Canadian Contretemps

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach

Driving home today, I heard about a new report from one of those Canadian “we work for the Government but we’re actually really truly independent, honest we are” kind of organizations. It’s called “PAYING THE PRICE: THE ECONOMIC IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE FOR CANADA.” It is chock full of the usual nonsense about how, in a country plagued by cold Arctic winds and suffering from a short growing season, a couple degrees of warming will be a multi-billion dollar national tragedy. It featured the usual huge numbers, warming will cost multiple tens of billions of dollars per year. (Curiously, there is no mention of any billions in supposed costs from the 20th century warming.)

I got to wondering about how they estimated these huge costs. I mean, were they based on scientific studies, or from actuarial data, or were they estimated from past damages, or were they just extracting the numbers from their fundamental orifices?

The answer, I found out, is “none of the above”. Once again, it’s models all the way down. In this case, it’s a whiz-bang model called Page09. Here’s their diagram of how it all works, from page 37 of the cited report.

Figure 1. Description from the climate report of the model used to estimate the damages from warming temperatures.

Damage functions? I like the sound of that, I never heard of a “damage function”, but then I was born yesterday. So I set out to understand the Page09 damage functions.

In my research I find this:

Within the PAGE09 Model, damage from climate change is modelled firstly as combination of specified damage functions for sea level rise, economic effects and non-economic effects.

In this reference they give the general form of the damage function. I have spread out the right side of the equation to show the two different parts.

Climate change economic and non-economic impacts before adaptation are captured as a proportion of GDP by the climate change damage function. As do all the other main IAMs with the exception of MERGE, damage is defined as a non-linear function (Bosello and Roson, 2007). Welfare impacts (WI) are expressed as a polynomial function of the difference between regional and tolerable temperature levels (RTT) as follows:

WI(t, d, r) = [RTT(t, d, r) / 2,5 ^POW ]        *         W(d, 0) *[WF(r)/100] * GDP(t, r)

where t corresponds to time, d identifies the damage type (economic, non-economic, sea level rise) and r the region; 2.5 are the °C corresponding to the tolerable increase in temperature due to global warming; POW is the power of the polynomial impact function; W(d, 0) is the impact in the focus region (i.e. EU) at 2.5 °C and WF(r) is the regional weight applied to EU impact to calculate the impact in other world regions. SOURCE

Let me give a stab at translating that into English. First, the left hand side in brackets says take the amount by which the region is warmer than the tolerable range RTT(t,d,r) . Divide that by 2.5, and take that to some power POW. That gives you the damage impact index.

Second, the right hand side just adjusts the damage index calculated on the left hand side, to convert the impact into a dollar value. The important thing to note is that for a given damage type and region, the right hand side is a constant, that is to say it does not vary with T. All the work is done by the left-hand side.

Another reference gives the exact same equation for the damage function, with different symbols:

1.3.2 Model adjustments

At the core of the damage function in PAGE09 is the Equation (5).14

d = alpha * (TACT/TCAL) ^ beta

where d is the damage, alpha is the damage at the calibration temperature, TCAL is the calibration temperature rise, and TACT is the actual temperature rise, beta is the damage exponent.

The calibration temperature is on average 3°C. Therefore, if the actual temperature rise is 3 °C, on average, the damage equals alpha. The damage exponent, beta, becomes more important as temperatures rise above TCAL. In the standard model, beta is entered as triangle (1.5, 2, 3). Therefore, on average, the exponent is 2.167 (slightly above a quadratic), meaning that at twice the calibration temperature (on average, TACT equals 6°C), the damage will be 4.5 times alpha. SOURCE

The damage function graphs out as shown in Figure 2, for various values of the power coefficient POW (also called “beta”) and RTT(t, d, r) (also called “TACT”).

Figure 2. The form of the damage function for the triangular number POW = {1.5, 2, 3}. Note that for a 5° rise the maximum curve (POW = 3) forecasts eight times the damage.

