Warren Buffet, Climate Change and Pascal's Wager

By Mark Hirschey - Work of Mark Hirschey, CC BY-SA 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=2581999
By Mark Hirschey – Work of Mark Hirschey, CC BY-SA 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=2581999

Guest essay by Eric Worrall

Legendary businessman Warren Buffet has waded into the climate issue, with his latest letter to Berkshire Hathaway investors. Buffet seems to believe climate change is likely to be a serious issue – but he is cautious about this belief. Naturally everyone is interpreting Buffet’s words to suit their own position.

I am writing this section because we have a proxy proposal regarding climate change to consider at this year’s annual meeting. The sponsor would like us to provide a report on the dangers that this change might present to our insurance operation and explain how we are responding to these threats.

It seems highly likely to me that climate change poses a major problem for the planet. I say “highly likely” rather than “certain” because I have no scientific aptitude and remember well the dire predictions of most “experts” about Y2K. It would be foolish, however, for me or anyone to demand 100% proof of huge forthcoming damage to the world if that outcome seemed at all possible and if prompt action had even a small chance of thwarting the danger.

This issue bears a similarity to Pascal’s Wager on the Existence of God. Pascal, it may be recalled, argued that if there were only a tiny probability that God truly existed, it made sense to behave as if He did because the rewards could be infinite whereas the lack of belief risked eternal misery.

Likewise, if there is only a 1% chance the planet is heading toward a truly major disaster and delay means passing a point of no return, inaction now is foolhardy. Call this Noah’s Law: If an ark may be essential for survival, begin building it today, no matter how cloudless the skies appear.

It’s understandable that the sponsor of the proxy proposal believes Berkshire is especially threatened by climate change because we are a huge insurer, covering all sorts of risks. The sponsor may worry that property losses will skyrocket because of weather changes. And such worries might, in fact, be warranted if we wrote ten- or twenty-year policies at fixed prices. But insurance policies are customarily written for one year and repriced annually to reflect changing exposures. Increased possibilities of loss translate promptly into increased premiums.

Think back to 1951 when I first became enthused about GEICO. The company’s average loss-per-policy was then about $30 annually. Imagine your reaction if I had predicted then that in 2015 the loss costs would increase to about $1,000 per policy. Wouldn’t such skyrocketing losses prove disastrous, you might ask? Well, no.

Over the years, inflation has caused a huge increase in the cost of repairing both the cars and the humans involved in accidents. But these increased costs have been promptly matched by increased premiums. So, paradoxically, the upward march in loss costs has made insurance companies far more valuable. If costs had remained unchanged, Berkshire would now own an auto insurer doing $600 million of business annually rather than one doing $23 billion.

Up to now, climate change has not produced more frequent nor more costly hurricanes nor other weather- related events covered by insurance. As a consequence, U.S. super-cat rates have fallen steadily in recent years, which is why we have backed away from that business. If super-cats become costlier and more frequent, the likely – though far from certain – effect on Berkshire’s insurance business would be to make it larger and more profitable.

As a citizen, you may understandably find climate change keeping you up nights. As a homeowner in a low-lying area, you may wish to consider moving. But when you are thinking only as a shareholder of a major insurer, climate change should not be on your list of worries.

Read more: http://www.berkshirehathaway.com/letters/2015ltr.pdf

If adapting to or mitigating climate change was cost free, I would be an enthusiast – embracing free protection from an unlikely risk is a no brainer. But actions advocated by climate enthusiasts all have a cost, which has frequently been admitted to be in the trillions of dollars.

Even if alarmists are right about climate sensitivity to CO2, does global warming have the potential to make the world uninhabitable? I suggest the historic record strongly indicates that the answer is no.

A 2c warmer world, even a 4c warmer world, would still be habitable, perhaps more than habitable; life would likely be far more abundant, than today’s world. Wild predictions of lonely survivors clinging to existence on the edge of Antarctica are nonsense.

We know this, because in geologically recent times, the world was that warm. The Cretaceous Period, which lasted for 80 million years, and ended 66 million years ago, had a CO2 level of around 1700ppm, and was 4c hotter than today’s world. The dinosaurs didn’t eke out an existence in a barren scorching desert – their world was a lush, tropical world of jungles, giant trees, and super abundant life. So the risk that the Earth will become uninhabitable in the next few centuries, due to anthropogenic CO2, is essentially zero.

Next we have to consider other risks, the opportunity cost of chasing the climate dragon. What do we lose, which we could have had, if we hadn’t spent a trillion dollars building wind turbines?

As the recent Chelyabinsk Meteor showed, as countless asteroid strikes throughout the Earth’s history has shown, there is a very real risk of a catastrophic encounter with a large meteor. The probability in a given year of the Earth being struck by a dangerous meteor is very low – but a really large meteor actually could end civilisation, or could even end all life on Earth.

The Cretaceous Period ended because the Earth was struck by a gigantic meteor, which blackened the skies – eventually killing 75% of all living species on Earth. What would have happened if the meteor was a little larger? Would Earth’s biosphere have been returned to a primitive primordial soup, with tough single-celled organisms clinging to life on a barren, blasted world? Or worse, could the atmosphere itself have been swept into space by the impact, leaving an unbreathable mix of volcanic sulphates and ash?

