Socioeconomic Impacts of Global Warming are Systematically Overestimated

Socioeconomic Impacts of Global Warming are Systematically Overestimated

Part I: Why are Impacts Overestimated?

Indur M. Goklany

[Note to the Reader: For the sake of argument, in this post I will accept the IPCC’s estimates of global warming. I will show that even if one takes those estimates for granted, the impacts of global warming are, nevertheless, overestimated.]

Most of the scientific debate on global warming has focused on “climatological” issues that have been the province of IPCC Work Group I’s Science Assessment. However, there are even greater grounds for skepticism when it comes to estimates of the impacts of climate change, which is the monopoly of IPCC’s Work Group II, not least because these estimates are based on a chain of linked models with the uncertain output of each unvalidated model serving as the input for the next unvalidated model. [Yes, it’s that bad!].

The first link in this chain are emission models which use socioeconomic assumptions extending 100 or more years into the future to generate emission scenarios, which strains credulity. As Lorenzoni and Adger (2006: 74) noted in a paper commissioned for the Stern Review, socioeconomic scenarios “cannot be projected semi-realistically for more than 5–10 years at a time.”

The results of these emissions models are fed into coupled atmosphere-ocean general circulation models (AOGCMs) to estimate spatial and temporal changes in climatic variables (such as temperature and precipitation) which are, then, used as inputs to simplified and incomplete biophysical models that project location-specific changes in biophysical factors (e.g., available habitat, or crop or timber yields). Notably, the uncertainty of estimates of climatic changes increases as the scale at which they have to be specified becomes finer. This is particularly true for precipitation, which is a — if not the — critical determinant of natural resources (e.g., water and vegetation) that human beings and all other living species depend on either directly or indirectly. As the US Climate Change Science Program (CCSP) review, Climate Models: An Assessment of Strengths and Limitations, notes:

“Climate model simulation of precipitation has improved over time but is still problematic. Correlation between models and observations is 50 to 60% for seasonal means on scales of a few hundred kilometers.” (CCSP 2008, p. 3).

“In summary, modern AOGCMs generally simulate continental and larger-scale mean surface temperature and precipitation with considerable accuracy, but the models often are not reliable for smaller regions, particularly for precipitation.” (CCSP 2008, p. 52).  [Emphasis added.]

In colloquial English this means that the AOGCMs have not been validated for less-than-continental or less-than-regional scales because they are unable to reproduce historical temperatures and precipitation simultaneously (and, moreover, cannot endogenously reproduce major climatic features such as the ENSO, PDO, etc.).  But the real world distribution of climate-sensitive resources and climate itself is heterogeneous and varies considerably on “scales of a few hundred kilometers.” Therefore, we necessarily should be using finer scale models to estimate impacts on these resources.

No matter, depending on the human or natural system under consideration, the outputs of the biophysical models (which also are not generally validated; see Nogues-Bravo 2009) may have to be fed into additional models to calculate the social, economic, and environmental impacts on those systems.  Ideally, the outputs from this set of models should be fed back into the emissions models, thereby closing an iterative loop of models. But models have, so far, not yet incorporated this feature.

Notably, I have never seen an end-to-end analysis of the uncertainties/confidence limits associated with impacts estimates derived from the entire chain of models at relevant scales (including uncertainties associated with the basic assumptions feeding the emissions models). I have often wondered why such a step, that should be fundamental to any scientific analysis, is ignored.

In any case, this post will not deal with the level of confidence or uncertainty attached to impacts estimates but with reasons why impacts estimates are systematically overestimated.  Also, this post will not address potential “catastrophes,” i.e., low-probability but potentially high-consequence outcomes such as a shut down of the thermohaline circulation or the melting of the Greenland and Antarctica Ice Sheets. These are deemed unlikely to occur during this century, and are grist for other post(s).

