Quote:fd we are all looking down the gauntlet of higher electricity bills...now how do you expect those of limited means.. to avoid using this product... I am sick of you saying..there are cheaper things out there...
Wasn't I saying that you would be compensated? Or was that you saying that?
Quote:can we expect every car on the market now to have a star rating like our washing machine and fridge...mind you that is only in its use of water.. but how about a star rating on emmissions during manufacture???????
Do you check the fuel consumption rate on cars before you buy? There's a good place for you to save some money.
Quote:economists!!! sorry but most of these guys dont live in the real world..
So you would have economic policy decided by those who do not understand the implications of their decisions? This whole 'university of the real world' BS is juvenile.
Quote:a bit like you.... where do we get cheap power from when we cant afford RE....we cant use wood we cant use fire.
You do not actually need power. What you need is the services that you the power provides. There are lots of ways to get those services with less power. For example the house I am in now seems to be far more stable temperature-wise. I did not use the air con at all last summer. It is a nice temperature that I want, not GHG emissions.
Quote:its like smoking... put the bloody things in plain packaging wont change a thing.
So why are tobacco companies lobbying so hard against it?
Quote:you believe everything you read that has the same perspective as yourself..
I think for myself.
Quote:how???? by how much? when will it start to make a difference.. when will they know this TAX is working????
There are ways to measure it. You can measure it for example at the level of individual decisions. This is especially true for industrial users. Economists can also measure the overall consumption. Electricity and petrol prices have fluctuated many times throughout history and economists have a reasonable idea of what the short and long term sensitivity is. I make this distinction because there are many decisions that people only make once a year, once a decade, once in a lifetime etc, so the long term sensitivity tends to be higher than the short term. Anyway, if you want the numbers and details, you'll have to find them yourself.
Quote:they have, and I pressume you have, all this worked out..
Not completely cods, for the same reason that we do not have to know what the price of every item is going to be in order to choose capitalism over communism.
Quote:Also, over the very long term, it will be a 'suck it and see' approach. Economists cannot predict things like how new technology, new techniques etc will affect the future. No-one has a crystal ball. We are not now choosing a carbon price for the next fifty years. We are choosing a relatively low price for the next 4 years or so. What happens after that will depend partly on the effect of the tax.
What I can say for certain is that a tax is going to be cheaper than any other emissions reduction mechanism if you use the income to reduce other taxes.
Quote:everytime someone is asked, they increase the time frame.. I am fed up with hearing that.. it all sounds like guesswork.
You are asking a very vague question. The IPCC publications make these sort of predictions and acknowledge the level of uncertainty involved. There is no magic number where it suddenly 'makes a difference. If we reduced electricity consumption tonight by 1%, it would make a difference by tomorrow, though I doubt you would be satisfied with the extent of it.