When the Environmental Protection agency ordered s anges clean up its smog no matter what the cost . Global warming will it be a disasr . Should we spend billions to mitigate Climate Change or wait and see what really haens . Sie the late 196 has been a consens among americans that the air we breathe d the water we drink should meet certain standards of cleanliness. But, like most things of value those standards come with a price tag attached. Pollution how much is a Clean Environment worth . Economic analyst richard gill and i willxamine that question on this edition of economics usa. Im david schoumacher. The United States has always been blessed with vast Natural Resources, including some things we used to take for granted, like fresh water and clean, healthy air. But not any longer. In the past few decades, weve learned that industrial activity carries with it a substantial environmental price tag. If we want fresher waterand healthier air, somebody is going to have to pay for it as we found in the tiny town of silver bay, on the shores of Lake Superior. 30 years ago this part of minnesota was practically a wilderness area. Thenshortly afteworld waii some farsighteentrepreneurs cided there was money to be made in a rock called taconite, found here in abundance, near the famous mesabi iron range. They called their venturethe reserve mining company. Ruth erickson remembers the early days before the trouble started. Anybody that came here to work was in [ dog barks ] shush was in bad shape economically. And reserve ilt the town they furnished us with our medical facilities fire, ambulance, everying. Um. I cant say enough good things about reserve mining. Schoumacher taconite contains iron. Not a lot, but enough to make a profit if younow w to crush it and separate the grains of iron from the rest of the rock. And reserve knew how. But the refining process requires vast amounts of water anproduces 2 tons of sandy residue, called tailings foevery ton of iron pellets. And thatreates a proem. Those tailings have to be put somewhere. And for years, the cheapest place to put them was the lake. That upset a lot of people ke environmentalist alden lind. The save Lake Superiorassociatiostarted in late 69 and came about largely because of concerns of people who lived in the silver bay vicinity about the impact of the tailings disposal on Lake Superior. Schoumacher it wasnt long before a new federal agency got involved. Dr. Phillip cookemembers. Cook i think there was kind of a gut action of People Living in the area who were. More environmentallyoncerned that something that big was a problem. They didnt really, at first have any specic concerns othethant looked like the lake was gettingloudy and there was obvious turbidity being caused in the immediately vicinity of the discharge but, youre right, there was a feeling that this was a lot of material going in the lake. Schoumacher uneasiness soon turned to fear. In973, word got out that the tailings might contain asbestos a known carcinogen. Within a few weeks, much of the population of duluth 60 miles to the west had stopped drinking tap water. But was there a problem or wasnt there . Cook we knew we had tailings in the water. We knew that amphibole mineral was an important fraction of these tailings particles. We knew that some amphibole minerals, particularly the grunerite which was in the tailings, can occur assbestos, and that is associated with human health hazards, particularly for cancer. Um. What we didnt know was whether these particular amphibole particles in the water occurred as fibers. So we took samples of the water and looked at it by electron microscopy and saw that, indeed, some of the amphibole particles were, indeed, fiber shaped that was kind of a shocking revelation to us. Oh, i think it alarmed an awful lot of people. I think the t response was for an awful lotpeople to get very active very quickly. There was a petition, i think, with Something Like 10,000 names presented to the mayor ofuluth insisting that something be done about this. Schoumacher duluth responded by building a new filtration system, but that didnt stop the protests. And we are, too, were their neighbors. Well drink out of the same lake. Its all our country. If. Uh. I dont knowpeople have toaw a line someplace on what kind of an environmentthey wantoive in. Schoumacher that line was nally drawin federal court. R the next four years, claim llowed counterclaim. The answers definitely yes, itldelay it. Hearing followed hearing. No. Environmentalists produced expert witnesses who said the tailingswere dangerous. Reserve produced experts who said they were not and nted that they might be forced to shut down the plant if denied access to the lake. Silver bay residents saw an economic catastrophe in the making. Oneindustry town. Everytng is depeent upon reserve mining operating. Schoumacher in 1977 the feral court handed down its decision. After years of legal maneuvering by all parties reserve reluctantly agreed to keep the silver bay plant open and to build a tailings disposal site seven miles inland from the lake at a cost of nearly 400 million. I really have nothing to say at this time. Scumacher today, the water in tse parts is certainly cleaner than it used to be, and probably safer and reserve istill in the taconite processing business, with all the economic benefits it brings to silver bay. But the solution to the problem didnt come cheap. And it might not have come at all the courts hadnt intervened. The sults of the reserve mining case showed that society was no longer willing to take