The major reason for systematic overestimation is that the magnitude of future damages depends critically on society’s future “adaptive capacity” — a fancy word for “adaptability.”  But the methodologies used to estimate impacts underestimate individuals’ and society’s future capacity to make self-directed (or autonomous) adaptations to global warming.  [Adaptations should include measures to either reduce any adverse effect of global warming or take advantage of any of its positive impacts.]

Figures 1 and 2, based on cross-country data, show how two climate-sensitive indicators of human well-being — cereal yield and available food supplies per capita — have improved with wealth and time (a surrogate for technology). This makes perfect sense since wealthier societies ought to be better able to afford technologies that can enhance crop productivity (Figure 1). And if that is insufficient to meet food demand, wealthier societies also ought to be able to purchase the food supplies they need (Figure 2) via internal or external trade.  Not surprisingly, hunger and malnutrition are lower in wealthier societies.

Figure 1: Cereal yields vs. GDP per capita, 1975-2003. Source: Goklany (2007).

Figure 2: Average daily food supplies per capita vs. GDP per capita, 1975-2002. Source: Goklany (2007).

Figures 1 and 2 also show that the crop yield and food supply curves shift upward with time, that is,  for any given level of GDP per capita, crop yield and food supplies increase as time marches on. This can be attributed to the secular change in technology which accretes over time, and is defined broadly to include both hardware (e.g., catalytic convertors and carbon adsorption systems) and software technologies (e.g., knowledge, policies and institutions that govern or modulate human actions and behavior, culture, management techniques, computer programs to track or model environmental quality, trading).

The patterns indicated in Figures 1 and 2 hold for virtually all objective determinants of human well-being — hunger, malnutrition, mortality rates, life expectancy, the level of education, greater access to safe water and sanitation.  See here and here.  All improve along with the level of economic development and time/technology, at least until they approach “saturation” (which helps accounts for the shape of Figure 2).  Similarly, spending on health care and research and development tends to go up with GDP per capita. Notably each of these determinants helps boost economic and technological development, and human and social capital (see, e.g., here and here), which themselves boost adaptive capacity. Therefore, in the future, as time marches on — and if societies become wealthier — as is assumed under all IPCC emission and climate scenarios, their adaptive capacity ought to be higher, and the net damages from global warming should be correspondingly lower.

Adaptive Capacity in Global Impacts Assessments in the IPCC’s Latest Assessment

To date, however, no impact study has fully accounted for both increasing wealth and secular technological change, as will be discussed in greater detail below. Consequently, they all overestimate the negative impacts and underestimate the positive impacts. Consider, for example, the suite of studies of the global impacts of climate change sponsored by the UK Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) and undertaken by a host of authors intimately involved in the IPCC’s various assessment reports (Parry 2004Global Environmental Change, Volume 14, Issue 1, pp. 1-99; IPCC WGII, AR$, Ch. 2). These studies were state-of-the-art at the time the IPCC’s Fourth Assessment Report was compiled. However:

