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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pat
October 2, 2011 9:54 am

Pseudo mathematics for the pseudo mathematician. Sociologist have been playing that game for years. Much like AGW itself. About as valuable as tree rings in forecasting weather.

Lyle
October 2, 2011 9:56 am

taxpayer from Canada
“The National Round Table on the Envoronment and the Economy” that produced this drivel claims to be a non-profit organization. Just wondering how much of my taxes contributed to the thing.

Betapug
October 2, 2011 10:13 am

Canada is simply taking a lead from Chicago’s actions in preparing for a Louisiana like climate within the next few years…according to our National Broadcaster: http://www.cbc.ca/video/news/audioplayer.html?clipid=2138771012
How will we deal with the alligators in the Great Lakes?

Bruce Cobb
October 2, 2011 10:15 am

Ow, Canada! We feel your pain.

October 2, 2011 10:18 am

Re – “steven mosher says:
October 1, 2011 at 5:37 pm
http://www.newton.ac.uk/programmes/CLP/seminars/120711001.html
watch this Willis.. you’ll enjoy it”
Jonathan Rougier – “We know that climate is so complex, that even a code that’s a million lines long is not going to do a good job in capturing all the wonderful micro/macro scalar variation we see in the actual climate, and especially when you couple together the atmosphere, the ocean, the cryosphere, the biosphere [and] the chemistry.”
Now I understand (a) why, in the past, the art of reading chicken entrails was the accepted practice for predicting the future, (b) why current climate models are the present method of prediction, and (c) why man’s folly in trying to predict future climate changes, based on millions of variabilities, will continue ad infinitum…not bad work if you can get it…
As someone once told me, if you’re going to predict, predict often…..
Rougier’s power point presentation is at http://www.newton.ac.uk/programmes/CLP/seminars/120711001.pdf

October 2, 2011 10:20 am
Editor
October 2, 2011 10:44 am

Andrew Harding
We don’t want any of your subversive nonsense here.
Newcastle (your local council?) is spending large sums of money to educate businesses and schools to cope with a warmer climate.
You did NOT have snow last winter, you roads are NOT frost damaged, the summer was NOT cold and wet and you did NOT need your central heating on in August,
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_6783/is_2011_July_26/ai_n57898314/
You are imagining things and are a very naughty boy.
tonyb

TomRude
October 2, 2011 10:49 am

As pointed by a poster in another forum:
http://www.vancouversun.com/news/Fifty+year+drop+Asian+monsoons+linked+fossil+fuel/5479428/story.html
“Our data shows that the 50-year trend of decreasing monsoon rains is not a natural variation and is likely because of the particles from burning fossil fuels,” study co-author Yi Ming, a scientist at the Washington-based National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, said in an interview. “By better understanding the past, we can be more confident about predicting future climate change.”
The researchers ran data on pollutants compiled by the United Nations’ International Panel on Climate Change in computer models to determine the effect on monsoon precipitation. They then compared the results with 50 years of rain data from India and Pakistan.”
And on the newspaper SAME page:
“Monsoon rain crippled Pakistan’s biggest city Karachi on Tuesday, and the unpopular government came under pressure to provide relief for about 300,000 people left homeless by floods in the south. More than 800,000 families remain without permanent shelter from the 2010 countrywide floods, aid groups say, and more than a million need food assistance.”
Read more: http://www.vancouversun.com/business/Monsoon+rains+floods+kill+hundreds/5399783/story.html#ixzz1ZeEC9bXr
===
Clearly the models do not fit the reality!!!

PaulH
October 2, 2011 11:00 am

Fortunately there are some sane Canadians, such as Dr. Tim Ball:
http://www.sunnewsnetwork.ca/video/search/tim%20ball/climate-conundrum/1141170445001