a vast Natural Resource such as Lake Superior, for granted. And it also showed tha the courts were now willing to force business to spend large amounts of money in this instance, hundreds of millions of dollars to clean up theiact. The case also illustrated the way the American Economy in t past had permitted business to overlook the social and vironmental costs of iustriaenterprise costs whdot often show up in a firms ttom line. Wesked economic analyst richard gill to explain why the governnt shod get volv in cases such as this. The government has toet invol because a market economy cant hand them. Even the most devout proponents of a private Ee Enterprise system recognize the need for publicnterntion in situations like that illustrated byhe reserve mining case chnically speaking the problem is wt economists call negative externalities ofroduction. Is is ratherncy jargon but the central ideais clear. When a business fi produces ironor a other productitasertain costs wages, rent for land and so on that is has to pay for. But it also may impose other costs on society in this case, the pollution of Lake Superior for which it does not have to pay. Thescosts are external to the firm and, indeed, eernal to the supy and demand ice systemenerally. This is impoan because usuay economists are quite imessed by thefficiency ofherice system. When we aw supply andemand curvesor aarticur product, were not onlyetermi the price of the proct, he and e quanti of the product oducedhere but were alsoakinga statement about costs and tsroughly speakingthis demancue shows how muche Consumers Want t proct and the supply curve tel us how much it costs e society,in terms of scarce resources toroduce t product. At t intersection of the two curs,the maetct balances the add satisfactionwe get from e product wihe addedosof procing it. Utopia. But hard ua when we kea swimn a beuled lake orasongwriter it whene brusour eth withusial sludge. Ese exal costs change thoictu m societyspoinofiew, e al costs of pducing this produc are not reflected in this private supply curve but by another curve up here, or eway up here. And the problem with this new cue is that ivate business firms dont veo taket into account. They dont have to pay these additionalostsand this is why e governmenthas to step in thoughowt shou steinis slighy icky matter. [ chanting save our earth ] schoumacher 1970 marked a turning point in this countrys battle against pollution. People were upset about ameras deteriorating environment. They let our lawmakers know how they felt on april 22nd earth day. T sun shine in. Congress quickly passed a series of amendments to the Clean Air Act which established higherair quality standards and faster timetables to reach them. They also created an agency to enforce the new laws. And in swearing in mr. Ruckelshaus, i know that the attorneyeneral is very sorry to lose him, t the nation is very fornate toet him as the first adminisator of this vitally importantgency. Im very honored mr. President. I promise do the best job that i possibly can. [ applause ] was the feeling back then that you could do a 100 job of cleaning up the environmen yes, a a lot of that is reflected in the laws thatre still on the books. There was a sense that we knew what the bad pollutants were we knew how to measure them, we knew what the health and environmental effects of tse pollutants were. We had technology that was reasonably ailab at a reasonable cost tossentially eliminate that pollution. That was all of that we assumions writn into theaw at time. And ma of ose assumponsare stilthere. And byheaytheyre alwrong. Welllets ke e clean aiac the intento eliminate smog how was at supse work . Wellthe elements of smog are nitrogenxideanhyocarns that interact in sunlight, they combine in sunlight and cause photochemical oxidants, or smog. Now, those two pollutants hydrocarbons and hydrogen oxides come primarily in places like los angeles from mobile sources automobile. Schoumacher but how was the epa supposed to eliminate smog from a city where the car is king . County servisor kenneth hahn had been wrestling with the problem for years. Well, people in los angeles loved cars. Uh, you grew up liking cars. Youd go over to a high school youll see more cars in the parking lot than you do bicycles. Los angeles county has got five million trucks, buses, automobiles motorcycles, and Motor Vehicles polluting the air. Were in a big garage. No wonder here on certain days, the people will say the smog is harmful to their health. It is. A neighboring community turned around and sued los angeles, saying youre dumping on us. What was that all about . Yeah, it was riverside. It is just north of los angeles, where this was back in the early 70s the parents of the children who couldnt play football in the afternoon because the smog levels were so high that they were ordered indoors finally got agitated enough that they sued the city, they sued the federal government. I was ordered by a court out there to impose, as the Clean Air Act told me to a transportation control strategy. They said the automobile controls are not going to make it by 1975. The law says you have to ensure that these standards are met by that period and if you cant do it by imposing the controls on the automobile, then impose transportation control. We couldnt figure out what to do. The court threatened to hold me in contempt. It sort of boiled down to an issue of their mobility versus my freedom, so i flew out there and announced that 80 of the cars are going to have to get off the road. I am here in los angeles because in