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Beyond Science: The Economics and Politics of Climate Change

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Title: Beyond Science: The Economics and Politics of Climate Change


1
Discussion of
Beyond Science The Economics and Politics of
Climate Change Rice University, February 8,
2008 Rosina Bierbaum, Dean and Professor,
University of Michigan
2
SEG Coordinating Lead Authors
  • Rosina Bierbaum (Co-Chair), Professor and Dean,
    School of Natural Resources and Environment,
    University of Michigan
  • John P. Holdren, Director, The Woods Hole
    Research Center, and Teresa and John Heinz
    Professor of Environmental Policy, Harvard
    University
  • Michael MacCracken, Chief Scientist for Climate
    Change Programs, Climate Institute, Washington DC
  • Richard H. Moss, Senior Director, Climate and
    Energy, United Nations Foundation and University
    of Maryland,
  • Peter H. Raven (Co-Chair), President, Missouri
    Botanical Garden

3
SEG Lead Authors
  • Ulisses Confalonieri, Professor, National School
    of Public Health and Federal University of Rio de
    Janeiro, Brazil
  • Jacques Jack Dubois, Member of the Executive
    Board, Swiss Re
  • Alexander Ginzburg, Deputy Director, Institute of
    Atmospheric Physics, Russian Academy of Sciences
  • Peter H. Gleick, President, Pacific Institute for
    Studies in Development, Environment, and
    Security, Oakland, California
  • Zara Khatib, Technology Marketing Manager, Shell
    International, United Arab Emirates
  • Janice Lough, Principal Research Scientist,
    Australian Institute of Marine Science
  • Ajay Mathur, President, Senergy Global Private
    Limited, India
  • Mario Molina, Professor, University of
    California, San Diego, U.S., and President, Mario
    Molina Center, Mexico
  • Keto Mshigeni, Vice Chancellor, The Hubert
    Kairuki Memorial University, Tanzania
  • Nebojsa Naki Nakicenovic, Professor, Vienna
    University of Technology, and Program Leader,
    International Institute for Applied Systems
    Analysis, Austria
  • Taikan Oki, Professor, Institute of Industrial
    Science, The University of Tokyo, Japan
  • Hans Joachim John Schellnhuber, Professor and
    Director, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact
    Research, Germany
  • Diana Ürge-Vorsatz, Professor, Central European
    University, Hungary

Jae Edmonds, University of Maryland, Special
Advisor
4
These remarks draw heavily upon the February 2007
report of the UN Foundation / Sigma Xi Scientific
Expert Group (SEG) on Climate Change and
Sustainable Development prepared for the 15th
Session of the CSD.
5
Two Starkly Different Futures
  • Societys current path leads to increasingly
    serious climate-change impacts, including
    potentially catastrophic changes that will
    compromise development objectives and threaten
    living standards
  • The other path leads to a transformed energy
    system and improved stewardship of the worlds
    soils and forests to reduce emissions, create
    economic opportunity, reduce global poverty, and
    achieve sustainability
  • Humanity must act collectively and urgently to
    change course through leadership at all levels of
    society -- There is no more time for delay

6
Overview A Sense of Urgency
  • Climate issue at scientific/political turning
    point
  • Global climate change accelerating caused
    mainly by humans
  • Average temperature 0.8C above pre-industrial
    value
  • Increased incidence of extreme weather events
  • Accelerating sea-level rise, reduction in summer
    sea ice
  • Ecosystem boundaries moving
  • Political recognition of changes urgency of
    situation
  • Expect continuing increases at 0.2-0.4 per
    decade with potential abrupt changes in climatic
    patterns and major impacts on economic and social
    systems
  • Climate change will make achievement of MDGs
    harder
  • Pressure building for resolute international
    action

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8
Conclusion
  • Exceeding 2-2.5 C above 1750 levels would entail
    sharply increasing risk of intolerable impacts
  • Avoiding this will require prompt action
  • Two-pronged strategy avoid the unmanageable
    (mitigation) and manage the unavoidable
    (adaptation)
  • Mitigation and adaptation measures should be
    integrated and reinforcing

9
Projected Impacts of Climate Change
Stern,2006
10
Projected Impacts of Climate Change
Stern, 2006
11
A World Vulnerable to Climate Change
  • Most impacts are expected to be negative,
    especially for the poorest, most vulnerable
    nations
  • Water resources, coastal infrastructure, health,
    agriculture, and ecosystems are expected to be
    challenged in virtually every region of the globe
  • International, regional, and national
    institutions are ill-prepared to manage climate
    change impacts. Enhanced preparedness/response
    strategies are a global priority

12
The Millennium Development Goals
  • Eradicate Extreme Poverty and Hunger--Halve,
    between 1990 and 2015, the proportion of people
    living on less than 1/day and the proportion of
    people suffering from hunger.
  • Achieve Universal Primary Education
  • Promote Gender Equality Empower Women
  • Reduce Child Mortality--Reduce by 2/3, between
    1990 and 2015, the under-5 mortality rate.
  • Improve Maternal Health--Reduce by 3/4, between
    1990 and 2015, the maternal mortality rate
  • Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases--By
    2015 have halted and begun to reverse the spread
    of HIV aids and the incidence of malaria and
    other major diseases.
  • Ensure Environmental Sustainability
  • Develop a global partnership for Development

