09/06/2018

We Are Almost Certainly Underestimating The Economic Risks Of Climate Change

VoxDavid Roberts

The models that inform climate policymaking are fatally flawed.
With some stories, you just can’t avoid stock art. Getty Images/EyeEm
One of the more vexing aspects of climate change politics and policy is the longstanding gap between the models that project the physical effects of global warming and those that project the economic impacts. In a nutshell, even as the former deliver worse and worse news, especially about a temperature rise of 3 degrees Celsius or more, the latter remain placid.
The famous DICE model created by Yale’s William Nordhaus shows that a 6-degree rise in global average temperature — which the physical sciences characterize as an unlivable hellscape — would only dent global GDP by 10 percent.
Projections of modest economic impacts from even the most severe climate change affect climate politics in a number of ways. For one thing, they inform policy goals like those President Obama offered in Paris, restraining their ambition. For another, they fuel the arguments of “lukewarmers,” those who say that the climate is warming but it’s not that big a problem. (Lukewarmism is the public stance of most Trump Cabinet members.)
Climate hawks have long had the strong instinct that it’s the economic models, not the physical-science models, that are missing something — that the current expert consensus about climate economic damages is far too sanguine — but they often lack the vocabulary to do any more than insist.
As it happens, that vocabulary exists. At this point, there is a fairly rich literature on the shortcomings of the climate-economic models upon which so much political weight rests. (Here’s an old post of mine from 2015 bashing them.)



Two recent papers help simplify and summarize that literature. They are addressed to different audiences (one the US, one the international community), but both stress the importance of improving these lagging models before the next round of policymaking. I’ll touch on the US-focused one first, the international one second.

US climate policy is moribund; it’s a good time to update models
The first paper is “Time to refine key climate policy models,” a commentary in Nature Climate Change by Alexander Barron, a former Environmental Protection Agency and congressional staffer (on the Waxman-Markey bill) who is now at Smith College.
He notes that a relatively small set of models — “a handful of computational general equilibrium (CGE) models, sector-specific models, or hybrids like the US Energy Information Administration (EIA)’s National Energy Modeling System (NEMS)” — tends to set expectations and policymaking in the US. And there are reasons to believe those models are systematically underestimating climate change’s economic impacts and overstating the costs of mitigating it.
Barron summarizes the areas where current modeling falls short.

Technology costs: When it comes to clean energy technology, economics and policy are moving quickly, and because of the vicissitudes of academic review, the cost data used in official models is often years old and well out of date. Plus, models assume learning curves that renewables have exceeded again and again. “Work to incorporate empirically supported learning rates and induced innovation is challenging but possible,” Barron writes, “and research suggests that including innovation can significantly lower required carbon prices for a given target.”

Opportunities outside the electricity sector: As I’ve written recently, climate policy urgently needs to broaden its gaze from the power sector and start taking on other sectors. But models inhibit that. In models, the transportation sector and especially the industrial sector are resistant to carbon prices.
Research is needed to disaggregate those sectors into subsectors and find the places where policy can gain traction, and to explore the effects of electrification, widespread behavioral changes, cutting-edge technologies (like autonomous vehicles), and other things to which models remain largely blind.
Electrification is coming. Shutterstock
Demand and energy efficiency: Though virtually all decarbonization scenarios involve massive amounts of energy efficiency, we remain unable to model it very well. It is often “forced” into models as an exogenous variable, but at a flat per-kWh cost that allows little differentiation between the different potentials of different subsectors. Data on efficiency is not sophisticated enough to allow models to intelligently allocate resources to it and within it.
“All models would benefit from sustained investment in improved efficiency cost estimates, more publicly available data, updated information on adoption behaviors, and careful examination of model responses,” Barron writes.

Social benefits: Models often omit or undercount social benefits like health improvements and reductions in premature mortality from lower air pollution, reductions in disaster management costs, and the, uh, “use value” of a clean environment (hiking and stuff). “In fact,” Barron writes, “none of the modeling platforms historically used to analyze US climate policy produce direct estimates of the economy-wide reductions in air pollutants, let alone their economic impacts.”
(In late 2017, EPA’s Science Advisory Board released detailed recommendations for how to improve cost-benefit analyses along these lines. EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt is currently working to neuter the board and make cost-benefit analysis even worse.)