the implementation of the Clean Air Act los angeles is really in a unique position. Schoumacher the epas plan wasnt greeted with much enthusiasm. It would have been a federal disaster area. It would be as bad as a hurricane or a flood or an earthquake. To tell the people they cant use their automobiles to go to work or to go to school or to go to church is crazy. The chamber of commerce out there calculated that 400,000 jobs would be lost and there would be billions of dollars in adverse effect to the economy. Had epa made any kind of calculation on that . Under the Clean Air Act, we were not allowed to take that into account in announcing a transportation or a land use control that would achieve the standard. Removing that number of cars would have just devastated it economically. The air would have been cleaner, but there wouldnt have been people wouldnt have been able to get to the hospitals and other things. What was the philosophy behind the law that said we dont want to count cost . The philosophy is just as i stated at the outset, that we thought we knew what the bad pollutants were, that we knew how to measure them, we knew the level at which the health and environmental effects occurred we could get them below that level with a margin of safety, and we had the technology that could achieve that at a reasonable cost. All those assumptions are wrong. And if those assumptions are wrong, then the law that embodies those assumptions is bound to drive us to an irrational result. And its just particularly obvious in a case like los angeles. Schoumacher as it turned out, the law which drove us to an irrational result was amended. Los angeles was given a waiver which allowed the city more time to clean up the air and lowered the standards it was expected to meet. Today, the city of the angels drives on and on. The air isnt as clean as it would have been with 80 of the cars off the road but neither is los angeles an economic basket case. The story of los angeles versus smog was only one of many conflicts that developed during the 1970s. Cleaning up the environment, no matter how beneficial wasnt going to be as easy or as cheap, as we first thought. But does that mean we shouldnt try to clean up pollution . What are the economic principles involved . We asked economic analyst richard gill. Well, one principle economists dont thk too highly of is what we might call the principle of perfection. Its a natural approach. We have these harmful external effects lets get rid of them no matter what the cost. The 1973 plan for los angeles was a little like this. Smog is harmful to your health. Lets get rid of it, virtually outlaw driving for six months of the year. There are countless examples of this approach. Nuclear generating plants involve certain hazards. Lets ban them completely. Alcohol leads to driving fatalities. Lets bring back prohibition. The trouble with this approach is not only that it usually doesnt work the los angeles plan had to be modified but that its bad economics. In our society, clean air has become a product. It brings us certain benefits but it also has certain costs of production. And what economists want to do is to measure these benefits against these costs, taking, of course, all external effects into account. These look like ordinary supply and demand curves for our product cleaner air measured by some reduction of particulate matter, noxious fumes, and the like. But these curves do take external effects into account and are curves of social benefit and social cost more accurately, marginal social benefit msb and marginal social cost msc. What these curves tell us is that, as we produce cleaner and cleaner air, moving towards the right the added social benefits begin to decline and the added social costs begin to rise. This makes sense intuitively, i think. Reducing the first and worst air pollution brings us a lot of social benefit. Getting extremely clean air is somewhat less important. Also, as the los angeles case shows producing somewhat cleaner air is not too expensive while producing very, very clean air would have been disastrously costly. So what the Economist Says is apparently fairly simple keep on cleaning up the air until the added the marginal social costs begin to exceed the added the marginal social benefits until the intersection of these two curves. I say apparently simple because measuring these social costs and benefits is not always that easy. Schoumacher from the 1990s and into the new millennium, we saw record floods record high temperatures more crop failures longer droughts, melting polar ice caps rising seas. Most climatologists, though certainly not all ree that thrising tperatures of the past several decades a phenomenon known as Global Warming are due to human activity. But theres more general agreement that the social and economic ramifications of trying to do something about the problem are enormous. Both politicians and economists hotly debate the costs versus the benefits of how much to do and when to do it. To solve Global Warming, or to slowt, is likely to be very costly. And were talking about not just millions of dollars but billions of dollars and maybtens of blions of dollars every year that we would have to spend to make a significant dent on the trajectory of climate over the years to come. But the costs of doing nothing are potentially catastrophic because the changes in the climate which will occur are generally irreversible. Schoumacher december 1997. At the environmental summit in kyoto, japan, the worlds developed countries pledge to cut their Greenhouse