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Yeah, sorry I couldn't come up with a snappy title to encapsulate the first point. It's hard to do more than scream "Hypocrite!" at them.

I'm very confused by the apparent change of mind buried in that second point too.
Ideas:

  1. Cap and trade is becoming discredited in the newspapers (ironically as the system seems to be beginning to stabilise), so they want to avoid being associated with it?

  2. Who loses out under working cap-and-trade?
by Metatone (metatone [a|t] gmail (dot) com) on Mon Jun 4th, 2007 at 06:25:00 AM EST
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Taxes on the carbon content of fuel do not provide an absolute ceiling on emissions. There is no guarantee that they will accomplish a certain reduction. This can be alleviated by periodically increasing the tax, but that provides the same kind of investment insecurity to businesses that a periodically reviewed emissions trading system does.
by nanne (zwaerdenmaecker@gmail.com) on Mon Jun 4th, 2007 at 06:52:41 AM EST
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