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Obama’s not waiting around for a carbon tax anymore

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President Obama’s sweeping new proposal for slowing climate change has been one of the worst-kept secrets around.

The reactions were rolling in before the plan had been officially released. One of them, from the free-market think tank R Street Institute, made an interesting suggestion: The conservative alternative to the president’s call for much tighter standards on power plants, especially coal-fired plants, is a carbon tax. (R-Street is a breakaway organization from the conservative Heartland Institute; unlike the latter, R Street recognizes that global warming is real and that human activity is a major contributor to it.)

Yes, a carbon tax is a great idea. Unlike out-and-out limits on carbon emissions, which the president proposes, a tax could both quickly nudge industry into cleaner energy while minimizing the short-term impact on consumers. That’s because, although energy prices would rise, the taxes would increase federal revenue and that would allow (under some proposals) for lower personal taxes.

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There’s one big problem: Been there, didn’t do that.

Congress, ever allergic to anything with the word “tax” in it, killed carbon tax legislation in 2010 and again this year.

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