Of course, you don’t need a dinosaur killer to end civilisation. Much smaller meteors pose a significant threat. For example, the East Mediterranean Event, a nuclear scale meteoric blast which occurred in 2002, occurred during a period of heightened tension between India and Pakistan. If the meteor had struck a few hours later, over India or Pakistan, it could have been mistaken for a first strike, and triggered a nuclear war.

If we bankrupt the world by chasing climate fears, we won’t have any cash left over for a meteor defence system.

There is a long list of other problems which could use some of that trillion dollars climate cash; disease, poverty, desperation, hunger, all of which would be ignored, if the world committed every available resource to building wind turbines.

Disease should be an especial concern for Westerners. The recent Ebola epidemic came very close to spreading beyond Africa. The period between infection and symptoms is frighteningly long. While it has been claimed that such a disease couldn’t spread in the West, I’m not sure I believe such claims. Many Western cities are host to large slums, which are every bit as filthy and degraded as the run down urban slums of Africa – think the Favelas in Rio, or the run down skid row slums in some North American cities.

Ebola potentially poses a far worse threat, than has currently been realised to date. In some animals, such as pigs, Ebola is an airborne disease. In humans it isn’t airborne, though there is some question about this, it is more likely marginally airborne. Ebola might be be frighteningly close to mutating into a fully airborne strain in humans, to becoming a flu like disease which eventually kills high percentages of its victims. Diseases like Swine flu frequently make the evolutionary leap, from pigs to humans – could Ebola do the same?

If we spend all our money on wind turbines, we don’t have any cash left to fund early warning for dangerous diseases.

I could go on, but I think you see my point. As long as climate change is having no impact on our life, as long as there is serious uncertainty about whether it will ever have a significant impact on our life, there are far more urgent, immediate problems which deserve our attention.

If in 200 years, our descendants discover the weather is becoming worse, thanks to CO2 emissions in the early 21st century, as far as I’m concerned it is their problem. Manipulating the weather and climate will be child’s play, to people who will inevitably master technology, science, and planetary scale engineering capabilities which we today can only dream of. If they’re not happy with my position on this issue, they can sue me.

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Bernie Roseke
February 29, 2016 8:13 am

Warren Buffet seems to be making a mistake with the comparison to Pascal’s wager. Believing in God does not require massive sacrifice, whereas climate action does. So if they both have a 1% chance of happening. you should believe in God, but climate will require a corresponding cost vs. benefit analysis. And if he thinks there’s anywhere close to 1% chance of climate catastrophe, then the cost side of that equation will have to be pretty low to justify it.

john
February 29, 2016 8:22 am
Tom laws
February 29, 2016 8:29 am

In reference to “Pascal’s Wager”, Pascal was an idiot. He never considered the ever compounding losses as each generation drains resources on minuscule probabilities.

Rogueelement451
February 29, 2016 8:34 am

Warren Buffet is certainly stating the obvious IE “if, ifs and ands were pots and pans”
The main thing to remember about insurance companies ,is that they are competing against other insurance companies. Those companies that which to invoke Pascals Wager costs will lose out to those who do not. This is capitalism at work and not pseudo science.
Quite simply , as has been stated , Insurance is an annual event not a multi decade event ,therefore any company which raised its rates to encompass a threat 10 ,15,20 years down the line would lose out to those that simply waited until the next years premiums were due and make their assessment on an annual basis.
Put simply, if any Insurance company had believed on the advice of Al Gore that by ,2005/2010/2015 that New York would be underwater ,there would be no insurance on New York property.
Insurance companies are highly intelligent, ,they do not take risks , they price according to risk and on that basis they do not believe in CAGW ,or if they do to even a small extent , they do not consider any catastrophic outcomes.
The day an Insurance company refuses to provide insurance to a seafront property in Miami is the day I start building an Ark!

gmak
February 29, 2016 8:58 am

There are really two aspects to the bet on God.
Everyone overlooks the fact that one has to also believe that the rewards postulated by clerics are real. If not, then there is no pay-off to believing in God.
And, remember: These clerics are the ones who decide (in every religion) what “God permits” (sins) and only they can forgive them. Nice work if you can get it. Kind of reminds me of politicians and lawmakers – including those who are ramming AGW down our civilization’s collective throat.

John Moore
Reply to  gmak
February 29, 2016 9:02 am

Since Pascal was far from stupid, obviously his wager included the probabilities of the rewards and punishments.
As to the clerics and the definitions of the details… At least in the Catholic Church, while the clerics may announce the doctrine, they don’t get to just make it up. The basis of the doctrine is completely public and is based on the ancient founding texts.

gmak
Reply to  John Moore
February 29, 2016 9:03 am

That’s quite an assumption. Like assuming that Mann is far from stupid so he obviously took all the factors into account when he created his hockey stick graph.

John Moore
Reply to  John Moore
February 29, 2016 9:52 am

Quite an assumption? The alternative is very low probability – that this brilliant man (far, far more brilliant than Mann) failed to take into account the obvious.

