Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
A free-market ‘green revolution’
A free-market ‘green revolution’
Dec 16, 2025 12:28 AM

Society today is pulled between two opposite views towards the environment. At one extreme, some see the environment as only a source of profit and gain, but ignore any larger responsibilities. At the other extreme, some recognize an obligation to nature, but think that the only way to protect the environment is through stifling regulation and the expansion of government. Both of these philosophies contain elements of the truth, but neither plete. It is possible to develop effective government policies that both protect the environment and benefit the economy.

Read More…

Mankind has an unquestionable obligation to protect the environment. As Pope Benedict XVI explained in the encyclical Caritas in Veritate, “the environment is God’s gift to everyone, and in our use of it we have a responsibility towards the poor, towards future generations, and towards humanity as a whole.” These obligations, however, do not mean that businesses and society cannot use the environment for economic gain. Instead, these responsibilities imply that we must see the natural world as a gift from God, meant to be used and enjoyed, but also protected for the benefit of others.

With that in mind, it’s important to examine how President Joe Biden’s plans to deal with environmental stewardship stack up. During the 2020 presidential campaign, President Biden promised that he would not just “tinker around the edges” when es to addressing America’s climate policy. Instead he pledged to rejoin the Paris Climate Accords, set ambitious standards for reducing America’s greenhouse gas emissions, all with the stated goal of ushering in a “green revolution” in the United States. Addressing climate change remained at the top of his agenda during his first trip overseas as President. After President Biden’s meeting with the Group of Seven countries in the United Kingdom last week, many of America’s allies agreed to adopt similar policies.

After three days of meetings, the G-7 published a report titled “Our Shared Agenda for Global Action to Build Back Better.” Embracing a “green revolution” is a central tenant in that shared agenda. The member nations called for net zero emissions by 2050, increased conservation efforts, and other policies to halt the rise in global temperatures. With President Biden’s increased focus on the environment, it is worth considering what our obligations are to the environment, what policies are the most effective at stopping climate change, and what America’s “green revolution” should look like.

Society today is pulled between two opposite views towards the environment. At one extreme, some see the environment as only a source of profit and gain, but ignore any larger responsibilities. At the other extreme, some recognize an obligation to nature, but think that the only way to protect the environment is through stifling regulation and the expansion of government. Both of these philosophies contain elements of the truth, but neither plete. The laissez faire approach “has engendered immense inequality, injustice and acts of violence against the majority of humanity, since resources end up in the hands of the er or the most powerful: the winner takes all.” On the other hand, the protectionist approach ignores the costs to human freedom and economic prosperity that attend government expansion. Instead, America must seek a middle course. It is possible to develop effective government policies that both protect the environment and benefit the economy.

An effective solution to climate change must include a focus on private innovation, open markets, and free trade. The government must adjust tax and regulatory structures to favor investment in renewable energies; it must create open petitive energy markets; and it must promote free trade to spread green technologies around the globe.

Reforming government regulations and the tax code will reduce the upfront costs to green technology and incentivize green energy production in the long run. Businesses suffer high fixed costs when they choose to adopt green technology. After installation, however, renewable energy is cheaper than fossil fuels. The tax code, therefore, must help businesses that adopt green technologies. Congress must create a tax credit for green energy similar to the “Intangible Drilling Costs” (IDC) credit enjoyed by fossil panies. The IDC allows oil and gas producers to write off all expenses that are “incident to and necessary for” developing wells and other energy production facilities. Expanding this provision would benefit the renewable energy industry and decrease the costs for businesses adopting green technology.

Companies also need an incentive to stay in the green energy market for the long term. Performance-based incentives (PBIs) that reward high energy production over time can provide this incentive. State PBI programs panies based on the amount of clean energy they produce would increase the profitability of green technologies. This bined with lower maintenance pared to fossil fuels, will draw panies to sector that are able pete against traditional energy producers. This will foster the long-term growth of the green energy industry and will pave the way for a transition to renewable energy, which is critical to arresting global warming.

Second, the government should open energy markets petition among all energy sources. Traditionally, government regulators have viewed energy production as a natural monopoly created by high startup costs and economies of scale. Regulators used this as an excuse to involve themselves in all parts of the energy sector. Then, in the early 1990s, some states moved petition and deregulation in their energy markets to curtail high prices. They awarded contracts to the lowest pany and allowed supply and demand to determine consumer energy prices within a wholesale market. These reforms worked. Between 1982 and 1996, the real price of gasoline fell to $3 from $6. These facts illustrate the power that pro-market reforms have to increase renewable production, while also reducing consumer prices. The federal government should open energy markets petition, which will allow profitable and low-cost green energy sources to thrive.