  • The water resources study (Arnell 2004) totally ignores adaptation, despite the fact that many adaptations to water related problems, e.g., building dams, reservoirs, and canals, are among mankind’s oldest adaptations, and do not depend on the development of any new technologies (see here, pp. 1034–35). While, arguably, this may be acceptable methodology for an academic paper, it is simply inadequate to use “as is” to inform policymakers.
  • The study of agricultural productivity and hunger (Parry et al. 2004) allows for increases in crop yield with economic growth due to greater usage of fertilizer and irrigation in richer countries, decreases in hunger due to economic growth, some secular (time-dependent) increase in agricultural productivity, as well as some farm level adaptations to deal with climate change. But these adaptations are based on currently available technologies, rather than technologies that would be available in the future or any technologies developed to specifically cope with the negative impacts of global warming or take advantage of any positive outcomes (Parry et al., 2004, p. 57; and here, pp. 1032–33).  However, the potential for future technologies to cope with climate change is large, especially if one considers bioengineered crops and precision agriculture (see here, chapter 9; and here, pp. 292-93).
  • Nicholls (2004) study on coastal flooding from sea level rise takes some pains to incorporate improvements in adaptive capacity due to increasing wealth. But it makes some questionable assumptions. First, it allows societies to implement measures to reduce the risk of coastal flooding in response to 1990 surge conditions, but not to subsequent sea level rise (Nicholls, 2004, p. 74). But this is illogical. One should expect that any measures that are implemented would consider the latest available data and information on the surge situation at the time the measures are initiated. That is, if the measure is initiated in, say, 2050, the measure’s design would at least consider sea level and sea level trends as of 2050, rather than merely the 1990 level. By that time, we should know the rate of sea level rise with much greater confidence. Second, Nicholls (2004) also allows for a constant lag time between initiating protection and sea level rise. But one should expect that if sea level continues to rise, the lag between upgrading protection standards and higher GDP per capita will be reduced over time, and may even turn negative, if that seems warranted.  That is, adaptations would be anticipatory rather than reactive, particularly, for a richer society. Fourth, Nicholls (2004) does not allow for any deceleration in the preferential migration of the population to coastal areas, as might be likely if coastal flooding becomes more frequent and costly (see here, pp. 1036–37). [FWIW, New Orleans population continues to be below pre-Katrina levels, and Florida has been losing population in recent years – of course the risk of floods and hurricanes are hardly the only determinants of migration.]
  • The analysis for malaria undertaken by van Lieshout et al. (2004) includes adaptive capacity as it existed in 1990, but does not adjust it to account for any subsequent advances in economic and technological development. There is simply no justification for such an assumption, particularly since there were older papers in the open literature that had pointed that adaptive capacity was a critical element in determining impacts (see here, here, here). Yet this study passed peer review!!!

In my next post, I will look at what can be said about future adaptive capacity, and show that it has been grossly underestimated in impacts studies.



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73 Comments
January 5, 2010 9:26 pm

Thanks, Indur, for this report showing that the IPCC has skillfully overestimated:
a.) The social impact of global warming, as well as
b.) The scientific evidence of global warming.
The question:
Why are public funds spent on salaries of IPCC members and scientists who fabricate and distribute such nonsense?
With kind regards,
Oliver K. Manuel

Peter of Sydney
January 5, 2010 9:36 pm

“Panic buying at supermarkets as Britain braces itself for the big Freeze”
I thought Peter Garrett just said the world is suffering a global warming crisis. Does he have any credibility left at all now with the Japanese whaling issue running hot at the moment? His government has effectively aided and abetted the spying of the protest ships and the sinking of one of them by a Japanese ship. Good work Peter! You are a start NOT! I hope you hang your head in shame. Better still you should resign for spreading such nonsense about global warming and taking the side of the Japanese whaling. Otherwise, you are proving ot be the biggest ALP hypocrite of all.

thethinkingman
January 5, 2010 10:22 pm

I have always wondered why the AGW bunch think that people living at the coast aren’t able to outrun rising sea levels. I mean , even my gran could get away from a rise of a mm a year or so.

rabidfox
January 5, 2010 10:50 pm

Apparently, our (US) President is determined to find the missing global warming. This article indicates that he is putting intelligence assets onto the task.
http://www.nationalcenter.org/PR-CIA_Climate_010510.html

Michael
January 5, 2010 10:55 pm

“The world overall is growing warmer largely in the falsified computer imagery of the new global theorists, who have taken over from where the communists left off. Instead of the deluded and fanciful statistics of the Five Year Plan, or the Great Leap Forward, we are fed the dogmatic mumbo jumbo of weather ideology.”
“The sun disposes: it gives, and it takes away. And we are behaving like demented Aztecs when we try to change the future of the entire world to our own design.”
Biggest threat to man is probably less from ‘global warming’ than from the Hysterical Myths About It
http://www.independent.ie/opinion/analysis/biggest-threat-to-man-is-probably-less-from-global-warming-than-from-the-hysterical-myths-about-it-2000579.html

