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Saturday, November 14, 2015

Bizarre GOP Science Denial Puts Planet In Jeopardy. Remedy Less Costly Than Temporization

Marco Rubio's American hellscape: The insane science denial that puts the planet in jeopardy
"The Danger Of Science Denial"
TED Talk by Michael Specter

Marco Rubio’s American hellscape: The insane science denial that puts the planet in jeopardy

Rubio, Cruz and other GOP front-runners have it all backwards

In 2006, the Stern Review firmly developed the evidence that global warming will cost the world’s economy far more than the cost of taking mitigative actions, but almost a decade later, the entire GOP presidential field remains deep in denial.
At the second debate, in Simi Valley [transcript], CNN’s Jake Tapper framed the question in most non-threatening manner a GOP candidate could hope for, citing Ronald Reagan’s secretary of state, George Shultz, who drew a direct parallel to how Reagan responded to the threat to the ozone layer and used the framing of “an insurance policy,” but could not get anyone to agree, starting with current media heartthrob Marco Rubio:
TAPPER: Shultz says Ronald Reagan urged skeptics in industry to come up with a plan. He said, do it as an insurance policy in case the scientists are right. The scientists were right. Reagan and his approach worked.
Secretary Shultz asks, why not take out an insurance policy and approach climate change the Reagan way?
RUBIO: Because we’re not going to destroy our economy the way the left-wing government that we are under now wants to do.
But aside from the fact that Democrats are much better for the economy, a new study from Stanford and UC Berkeley, published in Nature, finds that global warming’s economic costs will be much larger than previous estimates have predicted. Rather than being alarmists, climate scientists and economists who study the matter have previously underestimated how damaging global warming will be if left unchecked.
“What that means for policy is that we should be willing to spend a lot more on mitigation than we would otherwise,” lead author Marshall Burke of Stanford’s Department of Earth System Science said in a press release. “The benefits of action on mitigation are much greater than we thought, because the costs of inaction are much greater than we thought.”
In short, Marco Rubio and the rest of the GOP crowd has it exactly backwards, and Lord Nicholas Stern himself agrees. “This paper recognizes that climate change could have impacts that increase very steeply with rising global average temperature,”Stern told the Guardian. “This is an advance on other previous studies [which have] made severe underestimates of the economic effects of unmanaged climate change.”
“Unmitigated warming is expected to reshape the global economy by reducing average global incomes roughly 23% by 2100 and widening global income inequality, relative to scenarios without climate change,” the paper’s abstract summarized. The paper itself adds, “The slope of the damage function is large even for slight warming, generating expected costs of climate change 2.5–100 times larger than prior estimates for 2oC warming, and at least 2.5 times larger for higher temperatures.”
In addition, “We show that substantial losses can occur even for end-of-century temperature increases of less than 2oC,” an accompanying FAQ document says.
“This does not mean that the world will be poorer in 2100. It almost certainly will not,” Burke wrote in a blog post for the scientific community. “It means that it will be less rich than it would have been had temperatures not warmed.”
However, even that could be too optimistic, given the limits of their methods. “Importantly, our estimates mechanically do not include the potential future effects of stuff we have not observed historically (e.g., sea level rise),” Burke added, “nor do they contain non-marketed things we care about that do not show up in GDP (e.g., polar bears).” In short, this represents a conservative estimate of what global warming will cost in the decades ahead.
The study examined 166 countries between 1960 and 2010, from which researchers identified an optimal average annual temperature of 13 degrees Celsius, coinciding with peak productivity—about that of San Francisco’s Bay Area (Beat poetry, the Grateful Dead, Silicon Valley, the West Coast offense; suddenly it all makes sense). They compared countries’ growth rates in cool versus warm years, filtering out a variety of episodic impacts (such as oil shocks).
As seen on this map, most of Europe (except the south), Canada and Russia are projected to see increased economic growth, as their temperatures are below the global optimum, but the vast majority of the world’s people will be losers. This includes major economies like the US (-36 percent), China (-42 percent), and Japan (-35 percent), emerging economies like India (-92 percent) and Brazil (-82 percent), almost all of Africa and Latin America, and even oil-rich nations such as Saudi Arabia (-96 percent), Iraq (-93 percent), Iran (-58 percent), Kuwait (-96 percent) and Oman (-94 percent).

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