| Reducing Carbon Emissions Could Help -- Not Harm 
    -- US Economy 3/25/2008
 
 New Haven, CT - A national policy to cut carbon emissions by as much as 40 
    percent over the next 20 years could still result in increased economic 
    growth, according to an interactive website that reviews 25 of the leading 
    economic models used to predict the economic impacts of reducing emissions.
 
 “As Congress prepares to debate new legislation to address the threat of 
    climate change, opponents claim that the costs of adopting the leading 
    proposals would be ruinous to the U.S. economy. The world’s leading 
    economists who have studied the issue say that’s wrong — and you can find 
    out for yourself,” said Robert Repetto, professor in the practice of 
    economics and sustainable development at the Yale School of Forestry & 
    Environmental Studies who created the site.
 
 The interactive website, www.climate.yale.edu/seeforyourself, synthesized 
    thousands of policy analyses in order to identify the seven key assumptions 
    accounting for most of the differences in the model predictions. The site 
    allows visitors to choose which assumptions they feel are most realistic and 
    then view the predictions of the economic models based on the chosen 
    assumptions.
 
 Among the key optimistic assumptions are that renewable energy technologies 
    will be available at stable or increasing prices; that higher fossil fuel 
    prices will stimulate energy-saving technological change; that reducing U.S. 
    carbon emissions will reduce economic damages from climate change and air 
    pollution; and that the United States will incorporate international trading 
    of emission permits into its national policy.
 
 Growth rates of the U.S. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) have been 3 percent 
    per year over recent decades. With emissions reduced by 40 percent below 
    projected business-as-usual trends, even under most pessimistic assumptions 
    the GDP would grow 2.4 percent a year, reaching $23 trillion by 2030, 
    according to the website’s predictions. Under the most favorable 
    assumptions, GDP would rise slightly above 3 percent a year.
 
 “The website shows that even under the most unfavorable assumptions 
    regarding costs, the U.S. economy is predicted to continue growing robustly 
    as carbon emissions are reduced,” said Repetto. “Under favorable 
    assumptions, the economy would grow more rapidly if emissions are reduced 
    through national policy measures than if they are allowed to increase as in 
    the past.”
 
 SOURCE: Yale University
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