Paris Climate Agreement passes the cost-benefit test

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Date
2020
Volume
11
Issue
Journal
Series Titel
Book Title
Publisher
[London] : Nature Publishing Group UK
Abstract

The Paris Climate Agreement aims to keep temperature rise well below 2 °C. This implies mitigation costs as well as avoided climate damages. Here we show that independent of the normative assumptions of inequality aversion and time preferences, the agreement constitutes the economically optimal policy pathway for the century. To this end we consistently incorporate a damage-cost curve reproducing the observed relation between temperature and economic growth into the integrated assessment model DICE. We thus provide an inter-temporally optimizing cost-benefit analysis of this century’s climate problem. We account for uncertainties regarding the damage curve, climate sensitivity, socioeconomic future, and mitigation costs. The resulting optimal temperature is robust as can be understood from the generic temperature-dependence of the mitigation costs and the level of damages inferred from the observed temperature-growth relationship. Our results show that the politically motivated Paris Climate Agreement also represents the economically favourable pathway, if carried out properly.

Description
Keywords
climate change, cost-benefit analysis, economic growth, environmental economics, aversion, economic development, France, temperature dependence, uncertainty
Citation
Glanemann, N., Willner, S. N., & Levermann, A. (2020). Paris Climate Agreement passes the cost-benefit test. 11. https://doi.org//10.1038/s41467-019-13961-1
License
CC BY 4.0 Unported