Michael
January 5, 2010 10:59 pm

“If you had a hard time getting your noggin around Copenhagen, don’t worry. It is just the latest anti-capitalist thrust from liberal intellectuals. The next opportunity will come around soon enough. Their cavalcade of causes revolves like a carousel — the Green Movement, the living wage, animal rights — virtually every one an attempt to deny individuals’ right to determine outcomes through free choice. The quarry never changes, only the backdrop to the chase. ”
Leftist Intelligentsia Dementia
http://spectator.org/archives/2010/01/05/leftist-intelligentsia-dementi

Tenuc
January 5, 2010 11:57 pm

Michael (18:16:25) :
“SO MUCH for all of that guff about global warming! Are world leaders having the wrong debate? We are experiencing the most prolonged period of icy weather in 40 years and feeling every bit of it. The harsh conditions are expected to continue into early next week. It is a time for taking particular care while driving, cycling or walking and for making sure that elderly neighbours are looked after in these difficult circumstances.”
Global Cooling
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/opinion/2010/0106/1224261728451.html

Reply: Thanks for posting this Michael.
Sudden warming/cooling events, which have lasted for several years, have been a feature of Earth’s climate for the past several hundred years, and this has happened with a periodicy of around 200. For the Maunder Minimum and Dalton Minimum these events seem to have coincided with a quiet sun, although the mechanism for why this happens has still not been found.
So nothing new is happening and panic/over-reaction/taxation/world government are not required. Mankind and most species have survived these events in the past and will survive this next event, should it come to pass.
Climate is the result of a number of processes which are driven by deterministic chaos. This means that trends provide no information about what the future will bring, and the only real information available is that from looking at the broad impact of climate quasi-cycles.
1410-1500 cold (Sporer minimum) – Low Solar Activity(LSA?)
1510-1600 warm – High Solar Activity(HSA?)
1610-1700 cold (Maunder minimum) – (LSA)
1710-1800 warm – (HSA)
1810-1900 cold (Dalton minimum) – (LSA)
1910-2000 warm – (HSA)
2010-2100 (cold???) – (LSA???)
It is interesting to note that within these cooler or warmer centuries, there are further periods of warmer and cooler climate happening on the decadal scale, and still more surprising perhaps, within each decade the same variance can be seen. Climate is unpredictable at all time-scales.

b.poli
January 6, 2010 12:02 am

Hmm. “Correlation between models and observations is 50 to 60%..” Do they flip coins? Or what is it about? I need some help I guess.

guidoLaMoto
January 6, 2010 1:50 am

Having recognized the fallacy of the concept of “Greenhouse Gases” based on the physics long ago, I’m by no means a supporter of the AGWers, but I think this author fails to realize that the predictions of the IPCC are simply outright prevarications and not false conclusions based on failure recognize Man’s ability to adapt.
The graphs in the article could (and should) be labeled “productivity vs. population density,” GDP being indirectly related to the latter. The author gives the impression that he thinks technology will always rise to the occassion to save Mankind from its population problem.
But, like population itself, all growth phenomenon, including growth of knowledge & technology, must follow a general logistic curve. Nothing can grow forever. The limits of the carrying capacity must always be dealt with.
We will reach a crisis in the developed world when food production falls precipitiously as oil is depleted sometime in this century. Modern agriculture is the process of turning oil into food. Those underdeveloped countries may already be adapted to such a world.

