• Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Browse by Category
    • Climate Change
    • Economy
    • Energy
    • Environment
    • Environmental Movement
    • Media
    • Notes
    • Politics
    • Renewable energy
    • Slideshows
    • Transportation
    • Video
You are in: Home > Climate Change, Transportation > Tesla’s Elon Musk Calls Carbon Tax “Ideal”

Tesla’s Elon Musk Calls Carbon Tax “Ideal”

0 by Timothy Hurst on March 27, 2012
  • Tweet
  • Share
  • Tweet
  • Bookmark and Share

Tesla Roadster

The most common narrative spun by opponents of regulating of carbon dioxide is that doing anything to intentionally raise energy prices is tantamount to crushing the American economy. Some of the loudest supporters of that narrative are titans of industry who argue that putting a price on carbon would effectively drive America back to the age of the horse and buggy. But Elon Musk is not your average titan. At a recent conference in Santa Barbara, the founder of PayPal, XPrize and Tesla Motors voiced his support for a carbon tax to address carbon emissions.

But the Wall Street Journal article reporting on the panel thought so little of that nugget that the quote where Musk offers support is the article's very last sentence.

Speaking about government subsidies on a panel at the Wall Street Journal’s ECO:nomics conference in Santa Barbara, Musk said that subsidies can be good but that they are usually bad. In the case of Tesla, the $465 million loan guarantee the company received from the Department of Energy in 2010 was the critical factor was the investment by Daimler, not the DOE loan.

And that was the story that The Wall Street Journal in their article: "Tesla CEO Says Government Subsidies Usually Bad."  Choosing to emphasize an "I told you so smugness" rather than bring more attention to Musk's support for a carbon tax, the Journal article buried the lead.

The take-home from Musk is that subsidies may be good and may be bad as policy tools, but they are inferior to a carbon tax.

“The ideal would be to tax CO2,” said Musk.

Photo credit: Some rights reserved by NRMA New Cars
H/t: PluginCars

| More

Category: Climate Change, Transportation | Tags: autos, carbon dioxide, carbon regulations, carbon tax, cars, Climate Change, climate policy, electric car, ev, green cars, tesla

About the Author:

Timothy Hurst is the editor at Ecopolitology and Earth & Industry as well as the executive editor of the LiveOAK Media Network. He writes mostly about energy and environmental politics, clean tech, infrastructure and green business. When not reading, writing, or talking about environmental politics to anyone who will listen, Tim likes to ski, hike with his aging lab and get dirty in his Colorado veggie garden. Find Tim on Google+.

Twitter Follow Timothy Hurst on Twitter: @ecopolitologist
« Previous Next »

Explore LiveOak

Archives

Let’s Connect!

Featured

Animated Map of Red-Blue America

Animated Time-Lapse Map of Red-Blue America

Animated Map of Wind Power Growth

Animated Map of US Wind Power Growth

Sponsors

LiveOAK Media
Radiant Heating

Tags

2008 presdential election barack obama bp bp oil spill cap and trade carbon emissions cartoon clean energy Climate Change climate policy coal colorado congress cop-15 copenhagen Energy energy industry energy policy Environment environmental movement epa food fracking global warming humor Mean Joe Green cartoon Media natural gas obama offshore wind oil oil spill Politics pollution Renewable energy science senate social media solar Transportation Twitter Weekly Updates Video water wind energy wind power

From the Network


  • Energy and Environment News Roundup – 6.18.13
  • Spot the irony on this direct mailing!
  • Energy and Environment News Roundup – 6.17.13
  • Energy and Environment News Roundup – 6.14.13
  • Energy and Environment News Roundup – 6.13.13
  • Spotted: Wine Cork Keychains
  • Energy and Environment News Roundup – 6.12.13
  • Energy and Environment News Roundup – 6.11.13

About Ecopolitology

Ecopolitology provides up-to-date news, interviews and critical analysis of energy and environmental politics in the U.S. and around the world. Exploring a wide range of topics from policy to social movements, Ecopolitology provides an in-depth and accessible narrative about what moves sustainability in the world today.
Read More...

Part of the LiveOAK Media Network:

  • Earth & Industry →
  • greenUPGRADER →
  • Crisp Green →
  • Amazon Pilgrim →
Ecopolitolgy Header Designed by Aleksandar Rodic Part of the LiveOAK Network
© LiveOAK Media, Inc. 2010   Legal: Privacy Policy  |  Terms of Use
Creative Commons LicenseThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.