Canadians see red over green recovery

Guest Commentary
By Elmira Aliakbari
and Jason Clemens

Many Western governments including the Trudeau government have shifted from a pandemic focus to a "green economic recovery." According to advocates, these recovery plans allow countries to “build back better” by simultaneously improving the economy and reducing greenhouse gas emissions (GHGs).

But a recent study published by the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) by noted economists Timothy Fitzgerald and Casey Mulligan found that green recovery plans in the United States will not improve economic growth but rather impose significant costs on Americans. Canadians should take note, since our green plans are actually more extensive, which means Canadians may suffer even larger costs than our southern neighbours.

The study looks at several aspects of the U.S. green recovery plan including changes in fuel efficiency standards for all new vehicles, replacing fossil fuel-produced electricity with clean energy sources, and the creation of new electricity generation capacity (using wind and solar) to accommodate mandated increases in electric vehicles (EVs).

It’s important to recognize how ambitious—some might say unrealistic—some of these initiatives are, particularly in terms of timing. Consider, for instance, that the Biden administration is requiring that 50 percent of all new vehicle sales by 2030 (only seven years away) be electric, hydrogen or plug-in hybrids. And that the U.S. establish an emissions-free power system—that is the complete elimination of fossil fuels—by 2035.

Here at home, Ottawa has mandated the phase-out of conventional coal-fired electricity generation and wants renewable energy sources to achieve 90 percent of non-emitting electricity generation by 2030. The Trudeau government has also set a sales target requiring all passenger cars, SUVs and trucks sold in Canada in 2035 to be electric. In 2021, fully electric and plug-in hybrid vehicles comprised just 5.2 percent of new car registrations.

The NBER study evaluates the economic costs of Biden’s green plan (described above) and concludes it “will require more inputs to produce the same outputs, resulting in recurring costs of up to $483 billion per year.” In other words, the U.S. economy will spend $483 billion more than it does now annually to produce the same level of output, which means it will be more expensive to produce the same amount of goods and services.

Those extra costs mean the U.S. economy will be less effective at producing goods and services people demand, and those goods and services will be available only at higher costs, resulting in lower living standards. According to the study, the green recovery plans in the U.S. will reduce the country's GDP (inflation-adjusted) by 2 to 3 percent.

This is just one study on top of many published over the last few years showing the enormous costs green energy plans in the U.S. and Canada will impose on citizens, and yet politicians and advocates on both sides of the border continue to argue that these plans will improve the economy.

That’s not to say that governments can’t respond to climate change, particularly with programs to encourage adaptation and risk mitigation. However, any action by the government should be rooted in an empirical evaluation of the likely costs and benefits, and then transparently shared with the public.

Elmira Aliakbari is Director, Natural Resource Studies, Fraser Institute and Jason Clemens is Executive Vice President, Fraser Institute.

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