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Climate change will knock one-third off world economy, study shows

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    Climate change will knock one-third off world economy, study shows

    [url]https://www.theglobeandmail.com/business/commentary/article-climate-change-will-knock-one-third-off-world-economy-study-shows/[/url]
    analysis

    Climate change will knock one-third off world economy, study shows

    John Rapley is an author and academic who divides his time among London, Johannesburg and Ottawa. His books include Why Empires Fall (Yale University Press, 2023) and Twilight of the Money Gods (Simon and Schuster, 2017).

    Ever since economist William Nordhaus ([url]https://www.jstor.org/stable/2880417[/url]) established the macroeconomics of climate change in his 1992 work estimating the long-term economic effects of climate change, most studies coalesced around the view that for every degree of global warming, the world economy would contract by 1 or 3 per cent – challenging, but manageable.

    However, recent studies have begun questioning the consensus and predicting much deeper falls in output, in part because the planet is warming faster than earlier assumed. Now, a new paper ([url]https://www.nber.org/papers/w32450?utm_campaign=ntwh&utm_medium=email&utm_sour[/url] ce=ntwg7) released this week from the U.S. National Bureau of Economic Research may shatter the orthodoxy altogether.

    Climate change will eventually reduce the value of the global economy by almost one-third, according to Harvard University’s Adrien Bilal and Diego Kanzig of Northwestern University.

    Their paper, “The Macroeconomic Impact of Climate Change: Global vs. Local Temperature,” represents a departure from previous studies.

    When the macroeconomics of climate change first emerged as a subdiscipline, its practitioners tended to take scientific estimates of expected future warming and then model the effects on a country-by-country basis, focusing only on the productivity effects of rising temperatures.

    But it’s becoming clearer that extreme weather is one of the main channels through which climate change is affecting the economy. Having found that the incidence of extreme weather correlates more closely with global than national temperature changes – storms and droughts don’t respect borders – this study builds a new model that estimates this effect.

    They found that previous estimates of climate change ([url]https://www.theglobeandmail.com/topics/climate-change/)considerably[/url] underestimated the macroeconomic damage of extreme weather, which not only hits productivity but also depletes capital. Once this is factored in, what emerges is a world economy that would be 31 per cent poorer by the end of this century.

    Moreover, they argue, the damage has already begun. Had there been no global warming since 1960, they reckon the world economy would be 37 per cent bigger than it is today. We do know that the global growth rate has been slowing, especially in Western countries. A recent article in London’s Financial Times ([url]https://www.ft.com/content/ee51d83e-0037-4130-a4f9-656aa7c4ca97[/url]) listed Canada at the top of the “breakdown nations” – former “model” economies – leading the world economy backward. There’s considerable discussion as to what’s causing this reversal, but there are growing reasons to think that the feedback loops of climate change are only just starting to wreak havoc on our economies.

    Because we’re still in the early stages of this cycle, the damage will worsen. The trend line in the number and severity of extreme weather events and zoonotic pandemics has been rising for decades, and we haven’t yet repriced assets to allow for the future impact of climate change. While the authors say their paper can’t estimate the effect, a clue of what’s coming may lie in the sharp and sudden inflation that’s happening in insurance policies. Our future may be one in which we have to spend more money repairing roads and homes, pay higher taxes to cover the bills, and watch the value of our investments fall.

    Most importantly for Canadian audiences, their model suggested the differences across countries won’t be as significant as previous models predicted. While warmer and middle-income countries are expected to suffer a little bit more, all countries are likely to be hit. After all, extreme weather doesn’t discriminate between rich and poor countries. Canada won’t get a pass.

    In rich countries, there is a lot more infrastructure to be damaged by extreme weather, and older populations will be more vulnerable to its effects, raising social and health care costs. Following global temperature shocks, capital and investment are depleted and productivity falls, making the bounce-backs from environmental shocks progressively slower.

    Carbon taxes should ideally mirror the social cost of carbon – the economic damage done by the addition of carbon to the atmosphere. Canada’s carbon tax just rose to $80 a tonne. Previous estimates of the social cost of carbon put it in the $100-200 range. This new study suggested it should be much higher, though, above $1,000, and that if we don’t pay it now, we’ll pay it later.

