FLVOL69
MAGA
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What, did the Fox News priest tell you the Popes encyclical will be on animal rights?You mean the Pope who named himself after the Patron Saint of Animals is going to talk about caring for Animals?
Following the lead of the great recent Popes, especially Paul VI, Pope Francis has a unique role as a religious leader and moral guidance to protect, preserve, sustainably develop the natural environment and achieve that social inclusion that can no longer be postponed. The problem of climate change has become a major social and moral problem, and mentalities can only be changed on moral and religious grounds.
Therefore, our Academics supported the Popes initiative to publish an Encyclical or another such important document on climate and social inclusion to influence next years crucial decisions.
In fact, the idea is to convene a meeting with the religious leaders of the main religions to make all people aware of the state of our climate and the tragedy of social exclusion starting from the biblical message that man is the steward of nature and of its environmental and human development according to its potential and not against it, as Paul IV intended.
The purpose of any cap-and-trade system is simple enough. First, put a hard ceiling on how much greenhouse gas (GHG) can be emitted in a given year by every firm subject to the system. Thats the cap. Then take the total amount of GHGs the cap allows for that year, and divide it up into permits, each one allowing whoever holds it to emit one ton of emissions. Then all the firms can buy and sell the permits among one another. Thats the trade.
The system ensures everyone has a profit motive to reduce their emissions: the more they cut, the fewer permits they need to buy, and the more excess permits they can sell to others. Some firms may cut a little, and some firms may cut a lot, just as long as the total reduction matches the cap. And without specific regulatory rules, everyone in the system can also pick and choose the least-costly reductions that work for them. In effect, a cap-and-trade system turns all the firms in it into a giant cooperative laboratory looking for the most efficient combination of ways to meet that one cumulative reduction.
Where cap-and-trade sets a cap on emissions and then lets the market figure out the price, carbon taxes set a price on emissions to incentivize the market to reach a particular reduction target. All other things being equal, economists tend to prefer carbon taxes; theyre simpler, and dont require the creation of whole new financial instruments or trading markets. And its a little easier to link cap-and-trade systems to each other than to link them to a carbon tax. But the effect of a carbon tax or cap-and-trade system is essentially symmetric, as Stavins put it. Theres very little difference between the two. The advantage at this point of cap-and-trade is mainly that some important states like California plus the Northeast have already gone forward with it.
The most efficient taxes will tend to be the simplest ones, without a bunch of loopholes to protect incumbent industries. So its good to hash out this kind of bill in the open rather than making a bunch of compromises with special interests behind closed doors, as happened with the Waxman-Markey cap-and-trade bill in 2009. Thats why last year Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.), cosponsor of that failed bill and a superclimate hawk, called for writing a new bill and making it a carbon tax.
Why the Kochs and the Walmart clan are trying to stop you from putting solar panels on your roof
For anyone that still thinks republicans are against taxes.
That prospect is enough to upset the Koch brothers, the heirs of the Walmart fortune and the utility industry, all which are trying to stamp out the rooftop solar movement or at least make a tidy profit penalizing the people who use it. With the help of powerful lobbyists and PACs like the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) and Americans for Prosperity, they are set to do battle in statehouses across the nation in 2015.
"ALEC, which receives much of its funding from the utility industry and fossil-fuel investors like the Kochs, has long been an opponent of renewable energy and the Obama administrations effort to reduce carbon emissions. Its working with conservative activists and corporate interests to fight homeowners who are installing solar panels on their roofs. Calling people who install rooftop solar panel freeriders, another word for freeloaders, the pro-corporate group is actively promoting legislation in states to charge fees, even exorbitant ones, for rooftop solar installations."
Thoughts on the article?
I'm pretty sure it's because the utilities are forced to pay retail for your electricity, with no consideration of demand or grid infrastructure. If they could just isolate and ignore the rooftop solar people, they would.
Grid maintenance, but that's not the hangup. It's mostly they are paying double for something they don't want (lost customer, plus paying for electricity not needed). And given baseload requirements, my guess is that they cannot take credit for solar which has poor capacity factors. I guess it has peak power working in on it's side, but again, I doubt they factor that into their baseload generation requirements.
I'm not too familiar with grid economics. But my given what I know, I can't fault them for hating rooftop solar producers. They are being forced to do something that has zero positives to their business model.
Ultimately the problem seems to be that you can't choose where that electron comes from.
I've live in ATL for a decade and have never heard of or experienced a brownout
I'm pretty sure it's because the utilities are forced to pay retail for your electricity, with no consideration of demand or grid infrastructure. If they could just isolate and ignore the rooftop solar people, they would.
I have had my solar panels for a couple of years now. The utility absolutely does NOT pay retail for my excess electricity. They pay wholesale or about 1/3 to 1/5 of retail, depending on baseline. I also pay a monthly fee to contribute to grid maintenance.
Where does the utility pay retail?
Why the Kochs and the Walmart clan are trying to stop you from putting solar panels on your roof
For anyone that still thinks republicans are against taxes.
That prospect is enough to upset the Koch brothers, the heirs of the Walmart fortune and the utility industry, all which are trying to stamp out the rooftop solar movement or at least make a tidy profit penalizing the people who use it. With the help of powerful lobbyists and PACs like the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) and Americans for Prosperity, they are set to do battle in statehouses across the nation in 2015.
"ALEC, which receives much of its funding from the utility industry and fossil-fuel investors like the Kochs, has long been an opponent of renewable energy and the Obama administrations effort to reduce carbon emissions. Its working with conservative activists and corporate interests to fight homeowners who are installing solar panels on their roofs. Calling people who install rooftop solar panel freeriders, another word for freeloaders, the pro-corporate group is actively promoting legislation in states to charge fees, even exorbitant ones, for rooftop solar installations."
Thoughts on the article?
really, never had the power flicker and go out during peak times? I have been here for 2 years, and really the only reason i notice is when i am on my desktop. bothered me enough where i bought a battery for the sob. you must live in a nicer area than me.
