"Climate change is suddenly a hot topic again. The issue is resurfacing in talks about a once radical idea: a possible carbon tax."
"On Tuesday, a conservative think tank held discussions about it while a more liberal think tank released a paper on it. And the Congressional Budget Office issued a 19-page report on the different ways to make a carbon tax less burdensome on lower income people.
A carbon tax works by making people pay more for using fossil fuels like coal, oil, and gas that produce heat-trapping carbon dioxide.
The idea was considered so radical that in 2009, when President Barack Obama tried to pass a bill on global warming, that he instead opted for the more moderate approach of capping power plant emissions and trading credits that allowed utilities to pollute more. That idea, after passing the House, stalled in the Senate in 2010 and has been considered dead since."
Seth Borenstein reports for the Associated Press November 13, 2012.
SEE ALSO:
"Grover Norquist Update: I Didn't Mean It" (Climate Denial Crock)
"Norquist: Carbon-Tax Swap for Income-Tax Cut Wouldn't Violate No-Tax-Hike Pledge" (National Journal)
"GOP Support Needed for Carbon Tax To Fly: Treasury Aide" (Reuters)
"A Carbon Tax Would Allow Us To Cut Other Taxes -- But Not Much" (Washington Post)
"Carbon Tax Idea Gains Wonkish Energy" (Washington Wire/Wall St. Journal)