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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2004
October
Low-cost climate-change insurance
could help ensure better future
James E.
Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
217 244-1073; kloeppel@uiuc.edu
10/14/04
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| U.
of I. Photo |
| Doing
a little now to mitigate long-term climate change
would cost much less than doing nothing and making
an adjustment in the future, say Michael Schlesinger,
and Natalia Andronova, professors of atmospheric sciences
at Illinois. |
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CHAMPAIGN,
Ill. — Doing a little now to mitigate long-term climate change
would cost much less than doing nothing and making an adjustment in
the future, say scientists whose paper appears in the Oct. 15 issue
of the journal Science.
Implementing a carbon tax of five cents per gallon of gasoline and gradually
increasing the tax over the next 30 years is the optimal solution, the
researchers report.
“You can think of the tax as a low-cost insurance policy that
protects against climate change,” said Michael Schlesinger, a
professor of atmospheric sciences
at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and a co-author of
the paper. “The policy premiums could be used to develop alternative
energy technologies.”
Because mitigation would impose immediate costs, with any long-term
benefit unknown, some scientists and policy-makers have argued that
nothing should be done until the uncertainty surrounding the climate
issue is substantially reduced. “By then, however, it may be too
late and we will have foreclosed certain options,” Schlesinger
said. “Rather, the uncertainty is the very reason we should implement
climate policy in the near term.”
To explore the effectiveness of implementing near-term mitigation policies
as a hedge against uncertainty, Wesleyan University economics professor
Gary Yohe, Schlesinger and U. of I. atmospheric scientist Natalia Andronova
assumed that tax policies would go into effect in 2005 and be in force
for 30 years.
“It’s really a cost-minimization problem, given that we
will eventually have to set a policy target sometime in the future,”
Schlesinger said.
“The idea is to search for the tax that provides the least cost
over the whole period. If the tax is too low, you do too little in the
beginning, then after 30 years you have to do a lot. On the other hand,
if the tax is too high, you spend too much now, and you may have to
do only a little later.”
The least cost, the researchers found, is to implement a carbon tax
that starts out at $10 per ton of carbon (about five cents per gallon
of gasoline) and then gradually climbs to $33 per ton in 30 years. Such
hedging effectively “buys insurance” against future adjustment
costs and is extremely robust, especially when compared with a wait-and-see
strategy.
“It would be much less expensive to buy low-cost, climate-change
insurance now, than it would be to wait and act later,” Schlesinger
said. People voluntarily purchase insurance as protection from extreme
events when the risks are private, he said, but societies can require
insurance when potential losses are distributed across a population.
In the past, risk has influenced policies where voluntary action could
prove insufficient.
“In the United States, for example, we allow drivers to decide
how much insurance to carry, but we require minimum levels of coverage,”
Schlesinger said. “We also allow individuals to choose how much
to contribute to their retirements, but we use Social Security taxes
to guarantee minimum levels of income protection.”
The study incorporates the uncertainty in the sensitivity of the climate
system estimated by Andronova and Schlesinger in 2001 by using a simple
atmosphere/ocean model to reproduce the observed temperature change
from 1856 to 1997 for 16 combinations of the radiative forcing by greenhouse
gases, the sun and volcanoes.
“Recent work by five independent research teams has shown that
climate sensitivity could be larger than the 4.5 degrees Celsius upper
bound published by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change,”
Schlesinger said. “In fact, climate sensitivities as high as 9
degrees Celsius are not implausible.”
Paralysis in near-term action could make temperature targets as low
as 3 degrees Celsius impossible to achieve if the climate sensitivity
turns out to be higher than 6 degrees Celsius, Schlesinger said, and
the cost of adjustment measured in terms of discounted gross global
product could be many times higher for lower climate sensitivities if
nothing were done for 30 years.
“In addition, spending a little over the near term to reduce the
likelihood of intolerable risk is the best way to show international
leadership in ‘global stewardship,’ to use a phrase coined
in the late 1980s by the earlier Bush administration,” Schlesinger
said. “Doing so would mean telling energy consumers that their
fossil fuel bills are a bit too low.”
The National Science Foundation funded the work.
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