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News / Nation & World

Climate change may cost 10% of GDP by 2100

By Andrew Freedman, The Washington Post
Published: August 19, 2019, 10:08pm

Extreme weather events, cuts to worker productivity, and other climate change impacts could cause major global economic losses unless greenhouse gas emissions are significantly curtailed in the next few decades, according to a new working paper published Monday. The paper is the latest in a string of reports from the U.N. and global financial institutions and others showing that climate change constitutes a looming financial risk.

At a time when there’s concern about a global economic downturn, the new study, published as a working paper in the National Bureau of Economic Research, warns of a far bigger cut to economic growth to come if global warming goes unchecked.

The study is unique in that it finds higher potential costs from climate change, particularly in the industrial world, compared with past research. For example, the study found that continued temperature increases of about 0.072 Celsius per year under a “business as usual scenario” would yield a 7.2 percent cut to GDP per capita worldwide by 2100.

In contrast, if countries were to cut greenhouse gas emissions in line with the Paris agreement, then such impacts could be limited to closer to a 1.1 percent loss in GDP per capita.

“What our study suggests is that climate change is costly for all countries under the business as usual scenario (no matter whether they are hot or cold, rich or poor), and the United States will be one of the countries that will suffer the most (reflecting sharp increases in U.S. average temperatures by 2100),” study co-author Kamiar Mohaddes, an economist at the University of Cambridge, said via email.

For the U.S., the study finds that if emissions of greenhouse gases are not significantly cut in keeping with the goals of the Paris climate agreement, the U.S. could see a 10.5 percent cut in real income by 2100. The hardest hit countries will be poorer, tropical nations, but in contrast to previous studies, the new paper finds that no country will be spared and none will see a net benefit economically from global warming.

The team of researchers from the University of Cambridge, the International Monetary Fund, the University of Southern California and the National Tsing Hua University in Taiwan examined economic data from 174 countries during the period from 1964 to 2014, and concluded that per-capita economic output growth is adversely affected by prolonged changes in temperature, both above or below its historical norms.

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