexorable course
toward an icefree state, a course punctuated by
increasingly extreme disasters with hundreds of
millions of climate refugees.
A large fraction of species on Earth face certain
extinction, if we burn most fossil fuels without
capturing and storing the carbon dioxide. New
species may come into being over many thousands of
years, but all generations of our descendants that
we can imagine will live on a far more desolate
planet than the one we knew.
v
Total carbon in conventional fossil fuels (oil, gas,
and coal), if released to the air, is enough to
initiate a dynamic transition to an ice-free climate
state, a transition that would be out of humanity’s
control. A large fraction of the carbon dioxide
emitted in burning fossil fuels stays in the air
many centuries. Thus the climate problem cannot be
solved by only slowing the rate at which we burn the
fossil fuels.
Solution requires that a large part of total fossil
fuels is left in the ground, or the carbon dioxide
captured and stored. In addition, the unconventional
fossil fuels (oil shale, tar sands, methane
hydrates) must be left largely untouched or the
carbon dioxide captured and stored.
vi
Now, with oil prices down, is when a hefty carbon
tax should be added. In the future, when the price
of gasoline again reaches and passes $4/gallon, most
of this cost will be tax, staying in the country,
spread among consumers, and driving our economy to a
clean future. The public can understand this, if
Barack explains it, and they will accept it, if
there is 100% dividend.
vii
A carbon tax requires agreement of only several
major nations. If any given nation does not apply
the tax, an equivalent duty can be applied to their
products at ports of entry
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