Guy
McPherson has referred a lot to William Nordhaus as the origin of the
2.0C target.
People
love to join the crowd and put the blame for all climate change on
the man with the yellow hair. However, given that the grounds of
what we see today were laid years (even decades ago) this man would
be one of the first I would like to see going to the gallows.
The
economics Nobel went to a guy who enabled climate change denial and
delay
By
EUGENE LINDEN
26
October, 2018
It
has been a scary month in climate science. Hurricane Michael and a
frightening report from the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change underlined the potential costs of human-caused global warming.
Then to add insult to injury, William Nordhaus won the economics
Nobel Prize.
Nordhaus
was recognized for his work developing a model to guide policymakers
on how best to address the costs and benefits of limiting greenhouse
gases. That’s a noble goal, but Nordhaus’ work has no more helped
to defuse the threat of global warming than Neville Chamberlain’s
appeasement of Germany prevented World War II. Rather, Nordhaus’
low-ball estimates of the costs of future climate change and
high-ball estimates of the costs of containing the threat contributed
to a lost decade in the fight against climate change, lending
intellectual legitimacy to denial and delay.
In
Nordhaus’ 1993 paper, “Rolling the ‘Dice’: An Optimal
Transition Path for Controlling Greenhouse Gases,” he wrote: “A
growing body of evidence has pointed to the likelihood that
greenhouse warming will have only a modest economic impact in
industrial countries, while progress to cut [greenhouse gases] will
impose substantial costs.” How modest? Nordhaus estimated that a 3
degrees Celsius warming would cost the U.S. economy a miniscule
one-quarter percent of national income. He admitted that unmeasured
and unquantifiable variables might affect that prediction, but in his
view, they might only bring the cost up to about 1% of national
income.
The
U.S. still doesn’t have a carbon tax, in part because Nordhaus (and
others who shared his views) underestimated the cost of doing
nothingGiven
such a tepid assessment of the threat, it is little wonder that
Nordhaus’ biggest cheerleaders have come from the “do nothing
about it” crowd. In 1997, for instance, William Niskanen, then
chairman of the ultra-conservative Cato Institute, seized on
Nordhaus’ estimates to argue before Congress that it was premature
to take action on climate change because “the costs of doing
nothing appear to be quite small.” Yet four years before his
testimony, scientists had discovered that, in the past, climate
changed quite abruptly and dramatically, not slowly and moderately as
Nordhaus’ model assumed.
The
warming we’ve experienced so far allows us to put this in context.
Global temperatures are now 1 degree Celsius above pre-industrial
levels, but even this increment has accelerated the melting of the
ice caps, spurred sea-level rise and increased the frequency and
intensity of storms, droughts and floods. It has also spawned myriad
derivative impacts: the spread of tree-killing bark beetles that
provide fuel for record-setting wildfires in the West, as well as
intolerable temperatures and droughts in the Middle East and Africa
that have contributed to war in Syria and destablilizing migration.
The
IPCC report, released the same day Nordhaus got his Nobel, heightens
the award’s absurdity. Nordhaus in 1992 estimated the net economic
damage of 3 degrees Celsius of global warming, under a
business-as-usual scenario, at $5.6 trillion globally (about $10.2
trillion in today’s dollars). The climate change panel now
estimates the damage from 2 degrees’ Celsius warming to be $69
trillion.
Even this figure might prove radically conservative.
Four
years after climate scientist James Hansen told Congress that global
warming was already happening, Nordhaus suggested that the “thermal
inertia of the oceans” meant climate change would have a “lag of
several decades behind [greenhouse gas] concentrations. That year,
1992, scientists studying ice cores taken from the Greenland Ice
Sheet, confirmed that, in the past, climate had undergone huge swings
in as little as a few years.
In
fairness, Nordhaus has always recognized global warming as a threat.
He advocates a tax on carbon, which is a good idea. If the price is
right, a carbon tax would push people and industries to cut emissions
without cumbersome bureaucracy.
Nordhaus
has also revised and updated the model he developed as the IPCC has
revised its forecasts, and he and his colleagues have (in their view)
gotten a better grip on the variables at work in the interplay of
climate and an economy. His most recent
work implies
an optimum tax on carbon at $31 a ton, which, in real terms, is about
three times his too-low 1992 estimate.
Nordhaus
and his colleagues concede that even with a $31-a-ton carbon tax, the
planet would be on a track for 3 degrees Celsius of warming, but they
don’t appear to recognize that such an increase would render much
of the world unrecognizable and vulnerable to mass starvation (a
number of studies predict yield declines of up to 70% for vegetables
if the world warms beyond 2 degrees Celsius). In any event, 26 years
after his first publications, the U.S. still doesn’t have a carbon
tax, in part because Nordhaus (and others who shared his views)
underestimated the cost of doing nothing.
Most
economists famously failed to predict the near-collapse of the
banking system in 2008, and it may be asking too much that such a
“science” ace the far more complicated problem of estimating the
impact of climate change. Still, it’s jarring that the same
organization that in 2007 gave its Peace Prize to Al Gore and the
IPCC for their efforts to come to grips with climate change, would,
11 years later, honor an economist whose work more undermined efforts
to deal with the threat than helped them.
Eugene
Linden is
the author of “Winds of Change: Climate, Weather and the
Destruction of Civilizations.”
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