This shows that in all cases used in, damage rises faster than temperature.

There are some odd parts of using this form of a damage function.

First, the one that rises the fastest with increasing warming (POW = 3, green line) starts out the slowest. What would be the physical reason for that?

Second, it assumes that human beings don’t learn. Sure, if there is one year of warmer weather, some farmers will lose money from planting the wrong thing, or at the wrong time. But if the warmer weather continues, the farmers will plant earlier and rejoice that the growing season is longer.

There is also another problem with this kind of analysis. In addition to assuming that farmers are stupid and that damage goes up geometrically as temperatures rise, there is no provision for the benefits of the warming. They pay lip service to the idea of benefits in the report, but I see no serious understanding of the difference between the costs and the benefits of warming for Canada. One difference is that the costs are often short-term (adjustment costs), while the benefits of the warmer climate are often longer lasting.

Again, farming is a good example. The costs to farming of a warming are short-lived. For a few years the farmers would plant something that might not be optimum for the new, warmer climate. But after that, the longer growing season is a benefit forever … how can they not include things like that?

Around the latitude of Canada, the change in average temperature as one goes north is on the order of 2.5° (where damage = 1) for every couple hundred miles. So if you took a Canadian farm and moved it two hundred miles south, do you seriously think that the farmers would suffer huge problems?

The same thing is true of the forests. They claim there will be huge damage to the forests from a few degrees temperature rise … but for many forests in Canada, the same forest exists two hundred miles to the south of a given point … and two hundred miles to the north of that point. That’s a change of FIVE DEGREES, OMG, THE SOUTHERN TREES MUST BE BURNING UP, THEY ARE FIVE DEGREES WARMER THAN THE NORTHERN TREES, COULD BE EIGHT TIMES THE DAMAGE …

I fear I can’t appropriately express my contempt for this kind of grade-school level of thinking about damage impact. If that’s the best a bunch of “damage analysts” can come up with, I’d fire them on the spot.

Always learning, I find out that this family of models are called “IAMS”, for Impact Assessment Models. The most trenchant comment I have found about them comes from the first source cited above, which says (emphasis mine):

An interesting challenge to the methodology of IAMs comes from a series of papers from Weitzman (2009a, 2009b, 2009c). In these papers, he puts forward a number of critiques of the current cost-benefit analysis of climate change, especially the approach embodied in IAMs.

Weitzman’s observations go even further with the elaboration of what is referred to as the ‘dismal theorem’. The idea is basically that under certain conditions, the expected loss from high-consequence, low-probability events can be infinite. In such a situation, standard cost-benefit analysis is therefore no longer an appropriate tool. Weitzman argues that, given the extent of our current understanding, these conditions apply to climate change.

Taking this idea to its limit would suggest that IAMs have little relevance for policy, as the response ought always to be to choose policies that do everything possible to avoid an infinite loss, even if there is only a small probability of such an outcome.

This “dismal theorem” is an extremely important conclusion, and is applicable to a host of the modeling exercises involved with thermal doomsday scenarios.

So Canadians, when they throw this high-cost, low-value modeling exercise in your face, you can just say “Sorry, go hawk your model results somewhere else. IAMS have little relevance for policy”.

Finally, as a businessman, I’ve done a host of cost-benefit studies. I have no problem with a proper historically based cost-benefit analysis of some possible future occurrence or action. However, the “PAYING THE PRICE …” report is nothing of the sort.

My condolences to my northern neighbors, who have their own Kyoto crosses to bear …

w.

