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Daily dose of solar news and Q&As


By Seth Masia
SOLAR TODAY deputy editor

Pacific Coast states, Idaho, Montana and Colorado might realize some economic benefit from global warming. The rest of the country is going to suffer. Hardest hit will be southern-tier and Appalachian states.

That's the conclusion of a new study from Sandia National Laboratory. Researchers combined projections of precipitation and employment patterns to predict shifts in population and economic activity in the United States. 

The paper,  "Assessing the Near-Term Risk of Climate Uncertainty:
Interdependencies among the U.S. States,"
notes that while some states will suffer mild drought conditions in coming years, they may profit economically if neighboring states have more severe conditions, driving businesses and populations to relocate.

Projecting a $1.2 trillion loss of GDP by 2050 for the entire nation, the research team forecast a loss of 752,000 labor years for Georgia, worth $102 billion, and driving a population loss of 40,000. By contrast, Oregon stands to gain 152,000 labor years, for a population gain of 20,000 and economic growth of $19.4 billion.

Sandia Labs press release:

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. - A climate-change study at Sandia National Laboratories that models the near-term effects of declining rainfall in each of the 48 U.S. continental states makes clear the economic toll that could occur unless an appropriate amount of initial investment - a kind of upfront insurance payment - is made to forestall much larger economic problems down the road.

Why tie climate change to economics?

"Absent any idea of costs, the need to address climate change seems remote and has a diluted sense of urgency," study lead George Backus said.

The Sandia study uses probability techniques familiar to insurance companies. Tables place dollar estimates on the effects of climate change in the absence of mitigation or other policy initiatives over the 2010-2050 time period.

The analysis is based upon results delivered by a variety of computational models reported by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's Fourth Assessment Report. From those, the Sandia report estimates the range of precipitation conditions - from lows to highs - that could occur across the states. The study then presents the consequence of those levels of precipitation on the states' economies.

"On the one hand, there's a lot of uncertainty in quantifying climate change," said Backus. "Everyone sees that. It's this uncertainty that presents the greatest difficulty for policy makers. If society knew how change would exactly unfold, we could undertake adaptation and mitigation responses."

Yet, Backus and his team wrote in the introduction to their paper, in other areas of interest to society, "despite uncertainty about the future, cost-benefit analyses are conducted on a daily basis as aids for policymakers on issues of critical importance to the nation such as health care, social security and defense."

By summarizing consequences over the range of predicted change - from the smallest to the greatest - the Sandia study is able to present a coherent grouping of results. Then, using well-accepted computer models, the study projects the net effect of climate change on a state's agricultural and industrial base, and the subsequent movement of populations for livable wages.

California, the Pacific Northwest and Colorado, for example, are the only states in the study that seem to benefit overall from the variation in precipitation that climate change might engender. That is because population would leave those states whose economy is hit hardest by reduced water availability, moving into and stimulating the economies of the less-affected states.

While the uncertainty in climate change predictions are often given as a reason by those skeptical of climate change to ignore the problem because of the wide range of model results, the study's authors take a point of view more common to insurance companies.

In insurance, Backus said, greater uncertainty means greater risk. In such cases, insurance companies merely reflect the higher risk in a higher insurance premium. For example, the rates for well-understood risks, such as taking a commercial airline flight, are far lower than those for less-understood risks, such as taking a privately funded rocket flight.

"One can emphasize the limitations of climate-change models, if one wants," said Backus. "But the real effect of that is to accentuate risk. To an insurance company, it would mean an area is more dangerous, not less. The proper action for those who want to halt government initiatives in climate policies is to reduce the uncertainty, not raise it. They need to demonstrate, if possible, that the future climatic conditions will remain below dangerous levels."

Thus far, the only existing models say that if nothing is done now, "by the time the negative effects of climate change significantly affect populations, it will be too late to prevent the escalating damage," Backus said.

Though the study stops short of applying its techniques to address effective mitigation techniques, its writers mention the early building of sea walls against the expected rise of oceans, planting crops resistant to drought and removing carbon from the atmosphere through reforestation or geological sequestration.

A further limitation is that the study only considers the impacts of near-term climate change on the U.S., disregarding worldwide impacts. It also has the imprecisions that result from neglecting a large number of influencing factors. It does not provide a risk analysis or reliability study of amelioration techniques. But the study concludes that "the larger challenge lies not in the technical difficulties of such [analyses] but rather in the communication of the risk and uncertainty in a manner that connects to the vital concerns of the policymakers."

The take-away point from the study? "It is the uncertainty associated with climate change that validates the need to act protectively and proactively."

Click here for the executive summary.

 



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Seth MasiaSeth Masia
Seth Masia is SOLAR TODAY's deputy editor and covers advances in solar energy on the blog.

Joseph McCabeJoseph McCabe Joseph McCabe is SOLAR TODAY's "Solar Prose" columnist and an ASES Fellow.

Liz MerryLiz Merry
Liz Merry is SOLAR TODAY's "Ask Ms. Liz: Career Q&As" columnist.


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