University of Melbourne professor of environmental economics Tom Kompas estimates climate change will cost the economy at least $584 billion by 2030 and $762 billion in 2050 under the current trajectory for a 2-degree rise in average global temperatures on pre-industrial levels.
The Black Summer fires are estimated to have cost the
economy $110 billion. Credit: Nick Moir
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Each Australian would be $2000 better off by 2050, according to the government’s modelling released on Friday, but this figure does not include the financial costs of global warming.
Climate policy
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But 86 per cent of a panel of 58 top local economists selected by the Economic Society of Australia last month backed an emissions reduction target coupled with a carbon price as the most efficient method to reduce greenhouse emissions.
Economist and Climate Council spokesperson Nicki Hutley said on Tuesday it was a “real Hail Mary” policy from the government that assumed voluntary action from industry to curb its emissions and did not factor in the economic impacts of warming.
“Any good modelling includes a cost-benefit analysis, but they have excluded the costs of failing to act on climate change, such as health, damage to property from weather events or economic distortions,” Ms Hutley said.
Despite the federal government’s claim carbon taxes would damage the economy, the modelling “absolutely” factored in a carbon price with an assumption that industry would pay $24 a tonne to offset emissions – a cost that ultimately would be paid by Australians, she said.
There are concerns Australia's net zero plan relies on technology, which hasn't even been created yet. 5min 14sec
Professor Kompas estimates the Black Summer fires alone cost $110 billion.
Climate scientists have found the Black Summer fires were intensified by global warming and bushfires generally would become more frequent and intense as the global average temperature rises.
Climate policy
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He told this masthead on Tuesday a “major reduction in fossil fuels and a
massive increase in renewables” was required for Australia to move in line
with the global efforts required to keep warming below 2 degrees.
“But the cost of this action is not very large compared to the economic
damage from climate change,” he said.
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