Gulf Today

Climate impact set to cut 2050 global GPD by nearly a fifth

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PARIS: Climate change caused by CO2 emissions already in the atmosphere will shrink global GDP in 2050 by about $38 trillion, or almost a fith, no mater how aggressive­ly humanity cuts carbon pollution, researcher­s said Wednesday.

But slashing greenhouse gas emissions as quickly as possible remains crucial to avoid even more devastatin­g economic impacts ater mid-century, they reported in the journal Nature.

Economic fallout from climate change, the study shows, could increase tens of trillions of dollars per year by 2100 if the planet were to warm significan­tly beyond two degrees Celsius above mid-19th century levels.

Earth’s average surface temperatur­e has already climbed 1.2C above that benchmark, enough to amplify heatwaves, droughts, flooding and tropical storms made more destructiv­e by rising seas.

Annual investment needed to cap global warming below 2C -- the cornerston­e goal of the 2015 Paris Agreement -- is a small fraction of the damages that would be avoided, the researcher­s found.

Staying under the 2C threshold “could limit average regional income loss to 20 percent compared to 60 percent” in a high-emissions scenario, lead author Max Kotz, an expert in complexity science at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK), told AFP.

Economists disagree on how much should be spent to avoid climate damages. Some call for massive investment now, while others argue it would be more cost-effective to wait until societies are richer and technology more advanced.

The new research sidesteps this debate, but its eye-watering estimate of economic impacts helps make the case for ambitious near-term action, the authors and other experts said.

“Our calculatio­ns are super relevant” to such cost-benefit analyses, said co-author Leonie Wenz, also a researcher at PIK.

They could also inform government strategies for adapting to climate impacts, risk assessment­s for business, and Un-led negotiatio­ns over compensati­on for developing nations that have barely contribute­d to global warming, she told AFP.

Mostly tropical nations -- many with economies already shrinking due to climate damages -- will be hit hardest, the study found.

“Countries least responsibl­e for climate change are predicted to suffer income loss that is 60 percent greater than the higher-income countries and 40 percent greater than higheremis­sion countries,” said senior PIK scientist Anders Levermann.

“They are also the ones with the least resources to adapt to its impacts.”

Rich countries will not be spared either: Germany and the United States are forecast to see income shrivel by 11 percent by 2050, and France by 13 percent.

Projection­s are based on four decades of economic and climate data from 1,600 regions rather than country-level statistics, making it possible to include damages earlier studies ignored, such as extreme rainfall.

The researcher­s also looked at temperatur­e fluctuatio­ns within each year rather than just averages, as well as the economic impact of extreme weather events beyond the year in which they occurred.

“By accounting for these additional climate variables, the damages are about 50 percent larger than if we were to only include changes in annual average temperatur­es,” the basis of most prior estimates, said Wenz.

Wenz and her colleagues found that unavoidabl­e damage would slash the global economy’s GPD by 17 percent in 2050, compared to a scenario with no additional climate impacts ater 2020. Evenso,thenewcalc­ulationsma­ybeconserv­ative. “They are likely to be an underestim­ate of the costs of climate change impacts,” Bob Ward, policy director of the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environmen­t in London, commented to AFP ahead of the study’s publicatio­n. Damages linked to sea-level rise, stronger tropical cyclones, the destabilis­ation of ice sheets and the decline of major tropical forests are all excluded, he noted.

Climate economist Gernot Wagner, a professor at Columbia Business School in New York who was also not involved in the study, said the conclusion that “trillions in damages are all locked in doesn’t mean that cuting carbon pollution doesn’t pay.”

In fact, he said, it shows that “the costs of acting are a fraction of the costs of unmitigate­d climate change”.

Global GDP in 2022 was just over $100 trillion, according to the World Bank. The study projects that -- absent climate impacts ater 2020 -- it would be double that in 2050.

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