Thursday, May 2, 2024
29 C
Brunei Town

Counting the cost

AP – Climate change will reduce future global income by about 19 per cent in the next 25 years compared to a fictional world that’s not warming, with the poorest areas and those least responsible for heating the atmosphere taking the biggest monetary hit, a new study said.

Climate change’s economic bite in how much people make is already locked in at about USD38 trillion a year by 2049, according to Wednesday’s study in the journal Nature by researchers at Germany’s Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research.

By 2100 the financial cost could hit twice what previous studies estimate.

“Our analysis shows that climate change will cause massive economic damages within the next 25 years in almost all countries around the world, also in highly-developed ones such as Germany and the United States (US), with a projected median income reduction of 11 per cent each and France with 13 per cent,” said study co-author, climate scientist and economist Leonie Wenz.

These damages are compared to a baseline of no climate change and are then applied against overall expected global growth in gross domestic product, said study lead author and climate scientist Max Kotz. So while it’s 19 per cent globally less than it could have been with no climate change, in most places, income will still grow, just not as much because of warmer temperatures.

For the past dozen years, scientists and others have been focusing on extreme weather such as heat waves, floods, droughts, storms as the having the biggest climate impact. But when it comes to financial hit the researchers found “the overall impacts are still mainly driven by average warming, overall temperature increases”, Kotz said. It harms crops and hinders labour production, he said.

People watch the sunset at a park on a warm day in Kansas City, Missouri, United States. PHOTO: AP

“Those temperature increases drive the most damages in the future because they’re really the most unprecedented compared to what we’ve experienced historically,” Kotz said. Last year, a record-hot year, the global average temperature was 1.35 degrees Celsius (°C ) warmer than pre-industrial times, according to the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The globe has not had a month cooler than 20th Century average since February 1979.

In the US, the southeastern and southwestern states get economically pinched more than the northern ones with parts of Arizona and New Mexico taking the biggest monetary hit, according to the study.

In Europe, southern regions, including parts of Spain and Italy, get hit harder than places like Denmark or northern Germany.

Only Arctic adjacent areas – Canada, Russia, Norway, Finland and Sweden – benefit, Kotz said.

It also means countries which have historically produced fewer greenhouse gas emissions per person and are least able to financially adapt to warming weather are getting the biggest financial harms too, Kotz said.

The world’s poorest countries will suffer 61 per cent bigger income loss than the richest ones, the study calculated.

“It underlies some of the injustice elements of climate,” Kotz said.

This new study looked deeper than past research, examining 1,600 global areas that are smaller than countries, took several climate factors into account and examined how long climate economic shocks last, Kotz said.

The study examined past economic impacts on average global domestic product per person and uses computer simulations to look into the future to come up with their detailed calculations. The study shows that the economic harms over the next 25 years are locked in with emission cuts producing only small changes in the income reduction.

If the world could curb carbon pollution and get down to a trend that limits warming to 2°C above pre-industrial times, which is the upper limit of the 2015 Paris climate agreement, then the financial hit will stay around 20 per cent in global income, Kotz said. But if emissions increase in a worst case scenario, the financial wallop will be closer to 60 per cent, he said. – Seth Borenstein

spot_img

Latest

spot_img