Jarmo
October 2, 2011 11:00 am

At least some studies see climate change as a positive thing for forestry in boreal forests:
http://www.mendeley.com/research/sensitivity-growth-scots-pine-norway-spruce-silver-birch-climate-change-forest-management-boreal-conditions/
An assessment is made on how climate change and thinning may affect the total stem wood growth of Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris), Norway spruce (Picea abies) and silver birch (Betula pendula), and the resulting effects on the total timber yield and the consequent distribution of timber between pulp wood and saw logs. A process-based model used in the study links the flows of carbon, energy, nitrogen and water in trees and soils as affecting the physiological and ecological performance of trees under the control of climatic and edaphic factors and management. The simulations represent the boreal forest in Southern and Northern Finland. Under thinning, the climate change increased the growth of Scots pine up to 28% in the south and up to 54% in the north, whereas the increase for Norway spruce was up to 24% in the south and 40% in the north. The response of silver birch was smaller than that of conifers; i.e. growth increased by 21% in the south and 34% in the north. The enhanced growth implied an increase in the timber yield regardless of tree species and site. The increase for Scots pine was up to 26% in the south and 50% in the north. For Norway spruce, the increase was somewhat smaller, up to 23% in the south and up to 40% in the north. For silver birch, the increase was the smallest, up to 20% in the south and up to 33% in the north. The thinning regime had, however, a clear effect on total growth and timber yield. Any thinning regime increasing the mean stocking over the rotation increased the total growth and timber yield regardless of the tree species and site. An adaptation of the current management rules might be needed in order to exploit the benefits that climate change seems to provide in the form of increased growth and timber yield in the boreal conditions.

TomRude
October 2, 2011 11:03 am

And as a follow up to my first post:
“Floods kill 18, displace 100,000 in east India
Agence France-Presse September 12, 2011
BHUBANESWAR, India — Heavy flooding in eastern India has killed 18 people and displaced almost 100,000 over the past week, government and aid officials said Monday, warning of more wet weather to come.
The floods were triggered by torrential monsoon rains across Orissa state, causing water levels to rise and overflow river banks, sparking an operation that saw helicopters drop off emergency food packets to help the stranded.
“We are face-to-face with yet another bitter flood that has claimed 18 lives with another six people reported missing,” Orissa’s disaster management minister Surya Narayan Patra told AFP.(…)”
This on the same page in the same newspaper!!!!

DesertYote
October 2, 2011 11:28 am

Doug Proctor says:
October 1, 2011 at 5:44 pm
###
Its spelled “Mogollon”, the ‘ll’ pronounce like the ‘j’ in fjord. It actually refers more to the escarpment. The plateau is usually called the “Colorado Plateau”.

nc
October 2, 2011 11:37 am

George in Richmond (BC)
Besides Bill Good of CKNW don’t forget Chris Gailus of Global Vancouver another talking shrill of Suzuki’s. Modern mainstream media all about the show and not the facts. Stopped watching Global mainly because of his warming support.

Billy Liar
October 2, 2011 11:57 am

steven mosher says:
October 1, 2011 at 5:37 pm
Steven Mosher, taunting Willis by giving him a link to a guy who stands up and starts talking about his model as an ‘experiment’ is very unfair. Are you trying to give him high blood pressure?
/sarc

ferd berple
October 2, 2011 12:21 pm

Unlike the US, most of the Cars in Canada are already electric. We plug them in during the winter which pretty much keeps them running year round. We also have a lot of renewable energy cars. During the winter when you can’t plug them in, all it takes is a small charcoal fire under the oil pan to warm them up a bit and get them running.
In the north of Canada, where wood and electricity are hard to find, we use perpetual motion cars and trucks. You never shut them off during winter, otherwise they won’t start until late spring when there is enough solar power to get them going again. Once started they seem to run fine until the next winter.

DirkH
October 2, 2011 12:32 pm

steven mosher says:
October 1, 2011 at 5:37 pm
“http://www.newton.ac.uk/programmes/CLP/seminars/120711001.html
watch this Willis.. you’ll enjoy it”
Makes you cry for every GBP these people are allowed to waste.

ferd berple
October 2, 2011 12:33 pm

It should be noted that not all cars in Canada are electric. Out on the west coast of Canada in Lotus Land where Suzuki lives, the cars there are all pretty much solar powered. Except for the very rich who can afford Whistler, the cars all pretty much run all year round even if you don’t plug them in.
Recently this has begun to change, led by Suzuki himself who was spotted this summer with an all electric Prius. With a long enough extension cord he can reportedly drive it all the way from Kits to Downtown. No word yet on what sort of mileage the heater gets.

