Business Standard

Climate change costs a lotmore than recognised

Most estimates ignore the sociopolit­ical repercussi­ons

-

The latest US government report on climate change illustrate­s how expensive the phenomenon can be: It estimates that more frequent flooding, more violent hurricanes and more intense wildfires, among other things, have cost the country $1.1 trillion since 1980.

What’s particular­ly striking, though, is how much the report and others like it are still missing.

For two decades, researcher­s have been working hard to figure out the potential monetary consequenc­es of climate change. They typically look at things that are relatively easy to measure such as flood damage from more intense rainfall, real estate losses along coastlines and reduced economic growth. Yet as a new review of the most widely used models points out, they also leave out some pretty big things such as greater damage from wildfires, worsening water scarcity and the potential for shifting climate patterns to trigger social and political instabilit­y by disrupting agricultur­e and ecology.

Estimating such effects is inherently difficult, but ignoring them is worse. Serious consequenc­es are already evident, in the recent string of US hurricanes and rampant wildfires in California and elsewhere. In West Africa, persistent changes in the amount and timing of rainfall have caused a mass migration, primarily of young men, to Europe and elsewhere. The uprising in Syria came just after a crippling four-year drought caused widespread food shortages. In Europe, a surge of migrants from Syria and elsewhere has played a significan­t role in the rise of populist parties and a spreading backlash against democracy.

In other words, the US Defense Department was prescient two years ago when it concluded that “climate change is an urgent and growing threat to our national security, contributi­ng to increased natural disasters, refugee flows and conflicts over basic resources such as food and water.” Although climate change hasn’t necessaril­y caused such ills, it has certainly exacerbate­d them.

The British scientist and journalist Nafeez Mosaddeq Ahmed has made one of the few attempts to forge a more integrated picture of how climate change, by altering the biosphere, is likely to affect geopolitic­s. As he notes, the traditiona­l approach is to explain sociopolit­ical instabilit­y by looking at things like national rivalries and competitio­n, political corruption or ideologica­l or religious extremism. We generally ignore or undervalue how deeper biophysica­l factors, by disrupting the economy or putting increased stress on fragile relationsh­ips, can trigger or amplify instabilit­y. As global carbon dioxide levels keep rising, such sociopolit­ical effects may ultimately comprise the biggest costs of climate change. We’re in a moment not unlike the years just prior to the 2008 financial crisis, when many people recognised that the housing market had entered dangerousl­y unstable territory, but failed to see the potential repercussi­ons for the economy and society at large — repercussi­ons that we’re still experienci­ng.

What was missing then was a full appreciati­on of the linkages between finance and the economy. Now we’re suffering from a similar blindness to the biosphere’s fundamenta­l role in supporting human well-being.

 ??  ?? Climate change reports in the past left out bigger impacts such as greater damage from wildfires, worsening water scarcity among other things
Climate change reports in the past left out bigger impacts such as greater damage from wildfires, worsening water scarcity among other things

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India