Uncertainty: To “reduce fixation on a single scenario,” Barron says, policymakers should be presented with a range of projections emphasizing how outcomes vary with assumptions and sensitivities. Modelers should strain to ensure that journalists and policymakers understand that models are not predictions and that outcomes depend entirely on our choices.
These are fairly technical problems, but solutions are within the grasp of the research community. US climate policy is likely on hold for (at least) four years, as Trump madness is worked out, but this is an area where improvement is both possible and achievable.
“Shortcomings in existing policy models represent barriers to climate policy that could be reduced with modest resources and limited political capital,” Barron writes. It would be nice for better models to be available when the US returns to sane climate policymaking.
The only GIF that matters.
The IPCC is working on its next big report and still using models that underestimate economic damages
The second paper, in Review of Environmental Economics and Policy, makes the same point — commonly used models are underestimating the economic impacts of climate change — in a slightly different way, to a different audience.
The audience in this case is the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which is preparing to pull together its Sixth Assessment Report, to be released over 2021 and 2022. IPCC assessment reports are hugely influential in global policymaking.
The models typically used to estimate effects are integrated assessment models (IAMs), using an “expected utility function” — that is, they add up effects based on their probability of occurring. Such models are “integrated” in that they include economic and climate models in interaction. The economy produces emissions, which feed into the climate models, which produce effects, which are applied as a “damage function” to the economic models.
The problems with IAMs are well-explored at this point (see this collection of papers from the National Academy of Sciences; or, see above), but the paper’s authors — Thomas Stoerk of the Environmental Defense Fund, Gernot Wagner of the Harvard University Center for the Environment, and Bob Ward of the ESRC Centre for Climate Change Economics and Policy and Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics and Political Science — focus on one in particular.
The expected utility function does not allow modelers to indicate their subjective confidence in various sources of input data. And many difficult-to-quantify effects are omitted entirely; “physical impacts are often not translated into monetary terms and they have largely been ignored by climate economists,” the authors write.
In other words, IAMs have the effect of undercounting risks and masking uncertainty, which is unfortunate since risks and uncertainties are the signal features of climate policymaking.
The heart of the critique is that IAMs do not properly account for “tipping points,” levels of atmospheric change “beyond which impacts accelerate, become unstoppable, or become irreversible.” We do not have a great understanding of tipping points or exactly when they might occur. But we know that they become more likely as temperature climbs and become almost certain as temperatures rise more than 4, 5, or 6 degrees.
Such high temperatures are not the most likely outcome, but they are, shall we say, less unlikely than one might like. The distribution of climate outcomes has a “fat tail,” which means even on the far end of extreme possibilities, a 6-degree apocalypse, the chances are still between 5 and 10 percent.
Wagner & Weitzman
IAMs do not account well for fat-tail risks. Nor do they account for “ambiguity aversion,” the authors write, “a widely held preference to avoid uncertainty.” If they properly understood it, people probably wouldn’t like the idea of betting millions of lives and possibly the future of the species on avoiding an outcome with 5 to 10 percent probability.
The most straightforward way to better integrate tipping points into IAMs would be to increase the steepness of the damage function. In a 2012 paper, famed Harvard climate economist Martin Weitzman “proposes a steeper damage function that relies on input from an expert panel that explicitly considered physical tipping points,” the authors write. “This damage function leads to a loss of global output of around 50 percent for a temperature increase of 6°C.”
Subsequent research has supported the contention that proper consideration of tipping points raises both expected economic impacts and the optimal size of a carbon price.
The authors summarize their conclusions about the state of climate economics:
First, the expected utility framework fails to capture important dimensions of the climate decision problem. Second, when uncertainty is explicitly considered within the expected utility framework, estimates of the economic damages from climate change generally increase, often by as much as an order of magnitude. [my emphasis]
The authors urge the IPCC to look beyond the expected utility framework and explore other models of decision-making under uncertainty. “Instead of the technical expert calculus that is currently used,” the authors write, “decisions concerning optimal climate policy should ideally move to public debates about the ethical choices that underlie different decision frameworks.” (Amen to that.)
And they urge the IPCC to better account for tipping points, which will have the effect of raising economic impact estimates and reducing estimated policy costs.


What are climate models?

