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Economics of Climate Change: Impacts

Economics of Climate Change: Impacts. Economics 331b Spring 2009. Global Warming and Sea Level Rise (SLR). Major variations in geological history (-150 to +40 meters) Sources in future: - Thermal expansion (up to 2 meters) - Small glaciers (0.5 meters) - Greenland (up to 6 meters)

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Economics of Climate Change: Impacts

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  1. Economics of Climate Change:Impacts Economics 331b Spring 2009

  2. Global Warming and Sea Level Rise (SLR) Major variations in geological history (-150 to +40 meters) Sources in future: - Thermal expansion (up to 2 meters) - Small glaciers (0.5 meters) - Greenland (up to 6 meters) - Antarctic (56 meters), but major unstable is West Antarctic Ice Sheet (7 meters) - Arctic Sheet (very likely to disappear, 0 meters) Major issues are stability and irreversibility

  3. Observed Sea Level Rise 18 cm rise since 1900 Current rate: 3.3 cm per decade Satellite Altimeter IPCC Tide Gauges Rahmstorf, Cazenave, Church, Hansen, Keeling, Parker and Somerville (Science 2007)

  4. Recent Global Sea Level Rise Estimates Data: Church and White (2006) Scenarios 2100: 50 – 140 cm (Rahmstorf 2007) 55 – 110 cm (“high end”, Delta Committee 2008) Scenarios 2200: 150 – 350 cm (“high end”, Delta Committee 2008) Scenarios 2300: 250 – 510 cm (German Advisory Council on Global Change, WBGU, 2006) WBGU Delta Comm. Rahmstorf Data Rahmstorf at http://www.ozean-klima.de/

  5. Estimate of distribution of output and population by elevation Gecon.yale.edu

  6. Impact of Sea-Level RiseOn Value of Real Estate in Cape Cod Caroleen Verly, “Sea-Level Rise on Cape Cod: Predicting the Cost of Land and Structure Losses”, Yale University, 2008

  7. Land value and altitude Caroleen Verly, “Sea-Level Rise on Cape Cod: Predicting the Cost of Land and Structure Losses”, Yale University, 2008

  8. Impact of SLR on Land and Structures Caroleen Verly, “Sea-Level Rise on Cape Cod: Predicting the Cost of Land and Structure Losses”, Yale University, 2008

  9. Non-linearities in the climate system Most of the impacts literature examines gradual climate change, with roughly linear systems and impacts. Scientists have been particularly concerned about discontinuities, abrupt climate change, tipping points, catastrophic impacts. Lenton et al. survey the terrain and find the following relevant and important tipping elements. We will discuss the dynamics of the Greenland Ice Sheet (GIS) as perhaps the most important and potentially costly. From economic/decision point of view, thresholds simplify decisions as to the optimal policy.

  10. Optimum Without Thresholds Marginal Abatement Cost Marginal Damage 0 Temperature* Temperature 11

  11. Optimum With Thresholds Marginal Abatement Cost Marginal Damage 0 Temperature* Temperature 12

  12. Tipping Elements in the Climate System “Tipping elements in the Earth’s climate system, “ T. M. Lenton, et al., PNAS, Feb 2008.

  13. Simulation of Melting IPCC, Science, AR4, p. 830 from Ridley. This is roughly for a 6 °C warming. Note that some climatologists think that this underestimates the rate of melting.

  14. Mathematics of GIS dynamics

  15. dE/dt E* E 0 Have initial stable equilibrium at E*.

  16. dE/dt E* E 0 E** Global warming raises sea-level temperature and lowers the equilibrium height and therefore volume from E* to E**.

  17. dE/dt E* E 0 E**

  18. dE/dt E*** E** E* E 0 … then when the system passes the tipping point, the melting effect overwhelms the precipitation effect, and the equilibrium moves to E***.

  19. dE/dt E 0 Reglaciation requires considerable cooling to get dE/dt positive again. This is the “hysteresis loop.” E***

  20. Hysteresis loops and Tipping Points for Ice Sheets Frank Pattyn, “GRANTISM: Model of Greenland and Antrarctica,” Computers & Geosciences, April 2006, Pages 316-325

  21. First Generation Estimates of AggregateMonetized Damages of CO2 Doubling, U.S., for present economySource: IPCC, Second Assessment Report

  22. Economic Impacts of Gradual Climate Change on the U.S. Joel B. Smith, A Synthesis of Potential Climate Change Impacts on the U.S., Prepared for the Pew Center on Global Climate Change, April 2004

  23. IPCC Collation of Global Damages, AR Three

  24. Estimated Damages from Yale Models and IPCC Estimate

  25. Summary of Impacts Estimates Early studies contained a major surprise: Modest impacts for gradual climate change, market impacts, high-income economies, next 50-100 years: - Impact about 0 (+ 2) percent of output. - Further studies confirmed this general result. BUT, outside of this narrow finding, potential for big problems: • many subtle thresholds and tipping elements • abrupt climate change (“inevitable surprises”) • many ecological disruptions (ocean carbonization, species loss, forest wildfires, loss of terrestrial glaciers, snow packs, …) • stress to small, topical, developing countries • gradual coastal inundation of 1 – 10 meters over 1-5 centuries OVERALL: “…global mean losses could be 1-5% Gross Domestic Product (GDP) for 4 ºC of warming.” (IPCC, FAR, April 2007, but no solid data underlying this)

  26. Why Impact Analysis is So Difficult 1. Most impacts analyses impose climate changes on current social-economic-political structures. - Example: impact of temp/precip/CO2 on structure of Indian economy in 2005 2. However, need to consider what society will look like when climate change occurs. 3. Example of difficulties of looking backward: • 2 ˚C increase in 6-7 decades – that was Nazism, period of Great Depression, Gold Standard, pre-Keynesian macro • 4 ˚C increase in 15 decades –Ming Dynasty, lighting with whale oil, invention of telegraph, stagecoach, …. 4. In the end, it appears that major impacts are NON-MARKET, VERY DIFFICULT TO VALUE, and VERY CONTENTIOUS.

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