Nicholas Smallwood


Mexico City & Fake Kidnappings
April 30, 2008, 4:07 pm
Filed under: Crime, International, Mexico | Tags: ,

First there were real kidnappings (you know, the typical ones: find someone who’s rich, abduct them, get money from their family), then there were express kidnappings, and now you have fake kidnappings.

As detailed in the New York Times, the ever-entrepreneurial spirit of violent criminals has manifested itself through a recent trend in fake kidnappings in Mexico City. The amazing thing to me about this is that such a scheme can even work. In, say, the U.S., given the extremely low probability of ever being held for ransom, I’m guessing people would want some sort of proof if someone called them and claimed they were holding a loved one.

Not so in Mexico.

Everyone I know from Mexico City (I was raised there and still have family there) has at least one acquaintance who has at one time or other either literally been held captive for money, or has had to physically escape from people trying to capture them. Most people I’ve ever talked to in Mexico City about kidnappings (and, believe me, it’s definitely a topic of conversation) are at two or three degrees of separation from an express-kidnapping-related murder. The odds are still low that on any given day you’ll experience – or anyone you know will experience – a kidnapping, but it’s still completely believable to think a loved one could be kidnapped at any time.

These criminals have managed to tap into a market created by the atmosphere of fear they have themselves fomented over the past decade or so. If people in Mexico weren’t already so afraid of the non-negligible risks of actually being kidnapped, I don’t see how this scheme could ever work.



Climate Change Legislation & Competitiveness (Part I)

[I originally published this post at the Breaking The Logjam blog, where I periodically blog. Here's the original. Here's the post explaining my participation at BTL.]

A big concern with national climate change policy proposals regards the issue of international competitiveness. A national climate change policy like a cap-and-trade system or a carbon tax will impose higher costs on the producers of regulated products, and if foreign producers of competitive goods are not similarly regulated, they will possess a competitive advantage over our domestic producers. Without proper measures, consumers in the U.S. will probably prefer to buy the cheaper (less regulated) imported products over the more expensive (but climate change-regulated) domestic goods. This could not only damage domestic industry (even if producing goods just as efficiently as their foreign competition), but could also lead to more production of unregulated, dirty, carbon-intensive goods (what’s referred to as leakage). A double whammy.

One potentially elegant solution to this problem presents itself in the form of “border adjustments“. With border adjustments, a tariff would be imposed on any product imported into this country from a country that did not impose adequate climate change regulations on its production. A recommendation along those lines has been recommended by two large U.S. Unions (the IBEW and the AFL-CIO), and by the U.S.’s largest coal-burning utility, AEP (strange bedfellows indeed). Their proposal would require “large emitter” countries (read: China & India) to submit allowances to the US for any unregulated emissions created during the productions process of products they intend to export to the US.

A second, much less talked about side to border adjustments regards the exporting of US products regulated under climate change legislation. Using the same competitiveness arguments as with incoming border adjustments, if we want our ostensibly “cleaner” US products to be able to compete with foreign products on their turf, we could offer “rebates” to exporters to strip these products of their regulatory costs when exported to these countries. Without such rebates, we’ll be placing domestically produced exports at a competitive disadvantage with their foreign produced, cheaper, and “dirtier” competition; a situation ripe for leakage.

There are a lot of important issues at stake when thinking about competitiveness and climate change policies. When thinking about these and other issues, it’s been helpful for me to realize that by placing a price on greenhouse gas emissions, a cap-and-trade system or carbon tax will be forcing producers of carbon-intensive goods to cover the true (or at least truer) costs of their products (they will be internalizing an externality). If we agree that unregulated producers in other countries (and currently in this country) are not being forced to pay for these costs, then we can also say they are actually being subsidized by their governments. By imposing border adjustments on such subsidized products, we would just be leveling the playing field.

For more information:



Agricultural Lobby and Environmental Misfortune

[I originally published this post at the Breaking The Logjam blog, where I periodically blog. Here's the original. Here's the post explaining my participation at BTL.]

If one were to look for specific examples of “logjams” in U.S. environmental policy, a prime candidate would be the agricultural lobby. This past Sunday the Wall Street Journal, in an article entitled “Farm Lobby Beats Back Assault on Subsidies,” detailed the most recent victory of the agricultural lobby against a proposed (and modest) reining in of the vast system of direct payments and price supports that undergird the multi-billion dollar agricultural subsidy system within the U.S. (make sure and check out their fantastic interactive breakdown of the U.S. agricultural subsidy system).

Thanks in large part to their successful lobbying, agriculture has been practically exempt from environmental regulation, either through explicit exemptions for agricultural activities, or through laws structured in such a way as to allow for farms to escape most or all environmental regulatory impact in what professor J.B. Ruhl (and Breaking the Logjam participant) has deemed the “anti-law of farms.” Professor Ruhl has researched and analyzed agriculture and environmental law in extreme detail, and notes there are “few exceptions to this anti-law.”

It is not a stretch to say that a great many of the harms agriculture is responsible for have been created by or exacerbated by our regulatory coddling of agribusiness. Take just three examples: 1) as noted by fellow BTL blogger Daniel Wieck, agricultural runoff is responsible for the majority of non-point source water pollution in the U.S., yet many “normal farming practices” are specifically exempted from the Clean Water Act; 2) Agricultural price support programs for sugar have artificially raised the price of sugar in the U.S. and have led to the destruction of a large part of the Florida Everglades; and 3) Agricultural activities are also responsible for 7% of domestic greenhouse gas emissions, yet the U.S. is not even considering direct regulation of these emissions.

