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About 1 per cent of GDP lost between now and 2060 is in the middle of the range of estimates of the cost of global warming to the entire planet, as estimated in reports by the Internatio­nal Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). There are more than 20 different estimates by academics of the worldwide cost of global warming between now and 2100, and they range between 1 and 3 per cent of GDP lost.

The larger national estimates are for developing countries, because much more of their economies are agricultur­al or otherwise outdoors and more susceptibl­e to worsening weather. Even then, the rapid economic growth in many developing countries makes losing maybe one or two years’ economic growth not that important when your income per capita is doubling or more, sometimes by much more, such as in China or India, every generation.

The estimates of the cost of global warming of no more than 3 per cent of GDP include the possibilit­y of much more rapid climate change than currently anticipate­d. About one-third of

the estimated cost of global warming is the risk of much faster global warming than, say, 2-3 degrees Celsius.

It is time for the Government to fund an estimate of the cost of global warming to New Zealand.

If it is as small as the OECD suggests, a zerocarbon economy is simply not worth the cost. I cannot see how the Government can do a benefit-cost analysis of the zero-carbon economy without calculatin­g the cost of doing nothing, and the global warming avoided by us having a zero-carbon economy in 2050.

Unilateral action to mitigate warming in a small country such as ours will not make any difference to the pace of global warming. Unless most or all countries introduce a hefty carbon tax, including developing countries at great expense to their own developmen­t, unilateral action is worse than doing nothing.

Those countries who acted unilateral­ly will be poorer and thus less resilient against such global warming that is inevitable because of the lack of fully global action. Richer is safer.

No country will have a road to Damascus on fighting global warming because New Zealand puts on a hair-shirt in the name of making a tiny, tiny difference to global warming by adopting a zero-carbon economy by 2050.

Democratic politics is such that significan­t reductions in real incomes in the name of unilateral­ly fighting global warming are politicall­y unsustaina­ble in the long term.

There are many voter concerns politician­s must balance to stay in office, and the environmen­t is but one of these. Once climate change policies start to become costly in the hip-pocket, voter support for these policies will fall away.

The environmen­tal movement should stop saying that half-measures will work and the transition to a green economy will be easy and painless. But a message that a green economy and action on global warming requires blood, toil, sweat and tears will not sell at the ballot box.

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