The Palm Beach Post

Carbon fees would help economy, climate

- By Robert Politzer Robert Politzer is president and CEO of Greenstree­t Inc., a constructi­on and developmen­t firm that specialize­s in highperfor­mance buildings, based in New York City. He wrote this for American Forum.

As the owner of a constructi­on company, I’m angry that politician­s say we can’t do anything about climate change because it would hurt business. From my perspectiv­e, not doing enough about climate change is already hurting business — and will do much more damage in the future.

Here’s just one small example: When we prepare a bid for a constructi­on project, we typically start by providing lineitem pricing for all of our general conditions expenses. These usually include things like project supervisio­n and labor, waste disposal and equipment rental. In the past (we’ve in business since 1998), we did not have to include costs for protection against the elements. Sure, we always anticipate­d having to cover parts of a job site with tarps for waterproof­ing, but this was never enough of a cost to identify it as its own line item.

However, in recent years we see that the rainstorms that bear down on our projects are more intense. Convention­al blue tarps that are inexpensiv­e and that we have used for years no longer protect our job sites from such intense rainstorms. So we have had to purchase new hurricane-strength tarps and to put much more time into securing these tarps to our job sites to effectivel­y waterproof them.

The new tarps cost nearly 10 times what convention­al tarps cost, and the additional labor time adds up to thousands of dollars per project. So now all of our bids for new constructi­on projects include a new line item that we call “protection against the elements.” This line item is listed as an allowance, which means that we will bill for all the work required, but will have no idea how much work and cost will be incurred.

Our situation is not unique. According to the EPA: “In recent years, a higher percentage of precipitat­ion in the United States has come in the form of intense single-day events. Nationwide, nine of the top 10 years for extreme one-day precipitat­ion events have tional market, the costs of climate change have been hidden, and producers have received windfall profits. Economists call these hidden costs, externalit­ies. I call them unfair and irresponsi­ble.

One simple way to pay for these costs and hold those who pollute responsibl­e would be to put a price on carbon. And it might be politicall­y possible, even in today’s current political atmosphere. At a recent summit of the American Sustainabl­e Business Council (ASBC), a libertaria­n panelist expressed his concerns about externaliz­ed costs and his interest in a price on carbon.

Imagine a scenario in which these carbon fees — potentiall­y in the hundreds of billions of dollars — were allocated toward infrastruc­ture projects that are known to create very high-paying jobs along with a corporate and personal tax cut. The economic stimulus from this program would be enormous and we would get a major push toward a more sustainabl­e energy sector and a more sustainabl­e economy.

We could right the dysfunctio­nal market and address climate change in a profound way. Now that would be good for business.

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