OK, US government — see you in court
By James Hansen and Sophie Kivlehan AUGUST 14, 2017
The Boston Globe
We
are a 76-year-old grandfather and his oldest grandchild, who just
graduated from high school in Pennsylvania. We are among 22
plaintiffs in a lawsuit filed by Our Children’s Trust on behalf of
young people and future generations against the federal government.
The
suit will show that the government, by authorizing and subsidizing
production, transport, and burning of fossil fuels, is substantially
responsible for growing climate disruptions that could lead to
irreparable harm to young people. These federal actions, we assert,
violate young people’s constitutional rights to life, liberty,
property, and equal protection of the law.
The
reality and intergenerational nature of human-made climate change are
undeniable. It takes decades and centuries for the ocean to warm and
ice sheets to melt in response to changes of atmospheric composition.
Benefits of burning fossil fuels occur today, but the principal
climate effects will be felt by young people and their offspring.
If
high fossil fuel emissions continue, eventual effects include loss of
coastal cities on time scales as
short as 50 to 150 years. Regional climate extremes are already
increasing. Growing numbers of climate refugees are a harbinger of
the future, if we let low latitudes become too hot for outdoor
activity.
We
expect to win the lawsuit, but that will not be enough. We could win
the battle in court, but lose the war. Indeed, unless the public
understands the situation, and asserts its potential to use the
democratic process, young people will be consigned to diminishing
prospects for their future.
Civil
rights provide a relevant example. The Supreme Court ruled in 1954,
in Brown v. Board of Education, that segregation was
unconstitutional. Yet the government dithered. Only with public
outrage in the 1960s did the civil rights war begin to be won.
A
similar delay in the climate case would be deadly. Continued high
emissions for decades will lock in a warmer ocean, likely pushing the
system beyond a point of no return, as the warmer ocean melts the ice
shelves around Antarctica and Greenland. Loss of coastal cities would
become likely. Other climate disruptions would be magnified.
Our
well-oiled, coal-fired Congress and president, predictably, will try
to dither. The court may require “all deliberate speed,” as it
did with civil rights, but it cannot usurp roles of the executive and
legislative branches. It may even require the president to report on
progress in reducing emissions. But that guarantees almost nothing
about solving the global climate problem.
The
fundamental fact is that as long as fossil fuels are cheap, as long
as they are not required to pay their costs to society, somebody will
burn them. The United States alone has the leverage to address the
global issue, but the court cannot order that.
The
economics is not rocket science. The price of fossil fuels should be
made to rise steadily by collecting a rising carbon fee from fossil
fuel companies at the domestic mine or port of entry. All of the
funds should be distributed equally to all legal residents. Economic
studies show that this would spur the economy, increase gross
national product, and create millions of jobs.
The
United States burned five billion tons of fossil fuel CO2 last year.
A carbon fee of $55 per ton yields $275 billion, or $1,000 for each
adult, $3,000 to a family with two or more children, if children
get half a share, for up to two per family. This market-based
approach provides incentives for the public and businesses, rapidly
phasing down fossil fuel use and modernizing infrastructure.
The
United States would quickly make the carbon fee near-global by
imposing a border duty on products from countries that did not have
an equivalent carbon fee or tax. Most countries would prefer to have
their own fee, rather than let us collect the money at the border.
The
best thing citizens can do is join the Citizens Climate Lobby, even
start a local chapter. There are 425 chapters with over 78,000
members in the United States, and chapters in 30 other countries. The
members write op-eds and visit lawmakers, being polite but
persistent.
Senators
Barbara Boxer and Bernie Sanders adopted the carbon fee-and-dividend
idea, but their Senate bill would grab 40 percent of the money for
the government. In that case, it won’t work — it becomes a tax
that depresses the economy. Most people would lose money. The public
would not allow the fee to rise.
James
A. Baker III, George P. Shultz, and leading conservative
economists have come out in favor of a carbon fee with 100 percent
dividend, exactly as we propose. Unfortunately, Republicans are
afraid that they will be challenged in their primaries if they appear
to admit that climate change is real.
Citizens
Climate Lobby needs to grow bigger and stronger, so that, when we win
the court case, politicians and the public are aware of the centrist
political compromise that would work. Incidentally, it would restore
America’s leadership and address domestic economic issues.
Why
are we confident of winning our lawsuit, which surely would need to
survive scrutiny by a conservative Supreme Court? Our case is based
on the rock-solid foundation of our Constitution.
Thomas
Jefferson, in
correspondence with James Madison in 1789 about the proposed
Bill of Rights, wrote, “The question whether one generation of men
has a right to bind another . . . is a question of such
consequences as not only to merit decision, but place also among the
fundamental principles of every government. . . . I set out
on this ground, which I suppose to be self-evident, ‘that the earth
belongs in usufruct to the living.’ ”
Jefferson
was saying that the present generation can enjoy the fruits of the
land, but with an obligation to leave comparable conditions for the
next generation. A reasonably stable seashore, our nation’s
Founders would agree, is an asset that should not be stolen from
young people.
The
young plaintiffs, and all youth today, confront a gathering storm.
They have at their command considerable determination, a dog-eared
copy of our beleaguered Constitution, and rigorously developed
science. The courts will decide if that is enough.
James
Hansen, former director of the NASA Goddard Institute for Space
Studies, is director of the Climate Science, Awareness and Solutions
program at the Columbia University Earth Institute. Sophie Kivlehan
will be a freshman at Dickinson College in Carlisle, Pa., this fall.
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