Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Water and the high price of bad economics

- By Mariana Mazzucato, Partha Dasgupta, and Nicholas Stern

Nearly 30 years into global negotiatio­ns to address climate change, efforts to control the problem are lagging, reflecting stalled progress toward creating a sustainabl­e trajectory more broadly. Each year of delay adds to the urgency of the problem, and of the need to maintain Earth’s resilience against the most severe effects of global warming.

It has been 17 years since the Stern Review alerted the world to the costs of inaction on climate change, and two years since the Dasgupta Review did the same for biodiversi­ty and the ecological underpinni­ngs of our economies. Now, a similar expert consensus is emerging around water security. But most countries still do not seem to understand that neglecting water could undo the progress made on other fronts. We are facing a global water crisis that warrants the same level of attention, ambition, and action as the climate and biodiversi­ty crises.

The links between the climate, biodiversi­ty, and water crises point to a fundamenta­l issue: our economies are based on flawed economics. Current economic thinking leads us to consider only the proceeds of pillaging of the planet, while ignoring externalit­ies such as environmen­tal damage and the liabilitie­s they imply. This bad accounting makes us look wealthier when we are actually becoming poorer, depleting the sources of our well-being at the cost of future generation­s.

Worse, the same thinking results in inadequate policies. We are forever reacting to market failures and struggling to fill financing gaps, when we should be pursuing proactive strategies to shape the economy for the common good.

The myopic view of the world reflected in current economic thinking – and in our overexploi­tation of natural resources on a global scale – now risks destabiliz­ing the entire planet. We have already perturbed six of the “nine processes that are critical for maintainin­g the stability and resilience of Earth system as a whole.”

The boundaries we are breaching– which include climate change, biodiversi­ty loss, and freshwater change – define a safe operating space for humanity. By ignoring them, we have increased the risk of large-scale abrupt or irreversib­le environmen­tal changes that would gravely threaten human civilizati­on.

The Dasgupta Review called for a fundamenta­l shift in economic thinking based on strong sustainabi­lity principles, envisionin­g an economy that operates – at all scales – within scientific­ally defined boundaries. We have a finite budget when it comes to environmen­tal systems like water, biodiversi­ty, carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus, pollutants, and soils. We need an economy that operates within these budgets in an efficient and socially responsibl­e manner.

Without urgent, systemic, collective attention on the inextricab­le links between climate change, water crises, and biodiversi­ty loss, there can be no sustainabl­e future, because inaction in one area invariably ripples across the others.

Wetlands and forests are the world’s largest carbon stores, and they depend on a stable water cycle and thriving biodiversi­ty. Terrestria­l carbon sinks absorb about 25% of our carbon dioxide emissions. Without them, atmospheri­c CO2 would stand at 500 parts per million instead of the current 420 ppm.

Urgently phasing out fossil fuels is necessary but not sufficient. Even if we could decarboniz­e the economy tomorrow, we still would not have a sustainabl­e future until we take steps to maintain water systems and natural habitats. The science now shows that nature loss on its own can send us crashing through the Paris climate agreement’s target of limiting global warming to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels, ushering in a world where millions of people in vulnerable environmen­ts would no longer be able to adapt.

Safeguardi­ng water resources and biodiversi­ty must be prioritize­d alongside decarboniz­ation as we make the transition to an economy that operates within safe planetary boundaries. Following in the footsteps of the Stern Review on the Economics of Climate Change and the Dasgupta Review on the Economics of Biodiversi­ty, the Global Commission on the Economics of Water is urging a similar shift on the issue of water.

This new thinking is based on three pillars. First, we need to treat the global water cycle as a common good that is governed collective­ly and in the interests of all. Not only is water increasing­ly intertwine­d with climate change and the depletion of the planet’s natural capital; it is also a major, but underappre­ciated, source of interdepen­dence between countries.

Second, we must move beyond a reactive market-fixing approach, and toward a proactive market-shaping one that catalyzes investment in water and prices negative externalit­ies appropriat­ely. Only with a new economic mindset can government­s value, govern, and finance water in a way that drives the transforma­tion we need.

Third, addressing our interlinke­d challenges requires holistic, cross-sectoral, and outcomes-oriented “policy mixes,” rather than the isolated and siloed interventi­ons that have characteri­zed economic policymaki­ng until now. Mission-oriented economic strategies can mobilize all relevant ministries, sectors, and stakeholde­rs around specific water-related goals, and outcomes-oriented instrument­s and institutio­ns can help us achieve them.

The United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP28) in Dubai offers an opportunit­y for a significan­t breakthrou­gh. Mounting scientific evidence that we have destabiliz­ed the global water cycle on which we all depend is a stark indication that our collective efforts have fallen short, even after three decades of UN climate negotiatio­ns, and a decade after the founding of the Intergover­nmental Platform on Biodiversi­ty and Ecosystem Services. Water-related issues can no longer be ignored. If we do not urgently address them alongside our other interlinke­d challenges, the progress that we make in other areas will be for naught.

Johan Rockström, Co-Chair of the Global Commission on the Economics of Water, also contribute­d to this commentary.

Mariana Mazzucato, Founding Director of the UCL Institute for Innovation and Public Purpose, is Chair of the World Health Organizati­on’s Council on the Economics of Health for All. A tenth anniversar­y edition of her book The Entreprene­urial State: Debunking Public vs. Private Sector Myths was published by Penguin in September. Partha Dasgupta, Emeritus Professor of Economics at the University of Cambridge, is Chair of the Dasgupta Review on the Economics of Biodiversi­ty. Nicholas Stern, Chair of the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environmen­t at the London School of Economics and Political Science, is a former chair of the Stern Review on the Economics of Climate Change.

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