MarkW
Reply to  gmak
February 29, 2016 10:11 am

It really fascinates me how those who know nothing at all about how religion works, see themselves as fit to comment on how religion works.

Tom in Florida
Reply to  MarkW
February 29, 2016 11:40 am

Actually religion acts exactly like AGW. Scare tactics to control the population. So we have right wingers using religious scare tactics and left wingers using environmental scare tactics. My oh my what is a low information voter to do.

JohnKnight
Reply to  gmak
February 29, 2016 7:15 pm

gmak,
“And, remember: These clerics are the ones who decide (in every religion) what “God permits” (sins) and only they can forgive them.”
Say what? That is utterly untrue (indeed heretical) in my religion (Christianity). Clerics have zero power to either decide what God permits or forgive any sins. Nor did they among the Jews . . Jesus was strongly condemned by the Jewish “clerics” for telling people they were forgiven. Somebody has grossly mislead you, it seems to me.

February 29, 2016 9:19 am

One issue here is that a lot of weather-related damage, such as from large tornadoes, is derived mainly from the temperature gradient between the Arctic and the tropics. (This does not apply to hurricanes except ones that reach northern areas and wierd-out like Hazel of 1954 and Sandy did.) Since the Arctic is warming more than the tropics, most storms would get less windy as the world warms. Indeed, tornadoes of all classes F2/EF2 and stronger have had a slight decreasing trend after good records started with 1950.

MarkW
February 29, 2016 9:27 am

Part of Pascal’s wager was that the cost of believing in God was trivial.
That can’t be said of the CAGW nonsense.

Marcus
Reply to  MarkW
February 29, 2016 10:27 am

..In my very humble opinion about the possible existence of God, I go by the saying my Grandfather always used when teaching me about nature and life…..” If God truly exists and he created all of the universe, then God is far beyond the Human ability to comprehend him ! “

Marcus
Reply to  Marcus
February 29, 2016 10:43 am

..And, I might note, he was just a simple farmer in the Great White Frozen North ! ( by coincidence, his last name was….Farmer, weird I know )…

Logoswrench
February 29, 2016 10:28 am

Not to go tangential but that was the worst most false synopsis of Pascal’s wager I ever read. You can do better. Stick to alarmist debunking.

Pat Paulsen
February 29, 2016 11:09 am

According to Shroedinger, maybe exists and doesn’t exist, at the same time? We won’t know until we discover (measure) the supreme being – if there is one?

Marcus
Reply to  Pat Paulsen
February 29, 2016 2:52 pm

” maybe exists and doesn’t exist, ..” Are you talking about that silly thought experiment with the cat ?

Resourceguy
February 29, 2016 2:40 pm

Translating Buffet’s climate change comments into his better known value investing expertise, he is saying to invest in the climate change line as a long run “likely threat” even though Al Gore’s hurricane prediction implications for insurance industry investing was dead wrong. Since the long run prediction and the short run fail are linked, a prudent investor would take the time to examine all of the prediction errors and be honest about them. They do teach ethics in business schools. I’m just not sure if other academic colleges considered ethics necessary for themselves.

February 29, 2016 3:38 pm

Let me get this straight. If, as an insurer, he decides to raise premiums because of the possibility of climate change, and climate change (whatever that is supposed to mean) happens, he pays out (and of course raises his premiums again because that’s what insurance companies do when bad things happen). If climate change doesn’t happen, he makes a massive score.
It looks as if the sage of Omaha has just figured out how to make a few more billions, doesn’t it?

JR
February 29, 2016 6:15 pm

This guy has an interesting take on the precautionary principle:
http://risk-monger.blogactiv.eu/2015/05/11/a-tale-of-two-precautions/

…the precautionary principle is a tool used to manipulate policy – one that can be twisted to fit whatever an activist campaign requires. This blog will consider how precaution, as a “principle” has been perverted during the two great activist campaigns of the social media information era: climate change and genetically modified organisms (GMOs). It is intriguing how precaution can allow for contradictions, incongruities and complete absence of logic and rationality.
Precaution as the triple negative or as reversing the burden of proof
…. In 1992, the precautionary principle was articulated in Article 15 of the Rio Declaration on Environment and Development as a triple negative – roughly (when applied to climate change): because we are not certain whether the world is warming or not, this is not a reason to not act (given that the consequences would be so great). The onus was on the sceptics to prove climate change was not a risk (something hard to do even after the IPCC had got their forecasts so badly wrong over the last decade).
Precaution on GMOs has not been framed in the triple negative context, but rather defined by the European Environment Agency’s reversal of the burden of proof: until proponents of GMOs could prove to the sceptics that biotech was safe (with certainty … something hard to do as safety is a relative concept), precaution must be taken. The onus is on the scientists to prove to the sceptics that the technology is safe, and, it should come as no surprise, the GMO sceptics can make that a burden.

He goes on to consider the consequences of switching the two approaches for climate change and GMOs.

Resourceguy
March 1, 2016 10:39 am

Was Pascal’s wager tipped by political pressures in the decision process? So that a small probability is magnified by unseen factors not included in the decision making process.