Model talk is kind of boring, but models underlie everything
There’s a lot of technical mumbo-jumbo flying around in these conversations about models, so it’s important to step back and recall the point of all this.
Policymakers want to know how much climate change will hurt the economy. They want to know how much policies to fight climate change will cost. Models provide them with answers. Right now, models are (inaccurately) telling them that damage costs will be low and policy costs will be high.
Political mobilization on climate change is going to fight a headwind as long as policymakers are getting those answers from models.
We need models that negatively weigh uncertainty, properly account for tipping points, incorporate more robust and current technology cost data, better differentiate sectors outside electricity, rigorously price energy efficiency, and include the social and health benefits of decarbonization.
One, such models would be more accurate, better at their task of informing policymakers. And two, they would justify far more policy and investment to fight climate change than has been seen to date in the US or any other major economy. We shouldn’t let the blind spots and shortcomings of current models undermine political ambition.
Save the models, save the world.

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Grave Climate Warning For Governments And Business: "This Is About Money"

InDailyBension Siebert

Photo: AP/Ajit Solanki 
“I’m a corporate lawyer, so I don’t care about the community, and I don’t care about the environment. I care about money.”
That was how Sarah Barker, a Minter Ellison international expert on climate change governance risks, opened an extraordinary presentation to the Adelaide City Council last night (being tongue-in-cheek).
Sure, the planet is likely heading for a rise in global temperatures more significant than the fall in temperature that characterised the last ice age – but ignore that for a moment, she said.
“Climate change isn’t an ethical or an environmental issue for council … it’s, clearly, a material, financial risk and one that has to be considered now,” she said.
“Of course, climate change presents one of the greatest threats to the ecology of the planet as we know it (but) it doesn’t matter whether or not this is a socialist conspiracy cooked up by China to harm the US manufacturing sector.
“It doesn’t matter what you believe, or I believe, or anyone believes when the markets believe it, when investors are making decisions, governments are making policy and when stakeholders have shifted their views.
“There’s a risk that needs to be mitigated.
“This is all about money. Markets have shifted, so we need to shift too.”

Unprecedented legal liabilities
Barker said the council – along with all levels of government around the world – faced unprecedented legal liabilities from the developments it approves, from the manner in which it maintains public infrastructure and from its growing role as “insurer of last resort” when natural disasters hit.
She cited a case in which another council rejected a development application from a homeowner – because the proposed renovation was at risk of going underwater.
The homeowner then appealed the planning decision and the council overturned it.
“The structure was then washed away,” she recalled.
“The homeowner then sued the council for allowing them to build it.”

Development approval policies
Barker warned there was “a significant potential for an uplift” in the amount of litigation directed against the Adelaide City Council unless it mitigates its risks.
“There’s a huge, widening gap between natural disaster damage and private insurance,” she said.
“When people lose money they look for someone to blame and someone to sue.
“There obviously needs to be changes to your mapping and to your development approval policies.”
She warned that if the council does not sufficiently maintain public infrastructure, impacted in new ways by climate change, and that infrastructure fails in a way that damages private property or assets, “that’s opening you up to legal challenge”.
“We’re already seeing a couple of challenges on that front in the US.”
The council’s credit rating – and that of all governments – was also under threat if it didn’t properly account for the new obligations created by climate change.
She said ratings giant Moody’s was in the process of re-assessing the credit ratings of governments and corporations around the globe, “starting with sub-sovereigns”.
“All the credit ratings of governments and corporations around the world (will soon) account for how susceptible they are to climate change risk, how prepared they are – from an adaptation and resilience point of view – to deal with the impacts, and also how quick they are to deal with any damage that does occur,” she said.

Preparing for climate change impact
Lord Mayor Martin Haese said the city council was overdue to audit its entire operations to make sure it is prepared for the impacts of climate change.
“The city council hasn’t undertaken any systematic (audit) of its corporate climate change risk,” he told InDaily this morning.
“Credit ratings agencies (… are) rating local governments on their climate risk exposure.
“It’s timely that we (undertake) a detailed audit.”
But he said the council was also a leader in climate change policy – including with its goal for the city and North Adelaide to be carbon neutral by 2025 – and that some of the risk mitigation work had already been done through normal infrastructure renewal processes.
Barker told last night’s meeting that the risks associated with climate change were matched by massive potential gains, she said, including favourable treatment by banks of organisations that can demonstrate sustainability.

