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    cap and trade

    Explore " cap and trade" with insightful episodes like "Patrons-First Podcast: State Legislative Preview with Sen. Joe Nguyen (D-34)", "New Research Calls Into Question Carbon Offsets From Northwest California Forests", "New Caps and New Concerns: Discussing the Federal Government’s Plan for Oil and Gas Emissions", "Tim Brown | Racing to destroy the world’s most potent greenhouse gases" and "Cap-and-Trade Market for Carbon Credits with Mary Nichols" from podcasts like ""Seattle News, Views, and Brews", "EcoNews Report", "ARC ENERGY IDEAS", "Climate Positive" and "Climate Break"" and more!

    Episodes (27)

    Patrons-First Podcast: State Legislative Preview with Sen. Joe Nguyen (D-34)

    Patrons-First Podcast: State Legislative Preview with Sen. Joe Nguyen (D-34)

    Ready to find out what's ahead in an action-packed 60-day state legislative session? Get the details with public affairs host Brian Callanan of Seattle Channel in about the time it takes for a coffee break! Brian connects with State Senator Joe Nguyen (D-34), the Energy, Environment, and Technology Committee Chair (and Ways & Means Vice-Chair) to get the scoop. From a climate action agenda threatened by a new citizens' initiative, to a breakdown of all the... breakdowns of the state ferry system, this podcast has you covered! If you'd like to get patrons-first content before anyone else with this podcast, please support it on Patreon!

    New Research Calls Into Question Carbon Offsets From Northwest California Forests

    New Research Calls Into Question Carbon Offsets From Northwest California Forests

    New research published in the journal Global Change Biology raises alarming questions about the efficacy of forest carbon programs registered in California’s cap-and-trade program. Utilizing satellite imagery, particularly of forests in Northwest California, researchers have compared the carbon sequestered by forests versus what is claimed and have emerged with a concerning conclusion: forests registered in the offset program are overcounting the carbon that they are paid to protect. 

    Researcher Shane Coffield joins Gang Green to discuss his findings and the implications of his research on California’s carbon emission reduction strategy.

    Support the show

    New Caps and New Concerns: Discussing the Federal Government’s Plan for Oil and Gas Emissions

    New Caps and New Concerns: Discussing the Federal Government’s Plan for Oil and Gas Emissions

    This week on the podcast we discuss the Canadian Federal Government’s July 2022 discussion document “Options to Cut Oil and Gas Sector Greenhouse Gas Emissions to Achieve 2030 Goals and Net-Zero by 2050.”    Joining the discussion is our guest Sander Duncanson, Partner, Regulatory, Environmental, Indigenous and Land at Osler, a Canadian business law firm.

    There are two policy options being proposed.  Option one is a new cap-and-trade system for the oil and gas sector in addition to the existing provincial carbon pricing systems already in place.  Option two proposes to modify the existing carbon pricing systems in each province, setting more stringent rules for oil and gas.

    Jackie, Peter and Sander express a number of concerns about the proposal; the inefficiency of pricing carbon higher for one sector of the economy, the potential for unintended consequences from overlapping policies, including the potential to harm to smaller oil and gas producers, and the policy could potentially face legal challenges from the provinces creating uncertainty that could ultimately slow down investment and reduction in GHG emissions. 

    The discussion document is asking for feedback to be submitted by September 30, 2022 and sent to PlanPetrolieretGazier-OilandGasPlan@ec.gc.ca. We encourage people to participate and express their views on the proposed cap on emissions.

    Content referenced in this podcast:

    Please review the ARC Energy Institute disclaimer.

    Tim Brown | Racing to destroy the world’s most potent greenhouse gases

    Tim Brown | Racing to destroy the world’s most potent greenhouse gases

    Climate change solutions typically center on carbon, and addressing carbon is essential for a safer climate future. But we sometimes forget that carbon isn’t the only culprit.  Fluorinated gases such as old HVAC refrigerants can have more than 10,000 times the climate-changing potential of carbon.  The climate research nonprofit Project Drawdown determined that refrigerant management is one of the most impactful ways to mitigate climate change.  As CEO of Tradewater, Tim Brown is racing to aggregate potent gases from around the world and destroy them before they leak into the atmosphere and wreak havoc on our climate. 

