Current:Home > reviewsObama’s Oil Tax: A Conversation Starter About Climate and Transportation, but a Non-Starter in Congress -Mastery Money Tools
Obama’s Oil Tax: A Conversation Starter About Climate and Transportation, but a Non-Starter in Congress
View
Date:2025-04-15 14:40:34
President Obama’s proposal to impose a $10 tax on every barrel of oil and spend the money on advances in transportation is one of the most comprehensive attempts yet to address the climate impacts of moving people and freight from place to place.
Linking climate policy and public works programs, however, is attempting to pave the way for a project not yet shovel-ready.
No lame duck president whose party is the minority in both houses of Congress seriously expects dramatic, ideologically laden new policies to pass.
And if there are two things that are hard to imagine Congress including in the budget for the fiscal year 2017, they are a broad new policy to control climate change and a big tax increase, let alone one hitting down-and-out producers of fossil fuels.
Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, whose Energy Committee has a bipartisan policy bill on the Senate floor, said that because Republicans are in the majority, nobody should “worry about this becoming law.“
White House officials, who announced the proposal late Thursday as part of the run-up to the annual budget submission next week, cast it as a futuristic vision of a transportation network that has become decrepit.
“Some things from the 1960s, like the Beatles, are ageless,” said Jeff Zients, director of the president’s National Economic Council. “But our transportation system definitely is not.”
The goal is to lower transport’s contribution to global warming while building its resilience in the face of growing climate impacts.
“Our transportation system is too dependent on oil,” he said. “Transportation is responsible for nearly 30 percent of the U.S. carbon emissions. And the system was not designed to handle the realities of a changing climate.”
The tax, which would be phased in over five years, would provide funds to increase spending on surface transportation by 50 percent.
A White House fact sheet spells out a broad mix of research, public works spending, and other elements combining some new initiatives with extensions of recent programs. It says the proposal “places a priority on reducing greenhouse gases, while working to develop a more integrated, sophisticated, and sustainable transportation sector.”
As Brad Plumer pointed out on Vox, there are similarities between an oil tax and the fuel taxes that have traditionally funded highways, mass transit, and aviation programs—but there are differences too. Still, “the most radical part” of this plan is its link between 21st century transportation and climate policy.
Elana Schor wrote on Politico that however adamant the Republicans are in declaring the proposal dead on arrival, it will reverberate among Democrats and their green allies. She predicts it will help push the debate toward ever more hawkish climate policies in the wake of fights over the Keystone XL pipeline and other thorny issues.
An article on Bloomberg compared the President’s proposal to his perennial suggestions to cut tax subsidies favoring fossil fuel producers. Congress has never gone along. And it would make little sense to tax oil companies with one hand while subsidizing them with the other.
The Washington Post calculated that at current rates of oil consumption, the plan would bring in about $65 billion a year when fully phased in. However, since the whole point is to lower consumption of oil, it’s hard to predict the long term flow of money. Nor was there any estimate available of how much carbon pollution would be prevented in the long run.
The New York Times wrote the proposal could bring in up to $32 billion in new federal revenue annually. It noted that some policymakers have argued that with oil prices low, now is a good time to raise oil taxes, since consumers are paying low prices at the pump these days. However, it would also be kicking oil companies while they are down, and tilt the playing field in favor of natural gas, which is also abundant and cheap these days but would pay no tax.
The easiest argument for opponents in this political season is to decry the tax increase, just as they would condemn any other tax hike.
But administration officials argue that people pay hidden taxes every day because of the costs climate change extracts from society, along with the costs of delays and inefficiency due to crumbling infrastructure. More of those costs, they are saying, should be paid by the industries that impose them on society—starting, in this case, with Big Oil.
veryGood! (1)
Related
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- 'Goodness wins out': The Miss Gay America pageant's 50-year journey to an Arkansas theater
- DeSantis campaign pre-debate memo criticizes Trump, is dismissive of other rivals despite polling gap closing
- Biden says he'll join the picket line alongside UAW members in Detroit
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- CDC recommends Pfizer's RSV vaccine during pregnancy as protection for newborns
- Student loan borrowers face plenty of questions, budget woes, as October bills arrive
- Bachelor Nation's Becca Kufrin Gives Birth to First Baby With Thomas Jacobs
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- 'Here I am, closer to the gutter than ever': John Waters gets his Hollywood star
Ranking
- Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
- The Rise of Digital Gold by WEOWNCOIN
- Missouri says clinic that challenged transgender treatment restrictions didn’t provide proper care
- College football Week 4 grades: Clemsoning is back. Give Clemson coach Dabo Swinney an F.
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- AI Intelligent One-Click Trading: Innovative Experience on WEOWNCOIN Exchange
- How inflation will affect Social Security increases, income-tax provisions for 2024
- Pakistan recalls an injectable medicine causing eye infection, sight loss and orders a probe
Recommendation
Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
William Byron withstands Texas chaos to clinch berth in Round of 8 of NASCAR playoffs
William Byron withstands Texas chaos to clinch berth in Round of 8 of NASCAR playoffs
'We just collapsed:' Reds' postseason hopes take hit with historic meltdown
Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
Family of Black high school student suspended for hairstyle sues Texas officials
Lizzo tearfully accepts humanitarian award after lawsuits against her: 'I needed this'
5 hospitalized after explosion at New Jersey home; cause is unknown