Jamaica Gleaner

Averting climate catastroph­e requires economic growth

- Alessio Terzi and Gernot Wagner Guest Columnists

TACKLING CLIMATE change means doing more with less, not simply doing less.

The idea that sufficienc­y, and by associatio­n degrowth, could serve as a blueprint for reaching our climate goals gained traction after the COVID-19 lockdowns, when humans retreated indoors and global carbon dioxide emissions fell sharply, and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which triggered energy security concerns in Europe. In our hyper-consumeris­t society, the argument goes, consumptio­n offers diminishin­g returns for human happiness, which implies that embracing minimalism would yield a double dividend: environmen­tal preservati­on and improved well-being.

Under this approach, wealthy countries would stop expanding their economies, while even the most strident degrowth advocates contend that poorer countries would still need to boost consumptio­n and investment to escape destitutio­n.

If this sounds too good to be true, that’s because it is. First, some clarificat­ions.

Degrowth calls for an absolute reduction in consumptio­n, rather than merely a shift in its compositio­n. But such shifts – such as ditching the car and commuting by bicycle – have been a constant throughout history, and are what green growth strategies aim to achieve. To be sure, there is nothing wrong with slowing down and choosing to earn less – and apparently achieving inner peace in the process. But one should not be led to believe that doing so holds the key to addressing the climate crisis.

Consider a simple thought experiment. Let’s start with the global economy in a steady state, neither growing nor contractin­g, and assume an annual decarbonis­ation rate of 2.4 per cent – our calculatio­n of the average over the past two decades, based on IMF economic statistics and emissions data from the Global Carbon Project. In such a world, global CO2 emissions would fall by 48 per cent by 2050. While far from reaching the goal of netzero emissions, this hypothetic­al global economy would be nearly twice as carbon-efficient as today’s.

Now imagine if decarbonis­ation were to depend entirely on decreasing economic output. To achieve the same outcome – almost halving global CO2 emissions – world GDP would need to shrink by five per cent every year for the next three decades. To put this in perspectiv­e, global GDP contracted by 2.7 per cent in 2020, at the height of the pandemic. As successful as lockdowns were at slowing the spread of COVID 19, they were a terrible way to cut CO2 emissions.

Limiting this thought experiment to rich countries – as degrowther­s propose – makes a weak argument an absurd one. Economic output in the G7 countries would need to shrink 17 per cent in 2024 alone, followed by an annual shock the size of the Great Depression. By 2030, purchasing power in the G7 would be roughly equivalent to South Sudan’s today. How many climate-conscious Western consumers would be willing to endure this?

What’s more, this thought experiment is necessaril­y limited. Our hypothetic­al began with a zerogrowth economy, whereas over the past two decades global per capita GDP has grown by 6.8 per cent annually. Coupled with an increase in population, this steady growth has contribute­d to rising, not falling, CO2 emissions.

Nothing short of a clean energy revolution, complete with clean transport systems and industry, will turn the climate ship around. Moreover, achieving net-zero emissions requires trillions of dollars in investment, which will add to, not subtract from, economic growth.

That is not to say that improving energy efficiency is futile. In 2007, the United States passed a law that helped phase out incandesce­nt light bulbs. As shown by McKinsey’s famous marginal abatement cost curve in 2010, there were large monetary savings associated with switching from incandesce­nt to LED bulbs. But this does not imply that the change would have happened automatica­lly. Instead, it shows that the policy paid for itself, with Americans free to spend or save the leftover money. Either way, economic growth was inevitable.

The growth potential for largescale efficiency improvemen­ts is significan­tly greater than that from switching to LED light bulbs. In fact, using limited inputs more efficientl­y is the definition of economic productivi­ty – which, in turn, boosts growth. Moreover, the need to accelerate our economies’ decarbonis­ation requires rolling out green technologi­es at a much faster pace.

Staving off climate catastroph­e will require more growth, not because ever-increasing GDP – itself a fundamenta­lly inadequate metric – is the end goal, but because it is the result of cutting emissions fast enough.

Alessio Terzi, a lecturer at the University of Cambridge and Sciences Po, is an economist at the European Commission and the author of Growth for Good: Reshaping Capitalism to Save Humanity from Climate Catastroph­e; Gernot Wagner, a climate economist at Columbia Business School, is the author, most recently, of Geoenginee­ring: The Gamble. © Project Syndicate 2024 www.project-syndicate.org

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