By Stephen Lee and Ellen M. Gilmer

Among President Joe Biden’s first acts in office was reassembling a cross-government team to figure out the “social cost of carbon,” a wonky number that has broad impacts on federal agency rules.

Biden signed an executive order Wednesday directing the team to publish an interim social cost of carbon within 30 days. Environmentalists and climate scientists agree that undoing the Trump administration’s changes to how the social cost of carbon is calculated will play a big role in federal policy, as well as in states that take their lead from the federal government.

1. What is the social cost of carbon?
It’s the estimated cost to society of releasing a ton of carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas, into the atmosphere. The figure takes into account everything from lost agricultural productivity, to property damages from strong storms, to diminished fresh water availability—all because of climate change.

Considering the price that society is paying, or will pay, due to greenhouse gas emissions affects how regulators weigh the costs versus benefits of proposed rules. If a rule would increase emissions, the social cost of carbon is multiplied by the number of extra tons of greenhouse gases expected, and that figure is added to the rule’s costs. If a rule would lower emissions, the figure derived gets added to the benefits ledger.

3. What is President Biden doing?
First, reconstituting the interagency working group, which pulls together experts from across the federal bureaucracy under the auspices of the White House Council of Economic Advisers and the Office of Management and Budget.

Next, Biden said he wants the group to put out an interim social cost that ensures agencies are accounting for the full costs of pollution from carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases, “including climate risk, environmental justice, and intergenerational equity.”

In June, the Government Accountability Office said the EPA under Trump had arrived at its lower estimate because, among other things, it only considered domestic costs, rather than global costs. It is almost certain that the Biden team will revert to the government’s pre-Trump way of calculating the social cost of carbon.

Michael Greenstone, an economics professor at the University of Chicago, said reverting to the Obama-era calculations would yield a social cost of carbon of $125 per ton, assuming it took into account lower interest rates in recent years.

4. Does Biden need Congress?
No. The working group is housed within the executive office, so Biden has free rein to put the team back together. The same is true of calculating a new cost estimate.

Interagency task forces are very common on issues where more than one agency has a stake, said Naomi Oreskes, a climate science professor at Harvard University. And Biden wants climate considerations to be part of every agency’s mission, not just the Environmental Protection Agency.

“That’s not to say that the usual suspects won’t get out their forces to try to undermine, challenge, or deny” the working group’s new findings, Oreskes said. “In the past they always have.”

Any figure the Biden team comes up with could be challenged in court, so the working group would be well advised to show its work through a formal notice and comment procedure, Greenstone said.

Continue Reading at Bloomberg Law…

Areas of Focus: Social Cost of Carbon
Definition
Social Cost of Carbon
The social cost of carbon is an essential tool for incorporating the cost of climate change into policy-making, corporate planning and investment decisionmaking in the United States and around the...
Energy Markets
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Energy Markets
Well-functioning markets are essential for providing access to reliable, affordable energy. EPIC research is uncovering the policies, prices and information needed to help energy markets work efficiently.
Fossil Fuels
Definition
Fossil Fuels
Under current policies, fossil fuels will play an important role in the energy system for the foreseeable future. EPIC research is exploring the costs and benefits of these fuels as...
Updating the United States Government’s Social Cost of Carbon
Definition
Updating the United States Government’s Social Cost of Carbon
As the Biden administration updates the social cost of carbon, their thorough review should include using the latest climate modeling, applying new climate damage estimates, employing lower discount rates, and...
Updating the United States Government’s Social Cost of Carbon
Definition
Updating the United States Government’s Social Cost of Carbon
Policymakers could immediately return to the Obama Administration’s social cost of carbon approach paired with a more appropriate discount rate that together would produce a social cost of $125 per...
Updating the United States Government’s Social Cost of Carbon
Definition
Updating the United States Government’s Social Cost of Carbon
Policymakers could immediately return to the Obama Administration’s social cost of carbon approach paired with a more appropriate discount rate that together would produce a social cost of $125 per...
Fossil Fuels
Definition
Fossil Fuels
Under current policies, fossil fuels will play an important role in the energy system for the foreseeable future. EPIC research is exploring the costs and benefits of these fuels as...