Big financial opportunities for businesses and governments
“Private companies, only in the last couple of months, out of Europe and in Asia (… are) getting discounts on their interest rate, negotiated for if they achieve their sustainability targets,” said Barker.
“There was a Spanish insurance company that recently renegotiated a five-year loan (so that) if it hits its targets for each of the five years, it will be paying 30 per cent less interest.
“Here’s a great opportunity to renegotiate with your banks.”'

Green bonds
A new trend of funding infrastructure through “green bonds” rather than bank loans was taking off internationally.
“Green bonds” are government IOUs to investors that finance environmentally-friendly projects.
She said investors were accepting significantly lower interest rates on projects that show “green” credentials, because the market perceives them as lower-risk.
“Green bonds are it-and-a-bit in financial markets at the moment,” said Barker.
She said a multi-billion dollar bond issued by the French Government early last year, offering an interest rate lower than an average a savings account, was hugely popular among investors.
She said local governments could issue similar financial instruments to finance public transport and cycling infrastructure projects, adding that new technologies like electric cars and more efficient renewable technology also represented great potential economic benefit.

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Climate Activist Bill McKibben Still Fighting 'The End Of Nature'

FairfaxPeter Hannam

It's fitting I meet US climate change campaigner Bill McKibben for our lunch shortly after filing on Sydney smashing its April temperature records, part of the city's hottest autumn in almost 160 years of records.
McKibben was on his Accelerate Climate Action tour around Australia, arranged by the local arm of the 350.org activist group he founded in 2008.
He arrives for our chat in the sun-soaked Sydney Botanic Gardens Restaurant after a brief side trip to the bleaching-battered Great Barrier Reef, and has his own grim tales to tell.
Bill McKibben, a leading American environmentalist, sits down for a lunchtime chat in Sydney's Royal Botanic Garden. Photo: Kate Geraghty