13
The Millennium Development Goals
  • Eradicate Extreme Poverty and Hunger--Halve,
    between 1990 and 2015, the proportion of people
    living on less than 1/day and the proportion of
    people suffering from hunger.
  • Achieve Universal Primary Education
  • Promote Gender Equality Empower Women
  • Reduce Child Mortality--Reduce by 2/3, between
    1990 and 2015, the under-5 mortality rate.
  • Improve Maternal Health--Reduce by 3/4, between
    1990 and 2015, the maternal mortality rate
  • Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases--By
    2015 have halted and begun to reverse the spread
    of HIV aids and the incidence of malaria and
    other major diseases.
  • Ensure Environmental Sustainability
  • Develop a global partnership for Development

14
Agro-Economic Vulnerability to Future Climate
Change
15
Ecological Vulnerability to Future Climate Change
16
Both Mitigation and Adaptation are needed.
  • A mitigation only strategy wont work because
    its already too late to avoid substantial
    climate change.
  • An adaptation only strategy wont work because
    most adaptation measures become more costly and
    less effective as the magnitude of the changes to
    which one is trying to adapt gets larger.

17
SEG adaptation strategy
  • Identify understand key vulnerabilities by
    sector and region, including
  • health, food production, water resources, coastal
    communities, biodiversity
  • Expand adaptation research focusing on
  • critical thresholds, multiple stresses, adaptive
    management, ocean chemistry, opportunities opened
    by climate change
  • Harness enhance existing institutional capacity
    for the task of planning for and adapting to
    climate change
  • with emphasis on UN other international
    institutions
  • starting with an inventory of relevant
    organizations instruments
  • Improve early-warning systems, contingency
    planning, information systems for resource
    management
  • Integrate adaptation concerns into social networks

18
SEG adaptation recommendations for the UN
  • Inventory evaluate the incorporation of
    adaptation concerns programs in existing UN
    organizations
  • identifying needs/opportunities for improvements
    additions
  • establishing increased communication
    data-sharing
  • Conduct vulnerability analyses monitoring,
    including
  • focused efforts to identify regions sectors of
    high vulnerability
  • assistance to vulnerable regions in monitoring
    capacity-building
  • Integrate adaptation into ongoing development
    efforts by
  • using 2006-2007 CSD focus on climate and 2008
    International Year of Planet Earth to integrate
    adaptation into Agenda 21 action plans and
    national sustainable-development strategies
  • create a global adaptation information
    clearinghouse

19
Adaptation recommendations for the UN (continued)
  • Refocus UN diplomatic, scientific,
    technological capabilities to encompass
    additional adaptation work, e.g.,
  • strengthen the proposed 5-year program on
    adaptation in the UNFCCC, including efforts on
    altered cropping patterns, water conservation,
    germ-plasm preservation, weather-disaster
    response
  • accelerate the development of drought-, salt-,
    and flood-tolerant crop varieties
  • promote expedited development of improved
    forecasting models and early-warning systems
  • Develop an operational plan for environmental
    refugees

20
The Roadmap - Adaptation
21
U.S. ADAPTATION RESEARCH IS INADEQUATE
  • Understanding and predicting physical climate
    change is progressing well
  • Declining observing capability
  • Inadequate human dimensions funding
  • 30 million lack of collaboration
  • Inadequate progress
  • in assessing impacts on human well being and
    vulnerabilities
  • in providing knowledge to support decision making
    and risk analyses
  • in communicating results and engaging
    stakeholders in a two-way dialogue

NRC, Evaluating Progress of the US CCSP Program
Methods Preliminary Results, 2007
22
Among the Presidents FY 09 Priorities.
So as to better inform policy, agencies should
continue to make investments to improve our
ability to observe, model, assess, and adapt to
impacts of climate change, particularly on a
regional scale, and to assure the availability of
critical long-term climate data.
23
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24
Even more than with mitigation measures,
adaptation measures tend to be win-win
  • Measures to improve water conservation water
    management have great value even in the absence
    of climate-driven increases in stress on water
    systems.
  • Strengthening public-health and
    environmental-engineering defenses against
    climate-linked increases in the geographic extent
    virulence of certain diseases will also reduce
    damage from disease more generally.
  • Strengthening buildings and infrastructure
    against floods, storms, storm surges expected
    to increase under climate change provides
    protection that would be valuable even absent
    such increases, and also provides protection
    against other types of extreme events
    (earthquakes, tsunamis).

25
More broadly
The best way to address climate-change impacts
is by integrating adaptation measures into
mainstream sustainable-development and
poverty-reduction strategies. - SEG,
Confronting Climate Change, p 82
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