    How much would we have to pay later? Profs. Bilal and Kanzig calculate that if we stay on our current course, the eventual economic price would be equivalent to fighting a domestic war, forever. The next time someone suggests that we should fight climate change only if the price isn’t too high, you could ask them what price they’d be willing to pay not to live in an eternal Ukraine or Gaza.

    #2
    Simple question Chuck2, without diesel fuel, modern fertilizers and herbicides what would the economic output of your farm be? Certainly talking to my father who started farming in the late 1930’s and was born in 1923, the difference was like night and day.

    Comment


      #3
      Reverend Jimmy Jones would've loved Chuck

      Comment


        #4
        Agreed farmers are totally dependent on fossil energy as it stands.

        But to do nothing to change will have a significant cost.

        There are so many sectors that can reduce emissions without as much disruption.

        But many of you want us to burn more fossil fuels instead of less because you don't even think there is a problem?

        The oceans have absorbed 90% or so of the current global warming.

        So after an El Nino winter when when only a portion of the pacific is warmer than normal and we saw a very mild and dry winter, imagine what happens when you have more or less a permanent El Nino that last all year long?

        We are just at the beginning of this process that will only get worse. The problems span generations and the largest costs will be paid for by future generations.

        A simple question Hamloc?

        Should we only worry about ourselves here and now and do nothing? Or should we start to reduce our fossil fuel use and reduce emissions to avoid severe climate change for future generations?

        Comment


          #5
          We are well on our way with the current governments .
          G7 are giving it up for the brick,s and the developing world.

          Comment


            #6
            Extreme weather causing billions of dollars in damage, driving up insurance premiums: StatsCan

            Homeowner insurance increasing at a rate higher than inflation, report says

            Peter Zimonjic ([url]https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/author/peter-zimonjic-1.3689630[/url]) · CBC News · Posted: May 15, 2024 2:53 PM CDT | Last Updated: May 15

            The increasing frequency of extreme weather events across the country has caused the sums paid out annually for catastrophic insurance claims to explode — and annual payouts for the last four years now rank among the ten largest on record, says a new Statistics Canada study.

            "Homeowners have been particularly affected by extreme weather claims, with recent hurricanes, floods and unprecedented wildfires," says the report, released Wednesday. ([url]https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/pub/11-621-m/11-621-m2024003-eng.htm#n2[/url])
            "Insured claims costs were $3.4 billion in 2022 and $3.1 billion in 2023, each more than 50 per cent above the yearly average."
            The report says that between 1983 — the first year catastrophic insurance claims were tracked — and 2008, insurers paid out an average of $400 million per year. From 2009 to 2023, that yearly average rose to almost $2 billion.
            "These 'once in 100 years' events are happening more frequently and are becoming more severe and more costly," the report says.
            The report also says that for almost the entire period from the beginning of 2020 to the end of 2023, homeowner insurance premiums in Canada increased at a rate higher than inflation.

            Despite those higher payments, Statistics Canada says insurance companies' "profitability has not wavered significantly and is consistent with historical trends."
            The report says that returns on equity for the insurance industry ranged from 5.6 per cent at the beginning of 2020 to 25.7 per cent by the end of that year. In 2023, returns dropped down to near the "long run average" of 10.1 per cent, the report says.
            "At the end of the day, insurers are remaining viable only because premiums have gone up," Craig Stewart, vice-president of climate change and federal issues at the Insurance Bureau of Canada (IBC), told CBC News.
            "What it means is that homeowners are now, on top of everything else, feeling the pinch because of the severe weather events that we are seeing."

