Data points.

Using carbon to pump crude oil

Deep in the Permian Basin, America's biggest oilfield Occidental Petroleum plans to build a facility that it believes could change the way the world thinks about fossil-fuel emissions. The globe's first large-scale direct air capture plant will remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and pump it deep underground, where it will remain for millions of years. The process would essentially be the reverse of what oil and gas companies do today. The goal is to lower emissions of the primary greenhouse gas responsible for global warming - and one day even produce a carbon-negative barrel of oil. But to cover the cost of operating the plant, Occidental will initially use much of the CO2 to push out lucrative oil from underground reservoirs, thereby replacing one pollutant with another. The facility, expected to cost hundreds of millions of dollars, will also need support from tax credits and outside investors to be financially viable.

(Adapted from 'Occidental to Strip Carbon from the Air and Use It to Pump Crude,' by Kevin Crowley and Akshat Rathi, published on Jan 12, 2021 by Bloomberg Quint)

The 'wealthiest' thought experiment

Imagine a scenario in which Elon Musk, the recently made richest man in the world, had to pay for his purchases in proportion to his wealth. His net worth is approximately 1.6 million times that of the median American family, which was $121,700 in 2019, according to the Federal Reserve's Survey of Consumer Finances. So anything costing the median family $1 would cost him $1.6 million. In this thought experiment, he goes to Whole Foods, which is owned by Amazon. Organic Honeycrisp apples that cost $3.99 a pound would cost him $6.4 million. A large Hass avocado would have a price tag of $2.4 million for him. The windfall from such a pricing system would go to Amazon rather than the Internal Revenue Service. Conceptually, the closest you could get at something like this with the tax code would be a cash-flow tax. The government adds up your income, subtracts the money you put into savings, calls the remainder consumption, and taxes it at a progressive rate: the more you consume, the higher rate per dollar of consumption.

(Adapted from 'When Elon Musk Shops for Groceries,' by Peter Coy, published on Jan 8, 2021 by Bloomberg Businessweek)

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