To top it all off, when Congress actually has legislated curbs on environmental harms from agriculture, they have done so through billions of dollars worth of more subsidy payments – to the very same farms creating the pollution in the first place! (There are two primary types of federal programs that provide subsidies to the agricultural industry ostensibly for environmental protection: land retirement, easement and conservation programs such as the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP), and working lands programs such as the Environmental Qualities Incentives Program (EQIP) (the NYT had a great recent article on EQIP)).

This is a serious logjam in environmental regulation, and many people on both the left and the right agree something needs to be done to lessen agribusiness’s hold on legislation. New Zealand managed to do so in 1984, despite having an economy much more reliant on agricultural production. It’s time we follow suit.

Further Reading:



Public Transportation, Sprawl & Emissions

[I originally published this post at the Breaking The Logjam blog, where I periodically blog. Here's the original. Here's the post explaining my participation at BTL.]

Not to belabor the blog discussion brought up in Lars’s earlier post regarding public transportation (good post, Lars!), but as I was listening to today’s panel discussion, and the point about whether or not public transport was a viable solution for a large part of the U.S., I was reminded of an article I read earlier last year in the New York Times which seems to offer a possible solution to some of the cultural, geographical and logistical difficulties with replacing our car-driven culture with more and better mass transport systems.

Google has managed to build up and run one of the major mass transit systems in the Bay Area to shuttle their employees to and from work. It appears to be wildly successful. Could not other iterations of similar systems be put together by other large-scale employers (or groups of smaller employers) to help lessen the congestion (and its accompanying pollution) problem due to the US’s uniquely sprawled geography? (according to the article Yahoo and Ebay have already started imitating their transport system). If we view congestion and pollution as an externality brought about by large employers locating in areas where most of their employees have to commute long distances every day, would it be insane to expect these employers to foot the bill for alternative transportation systems?

Also, as an aside, since Google explicitly sells their transportation system as a fringe benefit to attract employees, the idea that Americans are unwilling to change their car-driving desires seems to weaken a bit. I for one would rather rely on an efficient and comfortable transport system than have to put up with suburban commuting (but maybe that’s just me).



Ecosystem Services, Agriculture & Climate Change

[I originally published this post at the Breaking The Logjam blog, where I periodically blog. Here's the original. Here's the post explaining my participation at BTL.]

Panel IV has been discussing the role of ecosystem services in our approach to land and farm policy. Panelist Baron Thompson discussed the wide-randing opportunities and challenges from reframing environmental issues in terms of ecosystem services, and JB Ruhl, while not present at the panel discussion (due to a canceled flight) is presenting a symposium paper on agricultural ecosystem services.

Discussion of ecosystems services brings to the fore the important issue of what role we can expect from the agricultural industry in domestic climate change policy. In the US, agriculture is responsible for approximately 7% of GHG emissions, mostly in the form of methane and nitrous oxide emissions. However, agriculture also has the potential to biologically sequester carbon (and thus reduce atmospheric carbon dioxide) through the adoption of certain farming practices such as reduced tilling. Biological greenhouse gas sequestration is a perfect example of an ecosystem service, and, as professor Thompson pointed out, it is currently one of the only ecosystem services that actually has any money behind it.

Despite agriculture’s non-trivial contribution to GHG emissions, it is highly unlikely to expect U.S. legislation to directly limit agricultural emissions. So far, only New Zealand has planned to include agriculture “within” its cap-and-trade system (which probably has something to do with New Zealand being the only OECD country without a vast system of agricultural subsidies). We will likely see, however, assisted voluntary participation in U.S. climate change policy through the sale of “offset credits” to entities directly capped in their emissions (for example, the current version of the Lieberman-Warner bill — the only bill to have already been passed by the Senate Environment & Public Works Committee — will allow for up to 15% of capped entity emissions reductions to be achieved through the purchase of agricultural offsets). Typically, such an offset system within a larger cap-and-trade program allows for the capped industries to purchase a certain amount of offset credits from individual farms that have adopted practices or technologies that will decrease direct GHG emissions or increase the amount of GHG sequestered.

In such a system, while the agricultural industry will not be forced to reduce their GHG emissions or increase their carbon sequestration, they will be incentivized to do so. If the price that the buyers are willing to pay for the offset credits are more than the cost to farmers for adopting the new practices or technologies required to reduce emissions or increase sequestration, then farmers will adopt these new practices and technologies voluntarily in order to reap the financial benefits from selling offset units. It remains to be seen if such a program will be a useful contributor to domestic greenhouse gas emissions reductions.



NYU Law Symposium: Breaking the Logjam
April 27, 2008, 2:56 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: ,

On March 28th and 29th of this year NYU Law hosted a symposium organized by NYU Law, New York Law School and the NYU Journal of Environmental Law on the “Environmental Logjam” that has been building up in U.S. environmental law over the past few decades. This “logjam” has resulted in outmoded regulatory approaches to our current environmental issues, and the symposium brought in around 30 experts from diverse areas of environmental law to discuss possible approaches to help overhaul our current deficient approach to environmental problems.

I was asked to help out at the symposium by live-blogging some of the panels, and have been invited to continue to blog periodically at the Logjam blog (which I still think should be called the Blogjam). I will include any logjam posts I write on this blog.



Hello world!
April 22, 2008, 12:26 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: ,

Yes. Hello, World. The first post automatically generated by WordPress when you create a blog. I remember the very first algorithm I ever wrote way back in high school was a command to type out “Hello, World.” Its origins are ancient, in computer-time.