This just
in: Saving the planet would be cheap; it might even be free. But will anyone
believe the good news?
I’ve just
been reading two new reports on the economics of fighting climate change: a big
study by a blue-ribbon international group, the New Climate Economy Project,
and a working paper from the International Monetary Fund. Both claim that
strong measures to limit carbon emissions would have hardly any negative effect
on economic growth, and might actually lead to faster growth. This may sound
too good to be true, but it isn’t. These are serious, careful analyses.
But you know
that such assessments will be met with claims that it’s impossible to break the
link between economic growth and ever-rising emissions of greenhouse gases, a
position I think of as “climate despair.” The most dangerous proponents of
climate despair are on the anti-environmentalist right. But they receive aid
and comfort from other groups, including some on the left, who have their own
reasons for getting it wrong.
Where is the
new optimism about climate change and growth coming from? It has long been
clear that a well-thought-out strategy of emissions control, in particular one
that puts a price on carbon via either an emissions tax or a cap-and-trade
scheme, would cost much less than the usual suspects want you to think. But the
economics of climate protection look even better now than they did a few years
ago.
On one side,
there has been dramatic progress in renewable energy technology, with the costs
of solar power, in particular, plunging, down by half just since 2010.
Renewables have their limitations — basically, the sun doesn’t always shine,
and the wind doesn’t always blow — but if you think that an economy getting a
lot of its power from wind farms and solar panels is a hippie fantasy, you’re
the one out of touch with reality.
On the other
side, it turns out that putting a price on carbon would have large
“co-benefits” — positive effects over and above the reduction in climate risks
— and that these benefits would come fairly quickly. The most important of
these co-benefits, according to the I.M.F. paper, would involve public health:
burning coal causes many respiratory ailments, which drive up medical costs and
reduce productivity.
And thanks
to these co-benefits, the paper argues, one argument often made against carbon
pricing — that it’s not worth doing unless we can get a global agreement — is
wrong. Even without an international agreement, there are ample reasons to take
action against the climate threat.
But back to
the main point: It’s easier to slash emissions than seemed possible even a few
years ago, and reduced emissions would produce large benefits in the
short-to-medium run. So saving the planet would be cheap and maybe even come
free.
Enter the
prophets of climate despair, who wave away all this analysis and declare that
the only way to limit carbon emissions is to bring an end to economic growth.
You mostly
hear this from people on the right, who normally say that free-market economies
are endlessly flexible and creative. But when you propose putting a price on
carbon, suddenly they insist that industry will be completely incapable of
adapting to changed incentives. Why, it’s almost as if they’re looking for
excuses to avoid confronting climate change, and, in particular, to avoid
anything that hurts fossil-fuel interests, no matter how beneficial to everyone
else.
But climate
despair produces some odd bedfellows: Koch-fueled insistence that emission
limits would kill economic growth is echoed by some who see this as an argument
not against climate action, but against growth. You can find this attitude in
the mostly European “degrowth” movement, or in American groups like the Post
Carbon Institute; I’ve encountered claims that saving the planet requires an
end to growth at left-leaning meetings on “rethinking economics.” To be fair,
anti-growth environmentalism is a marginal position even on the left, but it’s
widespread enough to call out nonetheless.
And you
sometimes see hard scientists making arguments along the same lines, largely (I
think) because they don’t understand what economic growth means. They think of
it as a crude, physical thing, a matter simply of producing more stuff, and
don’t take into account the many choices — about what to consume, about which
technologies to use — that go into producing a dollar’s worth of G.D.P.
So here’s
what you need to know: Climate despair is all wrong. The idea that economic
growth and climate action are incompatible may sound hardheaded and realistic,
but it’s actually a fuzzy-minded misconception. If we ever get past the special
interests and ideology that have blocked action to save the planet, we’ll find
that it’s cheaper and easier than almost anyone imagines.
The CROWN where global issues are
extensively discussed and fiercely debated from both sides of the argument — by
one person.
I Agree that fighting global warming will not need a huge amount of budget. We can all fight for free. All we need to do is to have a discipline.
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