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Saturday, July 25, 2009
Tom Borelli :: Townhall.com Columnist
Caterpillar CEO Jim Owens: Digging a Cap-and-Trade Hole for America
by Tom Borelli
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Caterpillar CEO Jim Owens’s last minute opposition to the Waxman-Markey cap-and-trade bill, announced just prior to the House of Representatives’ vote, was reminiscent of Senator John Kerry’s infamous statement “I voted for it before I voted against it.”

While Kerry’s embarrassing comment only hurt his presidential prospects, Owens’s promotion of global warming legislation has far-reaching consequences: the potential to cause irreparable harm to his company, customers, employees and our economy.

After years of supporting a national law to limit carbon dioxide emissions through participation in the United States Climate Action Partnership (USCAP) – a lobbying coalition pushing cap-and-trade legislation – Owens realized the final bill would harm his company. According to Energy & Environment News, the day before the House vote, Owens wrote to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), saying, “We cannot endorse this bill in its current form.”

Owens’s flip-flop serves as a case study of the ignorance and arrogance that plagues many CEOs. Too many chief executives exaggerate their political influence only to discover that the “seat at the table” rationale for supporting regulation greatly overstates their ability to steer it.

CEOs such as Owens fail to comprehend the nature and motivations of left-wing politicians and their advocacy group allies. Although Owens may understand how to manage the complexities of a multinational heavy equipment company, when it comes to public policy, he turns into a useful idiot for the liberal agenda.

Owens’s comments at the launch of USCAP in 2007 underscored his inflated hopes for cap-and-trade. At that time, he said, "If we go to the sidelines and leave all of this to partisan politics, the stronger environmental groups will drive legislation which is incompatible with policies we need to support manufacturing in the global marketplace." He also added, “National reduction targets would avert a ‘patchwork’ of potentially costly and conflicting state regulations that could hurt U.S. manufacturers amid growing competition for global sales.”

The bill passed by the House fell far short of Owens’s expectations. Yes, the legislation would eliminate the patchwork of state laws but it also would decimate the competiveness of the U.S. manufacturing base – one of Owens’ major concerns. Owens, a member of President Obama’s Economic Recovery Advisory Board, warned the president in May that the U.S. would be at a competitive disadvantage if India and China failed to agree to reduce emissions. Owens said, “I think if we move unilaterally as the United States with a significant cap and trade program that drives up the cost of carbon here significantly, and our international competitors, the countries don't move with us, it's going to create competitive problems …for the manufacturing industry in this country.”

It seems Owens suddenly realized the law he was pushing would indeed backfire on our manufacturing industries and our economy.

Importantly, India and China have consistently refused to commit to a reduction in carbon dioxide emissions. At the G8 meeting held earlier this month, China and India rejected an offer to join the commitment to reduce world emissions.

More recently, during Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s first trip to India, that country soundly rejected a commitment to reducing fossil fuel emissions. Jairam Rajesh, India’s environment minister, said, “We are simply not in a position to take on legally binding emissions [reduction] targets.” Continued...

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About The Author

Thomas J. Borelli, PhD. is the editor of FreeEnterpriser.com and Director of the Free Enterprise Project at the National Center for Public Policy Research.

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CEOs Leave Me Utterly Confused
I don't understand these 'suicidal' Executives at all. They cut their own companies' throats... I'm not doubting there's strong-arm thuggery going on by the WH, but where's the integrity? Like BofA's Lewis found out, you'll not win with these boys, so why not stand up and take the shots for the sake of the country (and truth)!?

My industry-lauded, efficiently run mortgage servicing company was bot out by WaMu in 2002. When employee morale tanked over good practices swept aside, Killinger told us at a 'townhall mtg': "If you don't like the way we do things, LEAVE!" Many people were destroyed, jobs outsourced, bad loans proliferated...most know the outcome... the people remaining (under the sweet deal JPM Chase got to take over WaMu) employed were those who 'sold their souls' to management and/or were willing to strong arm other employees to go along.

We are in a world of mess.

Save it for the statists in Congress
Can we just lighten up on Jim Owens? Direct your justifiable rage at the fools in Congress who cook up things like Cap 'n Trade. They're the enemy. Jim Owens is trying to maneuver his company around the rocks and shoals placed there by Congress. He's doing what he has to do to keep his company afloat. When he appears in a photo with Obama, he's getting slimed and he knows it. Like I said before, he's fully aware of Obama's admiration for Marx & Engels. He serves on the advisory board as a counterweight.
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