Gas emissions. Stuart eizenstat was chief u. S. Negotiator. Eizenstat the major agreements that we reached were for the developed countries to take specific targets on average, a reduction of about 5 from 1990 levels to be reached in the year 2001. Schoumacher in january of 2001, a new president assumed power and took another look at the kyoto agreement. President bush decided it would hurt the u. S. Economy and announced he would not sign the accord. The decision by the United States not to participate in the kyoto accords touched off an uproar in european capitals. Volatile protestors gathered outside E European Union summit meeting in gothenburg, sweden, in june of 2001, where president bush answered questions from the european press. We didnt feel like the kyoto treaty was wellbalanced. It didnt include developing nations. The goals were not realistic. However, that doesnt mean we cannot continue to Work Together and will Work Together on reducing Greenhouse Gases. One can never forget that the United States is responsible for 25 of the worlds emissions of Greenhouse Gases. Schoumacher natural scientists have pondered questions associated with greenhouse warming for a century, but the political, institutional, and Economic Issues have only begun to be considered. Professor William Nordhaus of Yale University developed the first model of the economics of clite change a decade ago. Now there are dozens of modeling groups worldwide. Economic computer models permit governments to assess costs versus benefits of the kyoto protocol and alternative approaches. Nordhaus we want to know what the relationship is historically between the economy and the forces that are leading to Climate Change. And then in the future we want to get our best, best guess as to whats going to happen to the economy and to the climate and to the impacts of that on human societies over the decades to come. Its as simple as that. One of the conclusions of these analyses is and was that the kyoto protocol was neither going to make a big difference, nor very efficient. Woman how do you put a cost on new malarial outbreaks that are as a result of mosquitos having a larger range that they can live in because of changes in temperature . Or the fact that mosquitos bite more when temperatures are one to two Degrees Higher . How do you put a cost on the relocation of millions of people in bangladesh that live at or below sea level . It doesnt make sense to just completely overturn your entire economy, because this is just one of the problems, just one of the threats we face. Eizenstat the ice caps which are going to melt arent going to somehow reformulate. The sea levels which rise arent going to suddenly recede. So that the damages which are likely to occur are already on a trajectory. What we need to do is interrupt that trajectory before it becomes too late. So, sitting back and doing nothing is not a prescription for reducing costs. Its a prescription for having catastrophic economic as well as social and environmental impacts. Schoumacher as the debate continues, scientists are searching for more accurate ways to forecast Climate Change and pinpoint its causes. This in turn will allow economists to refine their assessment. In november of 2001, thE European Union along with japan and canada, ratified the kyoto accords but the United States pulled back. Still, it is expected that the differences eventually will be overcome and the entire International Community will Work Together. For more on cost versus benefit as a policy tool economic analyst nariman behravesh. Unfortunately, the debate about Global Warming has generated more heat than light. Environmental groups assert that Global Warming is an irreversible disaster that overwhelms all other problems that modern society faces. Opposing groups assert that the earth has been on a warming trend for the better part of the last 500 years and that manmade emissions have not contributed much to this trend. Environmental groups minimize the costs of implementing the kyoto accords. Many business groups are concerned that such measures would hurt growth and raise the unemployment rates. The key economic lesson here is that resources are, indeed, limited. This means that we need to figure out costeffective ways of dealing with Global Warming as well as all the other problems facing our global society, including but not limited to poverty, disease, education, and national security. The good news is that we have made progress over the last couple of decades in improving the environment. Few people would disagree that further improvements are needed. However, the benefits of these improvements need to be balanced against their costs. One challenge for both the supporters and opponents of the kyoto accords is to come up with better, and less exaggerated, estimates of the costs and benefits. America didnt get dirty overnight, and its not going to be totally pure tomorrow. But thanks to citizen protest and government response, the countrys environment is cleaner and healthier than it was back in 1970 when we first celebrated earth day. And now the challenges are ev greater. But along the way, we have learned that if we want a cleaner environment, the way to get it may not be to take every last bit of pollution out of the air, the water, and the earth, but instead, to look for levels of cleanup that provide adequate safety at a price we can afford. This is david schoumacher. Annenberg media nenberg media they were immigrant garment workers uneducated, unskilled, and underpaid. How could they fight for a living wage