By Ryan Cooper
Climate change is first and foremost a threat to human society.
That fact has been somewhat obscured in regular discourse, in favor of a false dichotomy portraying climate policy as an upper-middle-class noblesse oblige idea for anxious birders and other environmentalist types, and hardheaded economists who think building up yet more wealth is more important.
In reality, one obvious way that threat to humanity is going to be expressed is through economic damage. In other words, unchecked climate change is going to be terrifically expensive.
Now, its exact cost is basically impossible to predict. Contrary to people who would
But we can say the damage is going to be very large — indeed, it's already quite bad. NOAA's National Centers for Environmental Information estimates that 2017 was America's
This year is already off to a bad climate start as well. There is a severe precipitation shortfall in parts of the Southwest, with some Colorado drainages at
Even the blizzard that recently struck the Northeast may have been influenced by climate change. Contrary to the notions of President Trump, who appears to believe that climate science predicts it will
The dramatic and rapid increase in climate damages over the last decade suggests that disasters may increase nonlinearly with warming — that is, a doubling of greenhouse gas concentrations might lead to more than twice the quantity of disasters. The only way to be sure about that is after the fact, but it's still wise to assume it might be true, due to the larger downside risk. If not, then we have decarbonized our society more rapidly than we might otherwise have. But if it is true and we don't take action, the result could be catastrophic.
Now, a few caveats are in order. First, of course we cannot say with ironclad certainty that these weather disasters are 100 percent caused by climate change, because climate change isn't the sort of phenomenon that causes individual events. What we can say is that these are just exactly the sort of weather disasters that are predicted to become more common and worse as the planet continues to warm. Don't let
Second, expense is a
Nevertheless, climate disasters really are going to be hugely expensive for the United States — and not just in dollar terms. For example, the refusal from President Trump and the Republican Congress to properly rebuild Puerto Rico has not just
It drives home the fact that dawdling on climate policy, as Democrats did when they had majorities in 2009-10 — or denying it's even necessary, as virtually
Conversely, the faster we move on climate policy, the cheaper it will be. The International Energy Agency has roughly estimated that every year of delay adds
On the most important issue facing humanity, the United States is becoming dangerously close to a rogue state. Let us hope we can soon rejoin the world community and start acting like sensible, moral adults again.
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Related to SDG 13: Climate action