            The Statistics Canada study focuses on personal property insurance, which the report describes as "synonymous with homeowners insurance."
            It says that despite the increasing intensity of wildfires in Canada,"flooding caused by heavy rainfall, hail and hurricanes remains most detrimental to homeowners, most significantly impacting the coastal regions of Canada."
            The report says other factors have combined to drive up the cost of insurance premiums, including labour shortages, the pandemic and increased replacement costs.
            The report says that because insurance companies are responsible for rebuilding houses under current market conditions, they are subject to spikes in the cost of building materials.
            In September of 2021, the year-over-year increase in replacement costs (lumber, wire, concrete, construction wages and household items) hit 14.4 per cent, just as overall inflation sat at 4.4 per cent.
            • Why climate change on the farm means a big bill for Canadian taxpayers ([url]https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/edmonton/why-climate-change-on-the-farm-means-a-big-bill-for-canadian-taxpayers-1.7163473[/url])
            • In face of extreme weather, Canadians increasingly turn to crowdfunding for help ([url]https://www.cbc.ca/news/climate/canada-extreme-weather-crowdfunding-1.7194851[/url])
            Former federal environment minister Jonathan Wilkinson's 2021 mandate letter ([url]https://www.pm.gc.ca/en/mandate-letters/2021/01/15/archived-minister-environment-and-climate-change-supplementary-mandate[/url]) directed him to "invest in reducing the impact of climate-related disasters, like floods and wildfires, to make communities safer and more resilient."
            Stewart said that since then, not enough has been done to ensure homes and other properties are able to withstand the impacts of extreme weather events caused by climate change.

            Nearly 120 firefighters are battling the 21,000 hectare fire growing near Fort McMurray, says Alberta's Minister of Forestry and Parks Todd Loewen. He tells Power & Politics the province is working 'as hard as we can' to keep residents safe.


            He said the fight against the impacts of climate change has to be about more than energy efficiency and emissions reductions.

            "The greener homes program where they keep putting money into heat pumps ([url]https://natural-resources.canada.ca/energy-efficiency/homes/canada-greener-homes-initiative/oil-heat-pump-affordability-program/24775[/url]), which is fine, but there should be funding available for folks that want to make their homes flood and wildfire proof," Stewart said.

            A statement from the office of Housing, Infrastructure and Communities Minister Sean Fraser said the Liberal government "is making major investments in prevention, mitigation, response and recovery to help Canadians face these growing challenges."

            The statement said that to date, 96 projects worth $2.5 billion have been announced through the Disaster Mitigation and Adaptation Fund and another $228 million is being spent over seven years through the Flood Hazard Identification and Mapping Program ([url]https://natural-resources.canada.ca/the-office-the-chief-scientist/science-and-research/natural-hazards/flood-hazard-identification-and-mapping-program/24044[/url]).

            Comment


              #7
              Thats scary chuck, are they working on a vaccine for it

              Comment


                #8
                Jazz is proof you can't vaccinate against stupid!

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by chuckChuck View Post
                  Jazz is proof you can't vaccinate against stupid!
                  Chuck I have a challenge for you in the next few days. Come up with something educational entertaining or funny.Maybe thankful for something or someone, a pic of something beautiful or funny.Appreciate life and quit dragging us in this sludge of dismay.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by chuckChuck View Post
                    What emerges is a world economy that would be 31 per cent poorer by the end of this century.

                    Had there been no global warming since 1960, they reckon the world economy would be 37 per cent bigger than it is today.

                    Because we’re still in the early stages of this cycle, the damage will worsen. ​
                    So we have not gained/lost 37% of the world economy in the early stages of this cycle of 64 years, but in the rest of the cycle to 2100 we will lose 31% of the world economy in 76 years.

                    That sounds like progress.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Here is a little flashback to some of the science chuck was pushing a few yrs ago.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        You can get studies to prove about anything.

                        You just have to know who to call.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          I think maybe negative 36.872% (sarcasm).

                          Can’t you see the crazyness? How does one quantify idiocy? I think professors and climate ‘experts’ have lost 97 % of their legitimacy. Desperate whackos at work day and night! They choose to villify the staff of life for a cozy living.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Need to change title
                            “Climate change over reaction destroying 1/3 of worlds economies “

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Originally posted by kANOLA View Post

                              Chuck I have a challenge for you in the next few days. Come up with something educational entertaining or funny.Maybe thankful for something or someone, a pic of something beautiful or funny.Appreciate life and quit dragging us in this sludge of dismay.
                              You don’t live far apart. Take him for an ice cream at the concession in Meota by the beach. Maybe that cools him down.

                              Comment

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