"It was emotional to be out there on the reef," he says after we order - a barbecued barramundi shared between us, following an appetiser of chargrilled flat breads.
"We dove first on a spot that was utterly decimated, with 98 per cent mortality. This was on the spot [David Attenborough's] Blue Planet II had filmed those amazing things about the great spawning of coral," he tells me.
"It was one of most spectacular places on the whole reef, and apparently one of the most remarkable sites in the whole world. And now, you may as well go dive on a parking lot some place.”
The reef a kilometre further out, where merely half the corals had died, offered some cheer. "There was still great beauty and a great sense of what an enchanted corner of God’s brain this all was."
McKibben's own wits don't seem to get much downtime, either.
A prolific writer, the lanky Vermonter - when he's not researching or campaigning around the world - was among the first to popularise climate change as a major threat with his 1989 book, The End of Nature. 
His working title for the three-decade anniversary update next year - “Falter: Has the human game begun to play itself out?” - suggests things aren't looking up.
“Thirty years ago, I didn’t anticipate how quickly the world would change, and I didn’t anticipate how slowly the political world would respond," McKibben says. "I was remiss on both counts."
He isn't letting up though. To anyone following his Twitter feed, it's evident McKibben remains passionate about many issues - from lawsuits against oil giants for their climate impact, new worrying science such as confirmation of a slowdown in the Gulf Stream, to US President Donald Trump's latest announcement.
IMAGE
McKibben's journalistic nous was nurtured as an undergraduate at Harvard where he "theoretically" majored in government. In reality, he spent "day after day after day" on The Harvard Crimson, the campus newspaper that doubles as an incubator for future New York Times or Washington Post talent.
"I’m sure I wrote more words per day in my college years than any other part of my journalistic career,” he muses.
McKibben's news nose means he appreciates the difficulties journalists have keeping the climate issue in the public eye.
That's despite the science being basically settled since the first Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report in 1994, and the mounting evidence of more frequent and more extreme weather events as atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases continue to climb.
“Although [climate change is the] most important thing happening in the world every single day, it’s never the most dramatic, urgent thing on any particular day,” he says.
“It may be journalism is just a reflection of the brain of our species, which is not good at reacting.”
I raise the point that news on the climate science front also tends to be negative, citing the recent discovery of algae forming on the warming Greenland ice sheets, darkening the surface and speeding the melt.
The Great Barrier Reef is in "deep trouble" as climate change and other threats mount, scientists say. Photo: Jason South
“We’ve not caught a significant break from physics or chemistry or biology in the 30 years I’ve been working it," he agrees. "Instead, virtually everything’s come back worse than imagined."
Indeed, some processes - such as ocean acidification as the seas absorb more carbon dioxide from the atmosphere - were barely foreseen when The End of Nature first went to print, he says.
For many Americans, the election of the pro-fossil fuel President Trump - who has also sought to gut government climate action - has added a degree of dismay that few liberals saw coming.
"[It's] as if everybody’s taken a dose of reverse Prozac, and they’re just anxious and jittery at all time,” McKibben says.
“The one good thing to say about the Trump era is that the resistance has grown dramatically,” says Bill McKibben. Photo: AP
“It turns out to be an under-appreciated virtue of all former presidents that you could forget about them for weeks at a time,” he adds. “This guy, every 45 minutes, he rings a little bell and you have to go stare at him for a while.”
One way McKibben responded was to step up his writing, producing a mischievous debut novel, Radio Free Vermont, in which his beloved state seeks to secede from the United States.
Nobody was in the mood for anything dark," he says. "It’s half a love letter to my small quirky home state [that produced Democratic presidential candidate and former socialist mayor Bernie Sanders], and half a kind of mash note to the resistance, of which I’ve sort of been a part for, I guess, 15 years."
“The one good thing to say about the Trump era is that the resistance has grown dramatically.”
His 350.org now employs 100 people around the world, which he claims makes it the biggest such group devoted solely to tackling global warming.
The name refers to the 350 parts per million level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere considered by some scientists as a "safe concentration" for a stable climate. That's well below the current CO2 level, which is 410-plus and rising.
The group is "a hell of a lot bigger than it was 10 years ago, when I started it with seven college kids," he says.
"But it’s pathetic, you know," McKibben adds with a self-deprecating chuckle. "Any halfway ambitious mid-sized oil companies spends more money lobbying in a quarter than our budget for a year, and there are hundreds of them.”
The future, he says, hinges on a contest between technology, with the promise of renewable energy to displace coal, oil and gas, and the physics of a climate we are shifting.
"Basically, it’s a race, and the job of movements [like 350.org] is to try to make that race come out the right way," he says.  "Left to our own devices, we’ll do [the transition] too slowly. Maybe we can goose the process.”
Two emerging trends offer McKibben some hope. One is the "literal miracle" of a solar panel, which can bring light and communications to poor tropical villages just by taking "a plate of glass and pointing it at the sun",  as he witnessed last year in Ghana.
Bill Kibben calls the solar panel a "literal miracle". Photo: Justin McManus
"They’d just put in, a week before in this rural, remote community, a solar micro grid - maybe an array of 50 panels and the most rudimentary wire into each hut – and they kept handing me cold bottles of water to drink, for which I was grateful because it was very hot.
"But in my predictably clueless Western way, it took me a good 15 minutes to figure out why they would be so proud to be doing it," he adds. "Nobody had ever had a refrigerator. Almost literally, the concept of cold had heretofore been an irrelevant concept."
The other promising development has been "the remarkable emergence of frontline communities in general, and indigenous communities in particular, around the world at the absolute head of this fight” against fossil fuels, McKibben says.
“We work so much alongside and behind our indigenous colleagues everywhere - in Keystone, Standing Rock and Kinder Morgan [pipeline tussles in North America], in the Pacific Islands, in the Adani fight [in Queensland], wherever."
A protest march to a sacred burial ground at the Standing Rock Indian Reservation in North Dakota, in 2016. Photo: New York Times
"Standing Rock [in North Dakota] was just an amazing scene" led by Sioux protesters, McKibben says. "And one of the things that made me saddest about Trump’s election was losing that overnight - that pipeline would have been the first constructed pipeline to never go into operation."
As our chat winds down, the waiter comes to inquire as to the satisfaction with our meal, saying he hadn't wanted to disturb our discussion.
"It was really good," McKibben says, joking: “We were literally solving the problems of the world today."
"Good, at least somebody’s doing it," the waiter says with a smile.

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