PS — The climate models say that the maximum effect of the putative warming will be seen in the extra-tropical winter nights. Is this a problem? I mean, I don’t hear a lot of Canadians saying “Dang, it’s getting way too warm after midnight in February” …

PPS — my favorite argument is that the problem is not the absolute temperature change, it is the speed of the temperature change that is claimed will cause the problems. Yeah, at the much-hyped theoretical future rate of 0.03 degrees of warming per year, watch out when you step on board. If you’re not ready for it, the G forces from suddenly taking on that magnitude of high-speed warming can cause whiplash …

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dwright
October 2, 2011 12:59 am

rbateman says:
October 1, 2011 at 11:46 pm
In a word – COLD

BCBill
October 2, 2011 1:12 am

Why does anybody even bother reading reports from economistst? Economists failed to predict every major economic event from the great depression to the savings and loan crisis, to the sub-prime loans crisis (and every other economic event in between). They can predict nothing, they have no empirically proven methods to correct economic problems. Therefore economics is a fraudulent occupation. It exists at all only because it is fronted by non-capitalist business interests to legitimize immoral manipulation of markets and finances. The economics community even bought their own “Nobel” prize (not really Nobel or noble) to try to bask in some of the glow surrounding legitimate fields of investigation. Aside from a small number of rational individuals, most economists are simply shills to rationalize such parasitic activities as commodities and stock trading, arbitrage and carbon credit trading. Economists have difficult projecting a 20 year straight line one year into the future, let alone modelling anything remotely as complex as climate. The best thing to do is ignore all reports by economists. To pay attention to them, even to point out how farcical they are, simply encourages them.

Allan
October 2, 2011 1:43 am

Here in Toronto
as the temperature drops to near freezing
announcing the beginning of another grim 8 month winter
I continually ask my neighbours
when are we going to get this global warming
that they have been promising us for years?
The can’t seem to say
but they all are terribly afraid of it nonetheless.
Canadians are insane.

John Marshall
October 2, 2011 1:54 am

I use a model to assess other models and my model output about this model is:
C+R+A+P= yes you’ve guessed it.
Actually Willis your initial assumption was correct. Out of Orifice figures.

DirkH
October 2, 2011 2:03 am

Thanks. It looks like under any rock you turn you find political scientists thriving on rotting heaps of Dollars and Euros.
About the inventor of the exponential damage function:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin_L._Weitzman
“Martin Weitzman serves as a consultant to The World Bank, Stanford Research Institute, International Monetary Fund, Agency for International Development, Arthur D. Little Co., Canadian Parliamentary Committee on Employment, Icelandic Committee on Natural Resources, National Academy Panel on Integrated Environmental and Economic Accounting.”
A paper by him:
http://www.economics.harvard.edu/faculty/weitzman/files/REStatFINAL.pdf

Rhys Jaggar
October 2, 2011 2:21 am

Look mate
If your sources of funding rely on the funders being idiots, why do you suppose the damage analysts have the nous to realise that farmers aren’t just as stupid?
It’s not just temperature that would affect farming decisions. It’s also rainfall patterns, both amounts but also timings and spread between deluges and drizzle.
Economists still don’t get ‘adjustment theory’; do they?
It’s that Nobel Prize-winning insight that if you have less money to spend each month, in general you may find that in a few spending classes, you choose to either decrease frequency of spend or average spend/spending round.
You don’t say?
You know the effect of that on the economy right now in the eating trade? You’ll find more restaurants catering to the ueber-rich, pretty much the same numbers catering to the middle and upper middle range and quite a few at the bottom range going bust.
Do their models factor in things which chnage a constant temperature leading to a change in temperature? I’m talking about chopping down trees. This has huge effects on transpiration of water and, hence, rainfall. It has huge effects on ability of the soil to absorb rain which falls and erosion of topsoil.
If you read history about the Medieval Warm Period, you’ll find a migration of Danes to Greenland for several centuries where they could feed themselves happily. Until when? Oh, that would be the Little Ice Age wouldn’t it?? I seem to read in my history books that rather a lot of farmers died in those days….wonderful thing global cooling, isn’t it??
Thanks for the article. Keeping writing similar!

