drplokta: (Default)
[personal profile] drplokta
We keep seeing scary-looking estimates of the cost of climate change -- most recently an estimate here that it could be costing the UK £42 billion per year by 2080. What all these estimates have in common is that, while they look scary, they are in fact extremely small numbers, and indicate that we should do nothing about climate change.

Let's take that £42 billion per year by 2080 as an example. The UK's GDP is currently a little over £1 trillion per year. But if we assume 2% real growth in the economy per year over the next 74 years, then in 2080 it will be over 4.3 billion, and that £42 billion per year will be less than 1% of the economy, or equivalent to delaying economic growth by less than six months. Put another way, the effect of climate change will be to reduce average growth over the period from 2.00% to 1.99%, so it doesn't seem worth spending more than .02% of current GDP, or £200 million per year, to do anything about it.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-10-23 02:14 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] the-gardener.livejournal.com
You're simply complaining that the £42 billion per year estimate of the costs of global warming in 2080 is wrong, and that's really my point.

-- a point which is rather obscured by the rest of your comment. Besides, that wasn't my complaint; my argument is that to attempt to view the costs of climate change (or of dealing with climate change) solely in monetary or economic terms, whether they are measured now or in 2080-equivalents, is narrow and misleading because actual GHG impacts on the biosphere simply cannot be measured in pounds sterling (or euros, or yen, or whatever). Exactly what price do you put on maintaining the North Atlantic Drift and the associated thermohaline circulation, for example? (Weaken or terminate that, and UK temperatures would fall to those more appropriate to its Labradorean latitude, with mass emigration the probable result.) What price do you put on maintaining the soil's current loading of bacteria and invertebrates, the invisible ecological services without which agriculture would be almost impossible? What price do you put on maintaining global biodiversity -- the biodiversity necesary for the existence of large, complex species such as ourselves? (As any study of the evolutionary record shows, simple ecosystems have simple species, and complex ones go extinct when biodiversity disappears.) To try to view these factors in terms of whether or not it's "worthwhile to do much about global warming now" is to wildly miss the real issues.

no one is making projections like that, to the best of my knowledge

-- perhaps because (just to accept your monetary frame of reference for the moment) it's a moving calculation: do the sum once, and then start to make a change, and you have to do the sum all over again because the assumptions on which the first result was predicated have changed. Not to mention the fact that -- see previous paragraph -- some things are just incalculable anyway.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-10-23 05:05 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] the-gardener.livejournal.com
If money is sufficiently broken that it can no longer be used for that purpose, we have bigger problems than climate change.

In my view, to place problems of monetary valorisation ahead of climate change is not to grasp climate change's potential impact on human civilisation. But if you want to allocate resources in this fashion, then what value(s) do you place on the North Atlantic Drift, thermohaline circulation, the invisible ecological services of soil bacteria, etc.? How do you (propose to) calculate their benefits to us (to the human species), and the costs of losing them? What units will you use, across what time horizon? How will your calculations be validated, and by whom? Und so weiter -- because if these factors can't be allocated a monetary value (as I contend they can't), then from your perspective money is broken.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-10-24 09:31 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] the-gardener.livejournal.com
As I've said throughout this exchange, I don't think the North Atlantic Drift, etc. are amenable to monetary valorisation, and in my view to attempt to quantify the additional costs of heating people's homes as a consequence of its failure is simply to fiddle about in the econometric undergrowth and leave the real issue unaddressed -- i.e., the effects of climate change on the Earth's biosphere. For that reason, I think environmentalists such as Matt Prescott, in the BBC article you referenced in your original post are wasting their time as well -- their intention is clearly to try to demonstrate to business, in a language that business will most readily understand, what effect climate change will have on their balance sheets and thus their stock market valuation, but who, really, will care about any of that thirty, fifty or a hundred years from now?

(no subject)

Date: 2006-10-24 02:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] the-gardener.livejournal.com
I can only repeat my basic point: the effects of climate change can't be quantified in this fashion, because the net result of climate change will be to make the biosphere less suitable for the continuation of contemporary human civilisation.

How less suitable is unquantifiable, because we can't predict with certainty the exact state of the new climatic regime which will predominate (how many degrees warmer, how much windier, and so forth). To try to calculate what resources should be allocated to dealing with climate change, in the fashion you suggest, would require the creation of an almost infinite series of tables in which one attempted to assess the relative value of dealing with a one degree rise in temperature, a two degree rise, etc., cross-matched for each state with various states of cessation of global ocean currents, each in turn cross-matched with potential new hurricane indices, etc cetera, et cetera....and then attempted to match each of those against a whole series of other issues to which resources could be allocated. Assuming this is even possible, it would be pointless in the long run because by the time the numbers had been crunched through the climate would have changed and the results of the calculations would be entirely academic. (See also the comment from [livejournal.com profile] johncoxon way below.)

The point about climate change is that it will change everything. In my view, to discuss relative resource allocations in the face of that uncomfortable fact is a serious waste of time and effort.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-10-27 05:49 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] purplecthulhu.livejournal.com
If the UK (and Ireland) climate changes to that of Labrador, one could attempt to assess this by comparing the value of land prices for all real estate in the UK (a lot!) with that of Labrador or Greenland (hardly anything at all). As you can see I don't have the detailed figures :-) but this is a much larger monetary effect than just 42 billion a year.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-10-23 03:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] purplecthulhu.livejournal.com
I would be interested to see the details of that 42 billion calculation, and what error bars they place on it (the usual absence of error bars, or at least some quantification of uncertainty, in such gnomic declarations from government or QUANGO usually leaves me frustrated).

My guess is that there are large uncertainties on that value, with a significant probability of much much higher costs even if you believe the initial estimate. The presence of such large but uncertain costs has been the basis of substantial precautionary spending in the past. The London Barrage was constructed to prevent an unlikely event - the flooding of London through the conincidence of a spring tide and an easterly gale - causing a lot of expensive damage. I'd argue that substatial spending to reduce global warming is justified in just the same way, even if you believe these figures.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-10-23 04:09 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] palatinate.livejournal.com
You have also assumed that the £42bn is expressed in current terms, enabling you to deflate its impact. I'd expect that impact assessments would normally be given in today's terms, so that the £42bn is in 2006 pounds.

I also think that the figure of itself is of limited value (as Dave says, typically gnomic). Single figures are always too reductionist. For instance, an income tax increase which takes £42bn a year out of the economy is not going to have the same impact on people as a major hurricane occurring every year (think 1987) which does £42bn of damage. I think this kind of clarity applies even if you don't invoke the more radical downsides referred to by [livejournal.com profile] the_gardener.

I also think climate change impact estimates are particularly likely to come up short when a purely financial approach is adopted - at least for any scenario short of major flooding / massive drought. For instance, assume a scenario where we get more temperature variation and suspect weather - an extension of the behaviour of the last decade - but without these extreme outcomes. For instance, the UK is heavily industrialised and industrial output won't be heavily affected unless the weather is actually bad enough to prevent transport or close factories. The agricultural sector is relatively modest. I would guess that the scenario the analysts have run involves a cost for additional flood defences and insurance claims from more storms, combined with some marginal loss of output.


















(no subject)

Date: 2006-10-23 05:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] the-gardener.livejournal.com
The agricultural sector is relatively modest.

In terms of its contribution to GDP -- but bear in mind that food plants only grow within a relatively narrow temperature band, and that without food nothing else will get done.

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