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Not a silver bullet, “We need silver buckshot”: Oil, American Power, and future of funding transportation

The surface transportation system in the United States is financed in large part by the gasoline tax, though for years the tax has been insufficient to cover the costs of the entire system. Still, the more fuel American drivers consume, the more money goes to the cost of maintaining and expanding our roads, tunnels and bridges, which will cost something in the neighborhood of $500 billion over the next six years. Consuming the same fuel that generates those funds contributes unsustainable levels of Green House Gasses (GHG) into the atmosphere – the transportation sector produces 31 percent of CO2 emissions and is responsible for 70 percent of our country’s oil use — and, as the recent oil spill shows us, can lead to environmental catastrophe. How do you control the carbon that finances the system?

This was the central question at the panel discussion, “Transportation Carbon Fees: Is Kerry-Lieberman the Answer?” hosted by at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace on Friday.  Moderated by the Endowment’s David Burwell and featuring Vicki Arroyo of the Georgetown Climate Center, the panel was notable because it included friendly but candid contributions from John Horsley, the executive director of the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO,) and Deron Lovaas, federal transportation policy director for the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC,) who was representing Transportation for America.

Here’s video from the event:

What’s in the Kerry-Lieberman American Power Act?

As David Burwell explains in a Q & A on the Carnegie Endowment site, “the critical element of the legislation is that it puts a price on carbon and thus discourages carbon emissions, which cause global warming.”  Two-thirds of all revenues generated by carbon pricing would either be returned to consumers in various ways or help pay down the national debt. Section 1711 of the bill directs the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to work with the US Department of Transportation (DOT) to establish GHG reduction goals, assess progress every 6 years, and improve transportation planning models. The transportation sector would receive funding split among the Highway Trust Fund, the TIGER grant program, and a new competitive grant program for state and local GHG reduction plans.

Pick your metaphor

AASHTO’s John Horsley said that he could not support the bill in its current form because it essentially taxed the transportation sector too much and returned too little. In an acknowledged (and exquisite) mixed metaphor, Horsley commented that transportation is being treated as the forgotten step-child, while revenue from the sector was considered a cash cow. If, however, all of the funds from the carbon fee in the transportation sector were returned to the sector the bill would have “no better friend” than AASHTO, Horsley said.

AASHTO is concerned that the carbon fee would “suck all the oxygen from the room” for a needed gas tax to make the Highway Trust Fund solvent. To which NRDC’s Lovaas replied, “There is no oxygen in the room.” Suggesting that the only thing less popular than incumbent elected-officials right now is a gas tax, Lovaas said, “we need a new product, because we’re not making a sale” on a gas tax.

In any event, Lovaas argued, every possible approach for addressing environmental and transportation needs ought to be taken seriously: “we don’t need a silver bullet; we need silver buckshot.”

Gulf spill game changer?

AP Photo/Charlie Riedel

AP Photo/Charlie Riedel

A refrain too often relevant in recent years has been not to let a good crisis go to waste.  Though no one was sure of the exact impact of the oil spill on the fate of the American Power Act, there was general agreement that it would highlight the need to address our oil addiction. To illustrate the scale of our current dependence on oil, Lovaas put it this way: every day Americans consume 1,000 times the amount of oil that is being pumped into the gulf.

My Signature

Darren Flusche
League Policy Analyst

Flusche joined the League in April 2009 and has a B.A. in history from Syracuse University and a Masters of Public Administration with a concentration in public policy analysis from New York University.


6 Responses to “Not a silver bullet, “We need silver buckshot”: Oil, American Power, and future of funding transportation”

  1. Oil Spills and Carbon Caps « In The Spin Says:

    [...] Here’s the League of American Bicyclists’ take on the matter including a video from a Carnegie funded conference on Transportation Carbon Fees. [...]

  2. Raleigh Rider Says:

    I think that the League should be front and center, speaking to the national media on the issue of the relation between the oil spill and transportation policy.

    BP wouldn’t have drilled in such deep water if Americans weren’t driving big gas guzzling SUV’s.

    If our roads were planned the way that European roads are planned i.e. with bike lanes, a LOT more Americans would ride for their short trips and commutes. But, auto-centric managers planned roads for cars only for the past forty years.

    And, this spill is what we have to pay for it!!!!

    I would like to see the League front and center in the national spotlight on this issue, demanding a bike lane and a sidewalk with every new road construction project in the nation.

    NOW is the time. If not now, then when? Do we have to wait for the Pacific and Atlantic oceans to die, also, as a result of American car-centeredness?

  3. Darren Says:

    Hi Raleigh Rider,

    What you are calling for (a bike lane and a sidewalk with every new road construction project in the nation) is known as Complete Streets. The League works closely with the National Complete Streets Coalition and fully supports its policy goals.

  4. MikeOnBike Says:

    A Complete Street does not necessarily have a bike lane. For example, it could be a Bike Boulevard which has diverters for through motor traffic, but allows bike traffic through.

    Or it could be an ordinary residential street.

  5. Darren Says:

    That’s right. With Complete Streets, there’s flexibility in the approach. The key is that the needs of all users of the transportation system are considered and provided for. I figured Raleigh Rider making more of a rhetorical point than a literally calling for context-blind transportation planning.

  6. Double Bedding · Says:

    the oil spill in mexico really affected the eco system around that area, it would take years to clean those mess *

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