October 2, 2011 2:35 am

I’ve now read large chunks of this work of fiction, and came across this little gem in section 2.3 ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES OF CLIMATE CHANGE FOR CANADA
“Costs are higher with more climate change. On a dollar basis, a richer Canada would
face higher costs than in the alternate case, since the value and number of assets exposed to damages from climate change is higher. The combination of high climate change and rapid growth leads to the highest economic cost impacts.”
In other words, a richer Canada would do as little (i.e. nothing) to mitigate the effects of “damages from climate change” as a poorer Canada. Canadians will simply sit around and fiddle while Ottowa burns and coastal cities drown (with citizens presumably still in their beds).
The hidden message is, of course, that economic growth is BAD BAD BAD in a moderately warming world. What a surprise.

DN
October 2, 2011 2:51 am

Re: “a new report from one of those Canadian “we work for the Government but we’re actually really truly independent, honest we are” kind of organizations.”
Try working for the government and getting a paper CRITICAL of this arrant nonsense published. Just sayin’.
In other news, Ontario has a provincial election coming up, and the Liberal incumbent, Dalton McGuinty, is airing a campaign commercial where he says “8 years ago Ontario had 10 wind turbines, today we have more than 900.” He then cites David Suzuki as praising his government’s environmental policies.
Boy, talk about a tin ear. Can’t wait to hit the polls. Meanwhile, companies that offer REAL “green energy” (high efficiency gas and conventional heating and cooling systems, water-based and DX geothermal systems, etc.) can’t make a living because McGuinty is taxing the crap out of us to fund his pie-in-the-sky bird-blenders and solar panels. The billions of dollars he has put into solar have ended up adding 86 MW of (theoretical) generation with a 10-20% capacity factor to the Ontario grid; the same money could’ve built a 2.2GW nuclear generating station with a 92% capacity factor. The one thing leftist environmental zealots all have in common is an inability to do basic arithmetic.
Me? In anticipation of another winter of global warming, I just split and stacked three cords of hardwood.

October 2, 2011 3:24 am

I did of course mean “adapt to the effects” and not “mitigate the effects” in my previous comment. Reading this sort of stuff (rubbish reports, not WUWT) is rotting my brain. I’m clearly suffering a failure to adapt.

old44
October 2, 2011 3:38 am

10 to1 on says fundamental orifices.

Ursus Augustus
October 2, 2011 3:44 am

The more I see of this hysterical lunacy the more I am reminded of the reasons why Martin Luther started his break with the Catholic Church: the moral, political and commercial corruption that had grown up, the selling of indulgences, the hypocrisy of priest, abbots and bishops with women on the side etc etc. It took the Church 1500 years to reach that point where it was plain as day what the joke was, it has taken these alarmist bozo’s a mere 15 years or so.
I am an engineer , all I do is model in my analysis and lives depend on me getting pretty close to reality. They call that cretinous mathematical crap modelling?

DirkH
October 2, 2011 4:09 am

Rhys Jaggar says:
October 2, 2011 at 2:21 am
“Economists still don’t get ‘adjustment theory’; do they?”
I think comparing this Weitzman fellow to the late Milton Friedman is like comapring Michael Mann to Richard Lintzen.

October 2, 2011 4:14 am

Willis:
You fail to consider the enormous economic impact inflicted on Canada by people fleeing the warming climate in Minnesota, including those trying to escape the hoards of refugees from WIsconsin and Iowa, who have to move out to make room for climate-displaced people from Missouri and Kansas, who can no longer co-exist with the influx of survivors from Oklahoma and Texas. Global warming will spark the Great Northern Diaspora of half a billion people desperately fleeing to the last polar refuge. I have modeled this effect numerous times and I assure you, it is much, much worse that we thought.

DirkH
October 2, 2011 4:14 am

Another wikipedia quote about Weitzman:
“Weitzman’s research has covered a wide range of topics including Environmental and Natural Resource Economics, Green Accounting, Economics of Biodiversity, Economics of Environmental Regulation, Economics of Climate Change, Discounting, Comparative Economic Systems, Economics of Profit Sharing, Economic Planning, and Microfoundations of Macro Theory.”
He’s a kind of economist tool for the Green NGO’s and Social Justice (see Economics of Profit sharing), it seems to me.