Antonia
January 6, 2010 2:22 am

Surely with the panic buying and schools closed due to harsh weather even Britains will finally realize that the officially sanctioned global warming story is absurd? Surely?
But then again, Australian government ministers are daring the new opposition leader, Tony Abbott, to stand by his claim that global warming is “crap” seeing as the Bureau of Meteorology has declared the last year and decade as the warmest on record. Sadly, Abbott is hedging his bets knowing that the majority of the population have been thoroughly brainwashed that global warming – oops climate change – oops ocean acidification – is true and due to human CO2 emissions.
If only Abbott came out fighting for what he believes in the world might change overnight, after all the political fight has to start somewhere. We here know the scientific fight has been won. Now it’s just a wearysome matter of slinging shots accurately and often enough to force our political representatives to actually listen to us instead of Condoleeza Rice, Malcolm Turnbull and all the other sleazes who stand to make millions from carbon trading. [MT was Australia’s so-called opposition leader who was prepared to pass PM Rudd’s carbon emissions trading sceme. For his support he got toppled.]
Don’t you all just love it how in the southern hemisphere Australia’s heatwaves have been attributed to AGW – i.e. climate change – but in the northern hemisphere the record-breaking freezes are just due to weather.

January 6, 2010 3:48 am

Another brilliant and clear post – WUWT is pure gold for non-scientists such as me. The entire farrago postulated by the IPCC reminds me that as literacy rises the ability of the general public to discern the difference between BS and fact falls.
What has happenned to the Western tradition of crusading investigative journalists in MSM?

Curiousgeorge
January 6, 2010 4:54 am

Socio/economic impacts and consequences are always associated with litigation. For those interested here’s a place to get some information. http://law.lexisnexis.com/practiceareas/….tigation-Ch art
Contains a link to the chart, but I’ll dupe it here: http://www.climatecasechart.com/
One of the more interesting parts of this concerns the SEC and corporate reporting requirements relative to climate change, which you will find reference and links to on page 10 of the above chart. This has been ongoing for about 3 years. Such reporting requirements (as always ) increase the cost of doing business for no discernible gain, even though some investors will and do base their decisions on such things. I expect that there will be increasing litigation in the near future as a result of Climategate, since the basis for much of this rulemaking is traceable to the IPCC, et al.

ShrNfr
January 6, 2010 5:13 am

But consider the socioeconomic impact of millions of little Barrie Harrops running around hawking windmills.

martyn
January 6, 2010 5:42 am

From The Times
December 21, 2009
“Gordon Brown calls for new group to police global environment issues”
Could there be any connection here:-
Secretive carbon startup brings Condoleezza Rice and $26m on Board
http://www.businessgreen.com/business-green/news/2255650/secretive-carbon-start-brings

Ryan Stephenson
January 6, 2010 6:20 am

I think this is laughable. Any temperature change that causes more ice to turn to water (i.e. causing sea levels to rise) must 1] cause more areas that are currently permafrost to become fertile 2] cause more of the liquid water to become water vapour that will subsequently turn into clouds and thus greater precipitation. Thus any productive land lost to rising sea levels are very likely to be replaced by new productive land gained from retreating permafrost and higher levels of precipitation. It should be a much simpler matter to predict the retreat in permafrost and the increase in precipitation than to predict the level of ice melt, but thanks to the “confirmational bias” all science can do is look for the bad news and never the good.

DirkH
January 6, 2010 6:36 am

“Alexander (03:48:48) :
[…]
The entire farrago postulated by the IPCC reminds me that as literacy rises the ability of the general public to discern the difference between BS and fact falls.”
Do not overestimate the according capabilities of our ancestors. I’m german, i should know.

John Galt
January 6, 2010 6:36 am

If we use the IPCC models and calculate the amount of reduction we will get if things like cap and trade implemented, it’s easy to see those measures will have almost no effect and are much pain for little gain.
But the IPCC models are flawed anyway. The belief that civilization and nature will not adapt are also flawed. The belief that only central planning and control can affect the claimed necessary changes is also flawed.

