The economic damages of the COVID-19 emergency provide a bitter taste of what we face every year if Australia sticks to its present high emissions path, new modelling indicates.
Protestors at the global climate strike rally in Melbourne in September 2019. Photo: Christina Jingjie Liu |
New research from the University of Melbourne reveals annual economic damages by 2038 will be comparable to the current estimated annual cost of COVID-19 in Australia.
Archie, 3 years old says “I have to save the world?” Photographed on the
steps of Old Treasury Building during the Global Climate Strike Rally
in 2019. Photo: Chenxi Gui |
The modelling covers 139 countries in four potential warming scenarios from now to 2100.
The projections draw on a modelling framework in the journal Earth’s Future in 2018 and have been continually updated through adding data points for bushfires and other ecological events.
“There is no model in the world that is nearly this computationally large,” said lead researcher Professor Tom Kompas of the university’s school of biosciences.
“It’s as much as 10 times larger than standard basic models.”
The detail built into the projections allowed researchers to drill down and discover how each country will be affected by rising temperatures at particular points in the coming century.
Previous models could only provide average damages across large regions or the world as a whole.
It found the global economic impact of climate change varied enormously, with countries nearer to the equator suffering most.
Sydney’s air pollution was 11 times worse than harmful levels during the bushfires in 2019. Photo: Getty |
South-East Asia will be hit almost as hard, with countries like the Philippines and Indonesia recording annual falls of about 20 per cent.
The global effect, while less acute, is still severe, with global average GDP falling by 7.2 per cent ($31 trillion) each year by 2100.
The cumulative global economic damages from now to 2100 were found to be more than $US600 trillion ($828 trillion).
In Australia, greenhouse gas emissions dipped marginally (0.3 per cent) in the year to September, having grown steadily over the past seven years, but they are projected to grow again in the coming decade.
Global emissions are following a similar course.
If this trajectory is maintained, the research found that the economic cost of climate change for Australia alone will total at least $1.89 trillion by 2050 and exceed $100 billion in annual damages by 2038.
Professor Kompas described the impact of the coronavirus pandemic as “devastating”, but he said it also puts the huge economic threat of climate change into context.
“By 2038, on average projections, climate change may well be dealing a COVID-sized blow to the Australian economy every year … [it] will imply more job losses, unemployment and deeper cuts in GDP. And those damages will continue to increase disproportionately year after year,” Professor Kompas said.
Much of the economic damage will be from rising sea levels wreaking havoc on property, infrastructure and agriculture along the coast.
It is calculated that damages of more than $992 billion over the next three decades, or more than $30 billion a year, on average, from sea level rise and storm surge alone.
A grounded ship following a storm surge in the Philippines. Photo: Getty |
“Many of these damages ramp up over time,” Professor Kompas said.
But he said Australia is already getting a taste of what’s around the corner, the past “Black Summer” bushfires being an example.
The researchers tallied up the damage to property, infrastructure and agriculture caused by the recent bushfires, assessing the cost at $48 billion.
And with research suggesting Australia will have two more “megafires” before the end of the decade, Professor Kompas calculates that by 2050 bushfires will have cost the economy about $360 billion.
The $1.89 trillion cost to the economy in the next 30 years is almost certainly an underestimate, he said.
His research does not yet account for damage to Australia’s major environmental assets, pollution from burning fossil fuels, tourism losses and natural disasters other than bushfires.
“It’s still really a narrow set of damages … and even when you think about these severe damages, we’re still greatly underestimating overall potential impacts.”John Quiggin, a University of Queensland economist who sits on the board of the Australian government’s Climate Change Authority, said that the $1.89 trillion figure was “reasonable” and definitely not “out of the ballpark”.
In 2016 Australia was one of the 195 countries that signed onto the Paris Agreement, which aims to limit global warming to between 1.5 and 2 °C above pre-industrial levels. In its 2018 interim report, the Intercontinental Panel on Climate Change said this would be extremely unlikely if global emissions don’t reach “net zero” by 2050.
The federal government has refused to commit to this target, saying their approach “is not to have a target without a plan”. But Kompas said the cost of meeting the target is a small fraction of the damages if it’s not met.
In a separate study, now under peer review, he calculated that achieving net zero emissions by 2050 in Australia would cost $106.81 billion over the next 30 years. This accounts for the loss in exports moving away from carbon, the cost of changing land use and the transition costs of moving to renewable energy.
“So when you compare the damages from climate change to the cost of a net-zero renewable target, the cost of the target is a hell of a lot less. Instead of almost $2 trillion it’s about $100 billion,” he said.
“It’s a no-brainer to move to a clean energy target.”Links
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