bubbagyro
October 2, 2011 12:52 pm

ferd you are a riot! Thanks.
This computer model is a riot also. Don’t these guys test their own models, as Willis did? If temperature goes up, and CO2 increases as it is released from the oceans, don’t crop yields go up? Where are the mitigating expressions—there have to be many beneficial results that can be added to the simplistic equation, and many clever ones here have pointed these out. What are these clowns thinking? Do they NOT think, just type like the Chimpanzee novel writing pool of lore?
This reminds me of the Piltdown Man scandal, where the fraudsters fused pig, monkey and human bones to make the story they wanted to tell. It persisted as “truth” for decades. Thank goodness we have the internet, where clever minds like Wilis, Anthony et.al. can’t be silenced, else we would have the warm-earther cult lasting for decades!

bubbagyro
October 2, 2011 12:55 pm

Thanks again, Ferd.
Just an aside…I often wondered how Canadians could eat that tough back-bacon every day with their four front teeth missing? Perhaps you could shed light on this mystery also?

Andrew Harding
Editor
October 2, 2011 1:27 pm

Thanks for your comments climatereason.
Yes I live in Newcastle. I am paying £2180 council tax a year for roads that are designed to slow traffic flow down as opposed to keeping it moving, salaries for people who cannot ask for a white or black coffee because it is racist and to cap it all “teach” AGW. The teaching of AGW galls me the most because many of the kids at the local state schools cannot carry out simple arithmetic or string a sentence together.
They must really get therir knickers in a twist though about the devils machine (car) and the fact that slowing it down burns more fossil fuel and produces more CO2.
They also, a few years ago put a pollution sensor in the underground bus concourse instead of in the open air, this gave us the distinction of having the most polluted city in the country until it was placed more sensibly.

Ken Harvey
October 2, 2011 1:39 pm

The report addresses economic impacts. The only direct money value input appears to be the GDP which is then manipulated by various qualifiers. That may mislead some to believe that there is at least one real number in the equation. That is not in fact the truth of matters. The GDP is what the relative statistical authority says it is! There is not a country on earth, not even a tiny one, which knows what its GDP really is. Data is ( as I am talking about a body of data the singular is appropriate) collected from various sources of extremely variable accuracy. This is totaled and adjusted in the hope of eliminating the obvious sources of error. The bigger the economy the more complex the adjustment exercise and that final figure can be subject to political adjustment. How good is the final figure? Pretty good – probably within 10%.

clipe
October 2, 2011 2:00 pm
bubbagyro
October 2, 2011 2:32 pm

clipe:
Thanks for the heads up.
The author, Laurence Smith is indeed one of the perps in this saga:
Dr. Laurence C. Smith is Professor and Vice-Chair of Geography and Professor of Earth & Space Sciences at UCLA. He earned a B.S. in Geological Sciences from the University of Illinois (1989), M.S. in geological sciences from Indiana University (1991), and Ph.D. in Earth and atmospheric sciences from Cornell University (1996). He has published more than sixty research papers including in the journals Science and Nature. In 2006, he briefed Congress on the likely impacts of northern climate change, and in 2007 his work appeared prominently in the Fourth Assessment Report of the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). He has won more than $5M in external grant funding from the National Science Foundation and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) for his research on northern climate change.”
Anyone care to look up what his “contribution” was in IPCC 2007?
Five million$$$ ??? from Big Warmers? AND I thought taking Geography in university was just above Basket Weaving 101. Who knew? I could have taken Geo instead of Advanced Calculus IV and Advanced Organic Chemistry and gotten more rest and partying in…
Nice going Larry. Willis, Anthony, how much did you guys get from big oil?
Must be nice to be at UCLA and an IPCC author…

October 2, 2011 3:47 pm

Willis and others, one needn’t worry about us northerners so much as long as we have a conservative government in charge. I believe you southerners have graver worries. Both countries are full of disaster models for climate change but you folks have people in government that are pushing this stuff out there. They even invented the CO2-is-a-dangerous-pollutant in the clean air act. Fortunately our liberals and socialists are not likely to be in power for a stretch of years into the future by which time we may have this thing licked by inconvenient data on sealevel decline, and cooling.

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