    In this episode, host Hilary Langer speaks with Tim Brown, CEO and Founder of Tradewater – a Chicago-based company that finds and destroys the world’s most potent climate-changing gases. Tim shares how his eBay purchase of a common refrigerant inspired him to build a company that produces some of the highest quality carbon offsets. He explains how the Tradewater team leverages partnerships to scale their impact, why they expanded internationally, and how they plan to accelerate their work before potent GHGs are released into the atmosphere. 

    Links:

    Tradewater Website

    Tradewater on Twitter

    Tradewater on LinkedIn

    Tim Brown on LinkedIn

    Project Drawdown: Overview of Refrigerant Management

    One overlooked way to fight climate change? Dispose of old CFCs. (National Geographic)

     

    Episode recorded: May 5, 2022 

    Email your feedback to Chad, Gil, and Hilary at climatepositive@hannonarmstrong.comor tweet them to @ClimatePosiPod.

    Email your feedback to Chad, Gil, and Hilary at climatepositive@hasi.com or tweet them to @ClimatePosiPod. 

    Can We Mitigate the Effects of Climate Change by Putting a Price on Carbon?

    Can We Mitigate the Effects of Climate Change by Putting a Price on Carbon?

    There's no denying the world is already paying for climate change. The price is stronger hurricanes, bigger wildfires, and unpredictable heat waves. So, how can people living on a changing globe literally pay to mitigate the effects of climate change? One solution is to utilize the social cost of carbon, says economist Michael Greenstone. He co-led the development of the US government’s social cost of carbon as chief economist for President Obama’s Council of Economic Advisers. President Biden has raised carbon's value back to Obama-era levels after the Trump Administration lowered it. Greenstone, who leads the Energy Policy Institute at Chicago, speaks with Pulitzer Prize-winning Washington Post journalist Juliet Eilperin about how we're just beginning to experience what the climate has in store.

    aspenideas.org

    We’re better off when we stop pandemics before they start

    We’re better off when we stop pandemics before they start

    When Aaron (Ari) Bernstein met his first pediatric patient infected with COVID-19, he realized that this little girl's health was connected to an infected bat on the other side of the world. Climate change and deforestation have made it easier for new pathogens to spread across the globe. On this episode of Better Off, Ari Bernstein explains how protecting the environment could also secure the future of our own species.

    Guest: Aaron (Ari) Bernstein, Interim Director of The Center for Climate, Health and the Global Environment (Harvard Chan C-CHANGE).

    More about climate and health

     

    Carbon Controversy

    Carbon Controversy
    This week we dove into a hot topic, both literally and figuratively....carbon. In our Carbon 101 episode we break down: what are greenhouse gases (GHGs), how they impact the planet, as well as what options are available to combat carbon emissions. Just like the planet, we got heated in this candid conversation about the state of our Earth. But as always, focusing on the positive, we discussed thought provoking solutions that can hopefully lead to a fully renewable future and had a few laughs along the way.

    Episode 54: Carbon Emissions Explained

    Episode 54: Carbon Emissions Explained

    www.startingsustainability.com What are carbon emissions? Why are they bad? What are greenhouse gases? Why are they bad? What is the difference between carbon neutral and carbon offsets? How can you make money destroying greenhouse gases? Do you hear all these terms and get a little overwhelmed or confused? This episode explains all the differences so you can have a better understanding of what each term means. Show notes at www.startingsustainability.com/episode54 

    The climate crisis was caused by economics, can economics be part of the solution?

    The climate crisis was caused by economics, can economics be part of the solution?

    The New York Times called it one of the worst outcomes in a quarter-century of climate negotiations. United Nations Secretary General António Guterres said the international community "lost an important opportunity to show increased ambition on mitigation, adaptation and finance to tackle the climate crisis” at the recent UN Climate Summit in Madrid.