The final part of the free-market “green revolution” is free trade. Once panies develop new green technologies, it is critical to export them abroad. Free trade will help global efforts against climate change and ensure the success of American businesses. The best way to promote domestic exports is through free trade agreements and the single most important free trade agreement for the future of green energy is the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP). The TPP originally included 6 of the 20 largest energy consuming nations in the world, before the United States pulled out of the agreement. Had the TPP gone into effect, the renewable energy industry would have saved roughly $24 million per year in reduced tariffs. Instead, U.S panies have to face tariffs as high as 30% on their green energy exports. America’s first and most important step toward increasing the export of green technology is rejoining the TPP. This will boost the American economy by reducing tariffs and other trade barriers, while also disseminating green technologies abroad. Climate change affects the entire planet, so it is critical that new renewable energies spread around the globe.

A “green revolution” does not require new regulations, the expansion of government, or the destruction of the American economy. President Biden’s renewed focus on protecting the environment must also include mitment to innovation, open markets, as well as free trade. With the right policies, it is possible to both stop climate change and grow American business.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
She And Her Mother Escaped From North Korea: Then Things Got Really Bad
Yeomni Park is a 21-year-old defector from the nation of North Korea. She and her mother (who was considered a criminal for moving without permission) escaped the brutal North Korean regime. They ended up in China…and things got worse. As we continue to hear more on the “war on women” in America’s political battles, it is good to remember that the terrible suffering of women (and men) in places like North Korea and China. ...
Russell Kirk on Envy
Following up on the recent discussions of envy, here’s a bit from Russell Kirk’s book on economics: It would be easy enough to list other moral beliefs and customs that are part of the foundation of a prosperous economy, but we draw near to the end of this book. So instead we turn back, for a moment, to one vice we discussed earlier—and to the virtue which is the opposite of that vice. The vice is called envy; the virtue...
Graceful Marketing in a Broken World
In his reflections on art mon grace, Abraham Kuyper affirmed that “theworld of beauty that does in fact exist can have originated nowhere else than in the creation of God.The world of beauty was thus conceived by God, determined by his decree, called into being by him,and is maintained by him.” Beauty is, in this deep sense, a creational good, and even though beauty is oftenpressed into the service of evil, beauty, like all good things, is a creation of...
Mr. President: You Underestimate Americans
On Friday, President Obama was speaking at Rhode Island College. There was a lot of press given to his remarks about women who choose to stay at home to raise their children (it was a doofus remark), but I believe his entire speech was one in which he underestimates Americans. I know that many of you are working while you go to school. Some of you are helping support your parents or siblings. Well, yes, Mr. President, that’s what we...
Poverty, Inc. Documentary Premieres in Austin and Savannah
I worked alongside several Acton Institute colleagues and Coldwater Media for years on the Poverty, Inc. full-length documentary film, which tackles the question: Fighting poverty is big business, but who profits the most? It was gratifying to watch it Monday at what I’m told was the only sold out showing of the 2014 Austin Film Festival. It was at the first dine-in movie theatre I’ve visited, the Alamo Draft House, which meant we were watching a film about extreme global...
What’s So ‘Awesome’ About Those Shareholder Activist Nuns?
For some, the one quality most important for those pursuing a religious vocation is awesomeness. It matters not whether clergy, nuns and other religious adhere to the actual doctrines of their faith, whether they advocate for the poor and powerless and spread the Word of God. Specifically, Jo Piazza, author of the absurdly titled If Nuns Ruled the World, authored an advertisement disguised as a Time opinion piece for her recently released book. The Vatican, according to Piazza, doesn’t fairly...
‘Work Is A Good Thing For Man’
I was transfixed by this video the other day. The simplicity of the video itself, the careful, skillful work, the lovely hands of a master at work – all brought to mind the goodness of work and creation that God granted to us. St. John Paul II, in his encyclical Laborem Exercens (On Human Work) says this: It is not only good in the sense that it is useful or something to enjoy; it is also good as being something...
Video: An Evening With G.K. Chesterton
The 2014 Acton Lecture Series took a dramatic turn last week as we ed G.K. Chesterton – or at least a quite remarkable facsimile of Chesterton in the form of Chuck Chalberg, who travels the country performing in character as Chesterton, among other notable historic figures.In this presentation, Chalberg’s Chestertonspeaks about America, which he thought was the only country with the soul of a church. He also addresses the state of the family–and not just the American family–past and present....
How to Be a Better Guesstimater
Is the murder rate in the U.S. increasing or decreasing? What percentage of teen girls will give birth this year? What percentage of Americans are Christian or Muslim? What percentage are immigrants? If you guess wrong, you’re not alone. A new global survey, building on work in the UK last year for the Royal Statistical Society, finds that most people in the countries surveyed were wildly wrong. For instance, Americans guess wrong on each of the following questions: • What...
When Should We Be Worried About Economic Inequality?
The topic of economic inequality continues to be at the forefront of our current political discussions, thanks in no small part by a president who calls it “the defining challenge of our time.” But although such concerns are more typically lobbed about rather carelessly and thoughtlessly — cause folks to fret over the “power” of small business owners and entrepreneurs in a mythological zero-sum market ecosystem — there are indeed scenarios in which the rise of such inequality ought to...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved