Statements

TCS Statement on President’s Climate Speech

TCS RSS Feed RSS
June 25, 2013

Below is a statement by Ryan Alexander, president of Taxpayers for Common Sense, on the President's Speech on Climate Change.

Download: TCS President Responds to President on Climate (pdf)

 

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Steve Ellis
June 25, 2013 (202) 546-8500 x126

Taxpayers Cannot Afford to Go Down This Road Again
Energy Subsidies Not the Solution

TCS president Ms. Ryan Alexander Responds to President’s Speech on Climate

Washington, DC - As the President said today, carbon emissions create enormous fiscal liabilities and taxpayers will lose if this important issue is ignored. However, the speech is a mixed bag for taxpayers. Here is our reaction to a few key points raised in the President’s comments.

Ending oil and gas subsidies would be a win for taxpayers but it is important we do not replace one expensive energy subsidy with another. We need to stop picking winners and losers in the marketplace with energy subsidies, and not just with oil and gas. Taxpayer subsidies supporting the false promises of “clean” coal or the efficiencies of nuclear power must end too. We’ve been down on this expensive road before paving the way with loan guarantees, tax credits, and more for the well-established mature coal and nuclear industries and its time they fully bear these costs. As for renewable energy—the subsidies must stop there too. Building up industries with billions in subsidies is neither a sound nor a sustainable fiscal policy. The President called for more support for advanced biofuels, but you don’t have to look any further than the billions of dollars wasted on lucrative tax breaks and federal mandates for corn ethanol which has created a slew of taxpayer liabilities, consumer harms, and environmental consequences along the way.

Energy development on federal lands and waters must have a comprehensive leasing process and collect a fair royalty. Federal lands and waters should be used for energy production, but taxpayers lose billions in lost and unaccounted royalties for existing resource extraction on federal lands and waters. Some offshore oil and gas leases pay no royalties at all and all hardrock mining operations on federal lands are royalty-free. Opening up more land for renewable development without ensuring the proper safeguards and royalties are in place would add insult to injury and will cost taxpayers billions more in lost revenue.  

It’s time to get serious. Enough of the empty promises and political posturing, it’s time to put the shoulder to the wheel. To address our nation’s energy problems the playing field must be leveled. For more than a century the tax code has become riddled with energy giveaways and it’s time for a clean slate. Going further, any comprehensive approach to addressing climate liabilities should include a carbon tax. You tax what you want less of and you don’t hear a lot of clamoring for more carbon in the atmosphere. That would let the market work it’s will and reduce taxpayer and environmental liabilities.

####

 

 

Filed under: Ensure Fair Returns

Discussion
Weekly Wastebasket

Our weekly reality-check for federal spending. View All

September 13, 2013

Syria: Excuse 535 To Not Cut the Deficit

Volume XVIII No. 37 Possible action in Syria has become the most recent excuse du jour for Pentagon boosters... Read More