    But Harvard Kennedy School Professor Robert Stavins says global climate negotiators still accomplished something important last month at the COP25 conference—because of what they didn't do. Instead of approving lax rules full of loopholes that big polluting countries like Brazil and Australia were, negotiators held the line and pushed off a decision until next year's meeting in Scotland.

    Stavins, the A.J. Meyer Professor of Energy & Economic Development and director of both the Harvard Project on Climate Agreements and the Harvard Environmental Economics Program, tells host Thoko Moyo that getting workable economic solutions in place to combat the climate crisis is essential, because fundamentally the crisis was caused by economic activity. Stavins says his latest research shows that both carbon tax and cap-and-trade schemes can work, as long as they are well-designed.

    For more on Professor Stavins' thoughts on the COP25 summit and his research, check out his blog: An Economic View of the Environment

    PolicyCast is produced by Ralph Ranalli and Susan Hughes.

    Ep 36: Nathaniel Keohane, SVP of Climate at Environmental Defense Fund

    Ep 36: Nathaniel Keohane, SVP of Climate at Environmental Defense Fund

    Today’s guest is Nat Keohane, Senior Vice President of Climate at Environmental Defense Fund,  where he leads EDF’s Climate program and helps to shape the organizations advocacy for environmentally effective and economically sound climate policy.  

    EDF is one of the world's largest environmental organizations, with more than two million members and a staff of 700 scientists, economists, policy experts, and other professionals around the world. Guided by science and economics, they tackle urgent threats with practical solutions.

    An economist with expertise in energy and environmental policy, Nat also holds a position as Adjunct Professor of Law at New York University, where he teaches a seminar on climate change policy.

    Previously, Nat served in the Obama Administration as Special Assistant to the President for Energy and Environment in the National Economic Council and Domestic Policy Council, where he helped to develop and coordinate administration policy on a wide range of energy and environmental issues. Before joining the Administration, he directed economic policy and analysis at EDF, playing a lead role in the efforts to enact comprehensive cap-and-trade legislation in Congress.

    Prior to EDF, Nat was an Associate Professor of Economics at the Yale School of Management. He received his Ph.D. from Harvard University in 2001, and his B.A. from Yale College in 1993.

    In today’s episode, we cover:

    • Nat’s history, what led him to care about climate change, and what led him to EDF
    • What EDF does, and how Nat’s responsibilities have evolved at EDF since 1994 when he joined to today
    • Nat’s time teaching at Yale, what he liked about it, and what ultimately led him back to the advocacy world at EDF
    • His time at the White House in 2011/2012 as Special Assistant to President Obama for Energy and Environment in the National Economic Council and Domestic Policy Council
    • The role of markets vs policy
    • The importance of striking the right balance between urgency and hopefulness
    • EDF’s focus on pragmatism and getting stuff done, not just what the right answer is in theory
    • EDF’s bipartisan approach and the importance of that for any meaningful policy initiatives to be durable over the long term
    • Importance of the 2020 US presidential election, and the stakes
    • The role of China, and of geography in general when determining climate impacts and strategy
    • Some reasons for optimism
    • How Nat would allocate $100B to maximize its impact in the climate fight
    • Nat’s advice for you and I on how to help

    Links to topics discussed in this episode:

    • Nat Keohane’s Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nathaniel-keohane-00809988/
    • Nat Keohane’s twitter: https://twitter.com/natkeohane?lang=en
    • EDF: https://www.edf.org/
    • Yale School of Management: https://som.yale.edu/
    • Waxman-Markey bill: https://www.businessgreen.com/bg/glossary/1805110/waxman-markey-bill
    • National Economic Council: https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/administration/eop/nec
    • EPA: https://www.epa.gov/
    • Cap and trade: https://www.edf.org/climate/how-cap-and-trade-works
    • China cap and trade: https://www.technologyreview.com/s/611372/china-is-creating-a-huge-carbon-market-but-not-a-particularly-aggressive-one/

    You can find me on twitter @jjacobs22 or @mcjpod and email at info@myclimatejourney.co, where I encourage you to share your feedback on episodes and suggestions for future topics or guests.

    Enjoy the show!

