Yeah, taxing CO2 is stupid, and sets a bad precedent (the whole "being taxed on the right to exhale" thing will never stop bothering me) but regulating actual pollution (i.e. shit which isn't a critical component of the biosphere, and especially shit which actually harms the biosphere) is very important.
See, this is how easy it is to get wrapped up in misinformation.
What I said has nothing to do with misinformation.
Also:
Metabolic CO2 release can only augment as population size increases in the future. This is a component of the CO2 flux that must be recognized in future analyses of global CO2 dynamics and that must be considered to represents a component of the perturbed C cycle, as human population has increased – and will continue to increase – greatly since pre-
industrial time. Yet, the direct and indirect metabolic CO2 emissions by humans is not considered explicitly in the scenarios conducted by the IPCC (2001), and is not incorporated, therefore, into current strategies to mitigate the climatic consequences of greenhouse gas emissions.
What are current strategies again? Taxes and such? Isn't that kinda pointing out how exhaled CO2 isn't currently considered, and in the next paragraph doesn't it suggest that it might be something to look at?
At $0.04 per ton, that means you'd pay $0.12 for your car, and an additional $0.00 for your own personal CO2 emissions. But that's besides the point; CO2 taxes are not, and never were, about taxing individual humans for breathing. It's been about preventing corporations from using the air that is rightly yours.
Weeeell, more about trying to force certain things to happen, even assuming CO2 is actually worth going all chicken little over, taxing it doesn't
prevent emissions, it just raises the cost of anything associated with it. Myself, I don't expect an entity driven by profit maximization to do something for "the good of humanity" and I don't expect them to just suck it up and pay some additional cost without doing everything possible to divert or defer or otherwise get around it as a profit reduction.
More to the point: where on Earth did you get those numbers?
If a carbon tax is in place, as I recall there's usually the argument about the future cost of that ton being emitted and whatnot, with the idea being that the tax and future cost would be linked... let's check!
Yup:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_tax#Social_cost_of_carbonAccording to economic theory, if SCC estimates were complete and markets perfect, a carbon tax should be set equal to the SCC. Emission permits would also have a value equal to the SCC. In reality, however, markets are not perfect, and SCC estimates are not complete (Yohe et al.., 2007:823).
The values given there range from $10 to $100+ per ton(ne) for the most part, actual existing carbon taxes are in that range too, mostly in the $10~60 range from a look around different sites. So it would be $60~360 for your average car, and $1.10~$6.60 for you, plus a buck or so for each family member/maybe pets/etc.
Is $1~$7 a year a problem to you? It is to me, not the amount, but the fact that I could not in good conscience accept the rightness of paying for the right to
breathe out, though I am curious what would happen in this hypothetical if you were charged on this count.
Yeah, I know that human exhalation isn't a huge amount, and it would be crazy to think any government would seriously push to tax all CO2 emissions... still not exactly something I'm going to be comfortable with, too many fucked up sci-fi stories include ideas along those lines to just kick it out of my head.
It just plain makes sense. Imagine you live in an apartment building and your upstairs neighbor's toilet is broken, so he shits out the window and onto your patio. If you ask him why, he might say "hey, fixing toilets costs money, but this is free." Maybe if it wasn't free, he'd get his toilet fixed.
Uh, I would expect that there are all sorts of civil and legal remedies available in this situation, but I'm not going to google "what can I do if my neighbor shit on my porch" to find out.
The real problem is that you're living downstairs from a horse trying to disguise itself as a really rude human or something, the noise must be terrible, clopping around up there.