October 2, 2011 4:51 am

I have read the report. The work is of shameful quality.
Tom Harris has done stellar work in combating the alarmist reports in Canada as the the skeptical side of things is very rarely reported. He currently has the report and his response to it linked on his home page.
http://www.climatescienceinternational.org/
He was interviewed on the Charles Adler show on Sun News:
http://www.sunnewsnetwork.ca/video/search/Tom%20Harris/gloomsday/1191135453001
The interview is well worth the listen. Charles is a good interviewer and Tom Harris is a “fun guest” with facts at his finger tips.

George
October 2, 2011 5:15 am

BCBill says:
October 2, 2011 at 1:12 am
Yep, ignore all economists. Useless. Like the Ross McKitrick fellow, eh?
Real economist know that it is models all the way down. And the biggest unknown is human behavior which controls it all.
on the side, want to annoy a Keynesian? Ask them to explain stagflation with a Keynesian model.

Craig Loehle
October 2, 2011 5:22 am

In this paper:
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1046/j.1365-2699.1998.2540735.x/abstract
Loehle, C. 1998. Height growth rate tradeoffs determine northern and southern range limits for trees. J. Biogeography 25:735-742
and others I show clearly that trees (and other plants) will not die when it warms. The northern range limits are determined by freezing but the southern by competition, because more southern species grow faster than the northern species (a fir tree will grow in Atlanta, but not very fast). They just imagine death and destruction.

William
October 2, 2011 5:26 am

The Canadian Boreal forests are expanding due to increased CO2 and slightly warmer temperatures. I suppose that is an inconvenient truth.
Most of the warming has taken place at higher latitudes where growth is limited to the number of frost free days.
I noticed the IPCC included in their estimate of the economic impact of global warming a significant reduction in tourism as less people from Northern Countries will travel south to get away from cold winter temperatures. So far there is no evidence that is problem in Canada.

October 2, 2011 5:38 am

GIGO all the way. Garbage in, garbage out, and garbage in between. They input the garbage from what-if climate models, run it through garbage what-if functions, and expect to get useful economic information.

Steve from Rockwood
October 2, 2011 5:39 am

Stephen Rasey says:
October 1, 2011 at 11:29 pm
“such a damage function might increase quickly at low temperatures, but once the damage is done, further rises in temperature have little effect”
================================
Stephen, I don’t think such a damage function could exist in nature as “normal” temperature variations are so much higher than the proposed AGW trends. Otherwise all the forests would have died by now.
It is more likely that a damage function would be little affected by typical temperature variations until some point was reached and then its sensitivity would increase. Problem with even that is it doesn’t take into account the ability of the environment to adapt. If you believe in ice ages you have to be believe in adaptation and a low damage function sensitivity.
The only way a damage function could be real was if its effects were felt over a very short time period where adaptation was not fast enough to respond.
Also, take a look at Willis’ Figure 1. All the inputs into the system are presumed to be negative. There are no offsetting positive inputs such as lower heating needs, longer growing seasons, adaptation, less RVs going to Florida etc.

Ed Fix
October 2, 2011 5:44 am

In other words:
“Oh my God! It’s worse than we thought!!”

KenB
October 2, 2011 5:49 am

IAM = Idiotic Agenda Model (Maths)? sorry can’t resist!!

Catfish
October 2, 2011 5:54 am

Willis-
Did you check who is on the Round Table?
May be a few former employees who want more grants.

Garacka
October 2, 2011 5:56 am

Figure 4 on page 30 of their report shows “High” and “Low” climate change which translate as the “upper hot range” and the “lower hot range”. They could have fawned some objectivity by making these warming and cooling. The cooling could then be shown to be a miniscule likelihood, say .01%, and the propaganda message from this piece might be even stronger.

Mike M
October 2, 2011 6:06 am

“…I can’t appropriately express my contempt for this kind of grade-school level of thinking.”
Grade schoolers doth protest sir!

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