    Get connected with MCJ: 

    *If you liked this episode, please consider giving us a review! You can also reach us via email at content@mcjcollective.com, where we encourage you to share your feedback on episodes and suggestions for future topics or guests.

    TIL about carbon pricing

    TIL about carbon pricing

    What exactly is a carbon price, and how does it work? What would it look like and how would it change everyday life? In this episode of TILclimate (Today I Learned: Climate), MIT economics professor Christopher Knittel joins host Laur Hesse Fisher to break down the complexities of carbon pricing. Together, they explain different types of programs, give us a sense of how much it would cost, and explore how countries and U.S. states are experimenting with carbon pricing now.
    Christopher Knittel is a professor of applied economics at MIT’s Sloan School of Management, director of the MIT Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research (CEEPR), and co-director of the MIT Electric Power Systems Low Carbon Energy Center. Prof. Knittel’s research focuses on energy and environmental economics, and he works to compare the efficiency and costs of different programs and policies that aim to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

    For more climate explainers, check out: www.tilclimate.mit.edu.

    Links
    For more information on carbon pricing, check out:

    The work of Prof. Knittel:

    Overviews of carbon pricing:

    Examples of carbon pricing policies outside of the U.S.:

    Examples of carbon pricing policies in the U.S.:

    About the US sulfur dioxide (SO2) cap and trade program

    An overview of climate change:

    Credits

    Special thanks to Tom Kiley and MIT Open Learning.
    Produced by the MIT Environmental Solutions Initiative at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

    Ontario Throne Speech

    Ontario Throne Speech

    Today on the Unpublished Cafe podcast:
    The Ontario PC's made a lot of promises on the campaign trail but we're short on details when it came to attaining goals. Promises of lower Hydro bills and lower gas prices were highlighted but they haven't been fleshed out yet. The Province has pulled out of cap and trade although there is nothing to replace it. Ford has made good on turfing Hydro One head, Mayo Schmidt, who he dubbed the "six million dollar man" during the campaign. The entire Board resigned leaving the utility without leadership. One of the most polarizing issue during the campaign was a return to the previous sex-ed curriculum which is 20 years old and out of date.

    New Ontario education minister, Lisa Thompson was invited on to the show, but her office said she was unavailable. And that's too bad as their seems to be some confusion as to what will be taught. In the last 48 hours, the PC's have said the old curriculum will be taught in September, then Thompson added that things like consent, and respect will be taught. She then maintains no decisions have been made.

    Premier Doug Ford now says that his government will undertake the largest education consultation with parents in Ontario. There is no timetable for that consultation. When it comes to the sex Ed curriculum brought in in 2015, some parents felt it wasn't age appropriate. The religious right hijacked the issue spreading falsehoods about what it contained. So here we are about six weeks to go before kids head back to class and educators are no closer to knowing what is and isn't part of the curriculum.

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    https://www.unpublished.vote/issue/94/pcs-throne-speech

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    GUESTS:

    Mel Cappe
    https://ecofiscal.ca/2015/01/20/six-q...
    Member of the Ecofiscal Commission and with the School of Public Policy and Governance, University of Toronto.

    Sue McGarvie
    https://www.sexwithsue.com/
    Registered Sex Therapist

    Mike Schreiner
    https://gpo.ca/mike-schreiner-leader/
    Head of the Ontario Green Party

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    REFERENCES:

    https://news.ontario.ca/opo/en/2018/0...
    https://www.theglobeandmail.com/canad...
    https://www.thestar.com/news/queenspa...
    https://www.nationalobserver.com/2018...
    https://ipolitics.ca/2018/07/11/ford-...
    http://www.summastrategies.ca/?ddownl...
    https://www.ontariondp.ca/news
    https://ecofiscal.ca/2018/06/08/tread...
    http://ecofiscal.ca/video_news_clip/o...
    https://globalnews.ca/news/4332620/hy...
    https://globalnews.ca/news/4334369/on...
    https://ecofiscal.ca/2018/06/21/can-o...
    https://ecofiscal.ca/2018/06/22/not-c...

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