Climate Change
Inaction Will Cost Trillions
October 13, 2006 — By Jeremy Lovell, Reuters
LONDON -- Failing to fight global
warming now will cost trillions of dollars by the end of the century even
without counting biodiversity loss or unpredictable events like the Gulf
Stream shutting down, a study said on Friday.
But acting now will avoid some of the massive damage and cost relatively
little, said the study commissioned by Friends of the Earth from the
Global Development and Environment Institute of Tufts University in the
United States.
"The climate system has enormous momentum, as does the economic system,"
said co-author Frank Ackerman. "We have to start turning off greenhouse
gas emissions now in order to avoid catastrophe in decades to come."
The study said the cost of inaction by governments and individuals could
hit 11 trillion pounds a year by 2100, or six to eight percent of global
economic output then.
Most scientists now agree average temperatures will rise by between two
and six degrees Celsius by the end of the century, driven by so-called
greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide from burning fossil fuels for power
and transport.
Already at two degrees they predict a massive upsurge in species loss and
extreme weather events like storms, droughts and floods, threatening
millions of lives. Polar icecaps will melt, raising sea levels by several
metres.
Beyond that, the world enters into the unknown with the possible shutdown
of the life-giving Gulf Stream and possibly catastrophic runaway change
due to so-called climate feedback.
By contrast, spending just 1.6 trillion pounds a year now to limit
temperature rises to two degrees could avoid annual economic damage of
around 6.4 trillion pounds, the Tufts report said.
CHALLENGE
The report came the day after oil major Shell said business should see the
challenge of climate change as a chance to make billions of pounds due to
the demand for new technologies and products to slash carbon emissions.
"For business, tackling climate change is both a necessity and a huge
opportunity. We have to step up to the challenge," Shell UK chairman James
Smith said.
The British government is in the closing stages of a ground-breaking
global study of the economic costs of climate change which is expected to
be published within the next two weeks stressing the massive costs of
inaction.
During a debate in parliament on Thursday Environment Minister David
Miliband said the problem was worse than previously thought and the
sternest challenge faced by mankind.
"Preventing the transformation of the earth's atmosphere from greenhouse
to unconstrained hothouse represents arguably the most imposing scientific
and technical challenge that humanity has ever faced," he said.
"It is local, national and international. It will affect all of us as well
as all our children," he added.
Britain is set to meet its Kyoto target of cutting carbon emissions by 12
million tonnes by 2012, but the government is under pressure from
opposition parties and environment groups to introduce laws setting
enforceable national reduction targets.
Source: Reuters