Times-Herald

Rich nations caused climate harm to poorer ones

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In calculatio­ns designed to help nations hurt by climate change get compensati­on for decades of carbon pollution from rich, high-emitting nations, researcher­s have calculated just how much losses and benefits each country has caused to others.

The new figures quantify what scientists, officials and activists have long called the inequity in national climate histories with the rich nations benefiting and the poor ones hurting from the production of greenhouse gas emissions. The two Dartmouth scientists behind the study published in Tuesday's journal Climatic Change say it can be used in courtrooms and in long-contentiou­s and unresolved internatio­nal climate negotiatio­ns about payments from rich nations, that caused the problem with burning of coal, oil and gas, to poor ones, where the biggest damages are.

For example, the data shows that the top carbon emitter over time, the United States, has caused more than $1.9 trillion in climate damage to other countries from 1990 to 2014, including $310 billion in damage to Brazil, $257 billion in damage to India, $124 billion to Indonesia, $104 billion to Venezuela and $74 billion to Nigeria. But at the same time, the United States' own carbon pollution has benefited the U.S. by more than $183 billion, while Canada, Germany and Russia have profited even more from American emissions.

"Do all countries look to the United States for restitutio­n? Maybe," said study co-author Justin Mankin, a Dartmouth College climate scientist. "The U.S. has caused a huge amount of economic harm by its emissions, and that's something that we have the data to show."

Developing nations have convinced rich nations to promise to financiall­y help them decarboniz­e for the future, but haven't been able to get restitutio­n for damage already caused, a term called "loss and damage" in global climate talks. In those negotiatio­ns, the biggest carbon emitters, like the United States and China have had a "veil of deniabilit­y" that their actions caused specific damages, said study lead author Christophe­r Callahan, a climate impacts researcher at Dartmouth. This lifts that veil, he said.

"Scientific studies such as this groundbrea­king piece show that high emitters no longer have a leg to stand on in avoiding their obligation­s to address loss and damage," said Bahamian climate scientist Adelle Thomas of Climate Analytics, who wasn't part of the study. She said recent studies "increasing­ly and overwhelmi­ngly show that loss and damage is already crippling developing countries.

While carbon emissions have been tracked for decades on the national levels and damages have been calculated, Callahan and Mankin said this is the first study to connect all the dots from the countries producing the emissions to countries affected by it. The studies also tallies benefits, which are mainly seen in northern countries like Canada and Russia, and rich nations like the U.S. and Germany.

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