DirkH
January 6, 2010 6:50 am

“guidoLaMoto (01:50:35) :
[…]
The graphs in the article could (and should) be labeled “productivity vs. population density,” GDP being indirectly related to the latter. The author gives the impression that he thinks technology will always rise to the occassion to save Mankind from its population problem. ”
Guido, it is GDP per capita that is important, not the absolute GDP. As GDP per capita rises, a nation or the world becomes wealthier. What does this mean? It means that a population has surplus that it can invest into research and development. The wealthier your nation, the more research you can do. This explains why over time, new technologies are developed and used, and that’s why today the productivity for the same wealth can be higher than in the past. Even poor nations can harvest benefits from these new technologies developed in wealthier nations. An example? Tractors. A developed nation develops newer and better tractors. Poorer nations might not have the capabilities to develop the technology but can simply buy them. If they don’t have enough wealth to buy new tractors, they can buy used ones.
“But, like population itself, all growth phenomenon, including growth of knowledge & technology, must follow a general logistic curve. Nothing can grow forever. The limits of the carrying capacity must always be dealt with. ”
Read Julian Simon and Björn Lomborg about how limits of carrying capacity are sidestepped by changing to new raw materials.
“We will reach a crisis in the developed world when food production falls precipitiously as oil is depleted sometime in this century. Modern agriculture is the process of turning oil into food. Those underdeveloped countries may already be adapted to such a world.”
Even if it were true that we turn oil into food and absolutely need oil for that this would not be a problem. At the moment, extracting gas in situ from shale is becoming economically viable. Numerous other new mining technologies are being developed.
You bring the old Malthusian arguments. If Malthus had been right, we all would never have been born because the population would have collapsed long ago.

Dave F
January 6, 2010 9:06 am

“Yet, in holding scientific research and discovery in respect, as we should, we must also be alert to the equal and opposite danger that public policy could itself become the captive of a (psuedo)scientific-technological elite.”
Well, I often wondered what their basis for making the gloom and doom predictions was. This makes it clear that there is no basis.

guidoLaMoto
January 8, 2010 3:56 am

Dirk: Logically, there is an end to oil. New discoveries & technologies may extend its availability beyond our current estimates, but there will still be an end to it someday.
Buying tractors won’t help if there’s no oil. A man can only harvest 100 bu of corn in 8 hrs by hand. A combine does 800 bu per hour. That diffferential will have a big impact on food production & lifestyle when th oil runs out.
It takes the energy of one gal of oil to pump 100 gal of liquid petroleum. It takes 1 gal to produce 4 gal from oil shale. Th low hanging fruit is almost gone now.
You repeat the folly of thinking new technology will always necessarily materialize to rescue us from the limits of the carrying capacity. As the brochures say, “Past performance is no guarantee of future earnings.”

guidoLaMoto
January 8, 2010 3:59 am

And BTW, Dirk. Malthus thought growth was logarithmic. He didn’t realize it was logistic. Now we know better, but not all of us see the implications of it.

DirkH
January 8, 2010 1:20 pm

Diehard Malthusians here.
To each his own, kids, i give it up. I showed you my arguments and you keep on saying: “But the stream of human ingenuity will end RSN.”
Which i can’t disprove because it’s in the future. I have no more time for this debate; you can happily discuss the details of the coming inevitable collapse and – my advice – stock up on rock salt while civilization has some for you. Also, there’s always the helpful people at http://www.peakoil.com/ for survival tips.
Good Riddance,
Dirk

KDK
January 10, 2010 11:32 am

“I was posting on the Weather Channel FaceBook Page, nothing obscene or anything like that, just information about the solar minimum and global cooling, and I just got banned by Facebook. I’ve only been posting since yesterday. The thought police got me”…
Facebook is largely a social engineering (and spying) tool. It is largely a waste of time. I don’t use it and my undergrad degree is in CIS. I have no problem with trashing any idea/invention/belief when I find something that contradicts my current belief system. With that said, it is NOT easy to do, but it should, imo, be done. So many of ‘our’ beliefs AREN’T ours at all; but another’s.