Sustainability, Conflicting Interests and Generational Equity Professor Anil Markandya April 2008.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Aims Competitive Industrial Base (Lisbon jobs and growth) Climate Change (greatest long-term challenge facing the human race) Right Mix/Balance – critical.
Advertisements

Environmental Economics. Ten Key Insights from Economics which Policy-Makers Need to be Aware of Economic and environmental systems are determined simultaneously.
Andrew Sentance Warwick University and Bank of England Climate Change Policy Seminar 15 May 2007 Putting a price on carbon emissions.
Beyond Kyoto Addressing Cost: The Political Economy of Climate Change Prepared for the Pew Center on Global Climate Change.
Chapter 9 Project Analysis Chapter Outline
'A policy framework for the governance of integration across the energy system' Professor Brian Collins Professor of Engineering Policy, UCL.
THE CLIMATE POLICY DILEMMA Robert S. Pindyck M.I.T. December 2012.
1 Economics 331b Spring 2009 Integrated Assessment Models of Economics of Climate Change.
Three-way choice Option Price Option Value Real Options Calls & Puts Endogenous/Exogenous Option Price Option Value Real Options Calls & Puts Endogenous/Exogenous.
Economic Resilience and Market Efficiency in Small States Gordon Cordina University of Malta April 2007.
Climate Change 1. What is climate change? IPCC: A change in the state of the climate that can be identified by changes in the mean and/or the variability.
Economic Modelling of Climate-Change Impacts Kollegger – Sommer – Wallner Economics of Climate Change Chapter 6.
Uncertainty and Climate Change Dealing with uncertainty in climate change impacts Daniel J. Vimont Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences Department Center for.
Making public environmental decisions. Introduction to cost-effectiveness and cost benefit analysis.
Questions 1 What incentives do the individuals have to support mitigation, when non mitigation strategies would lead to a higher income during his/her.
Economics of Climate Change1 Chapter 14 Harnessing Markets for Mitigation - the role of taxation and trading Sari Karvonen, Katri Oksanen.
Gabriel Bachner - Thomas Kerekes 1 A Goal for Climate-Change Policy The Stern-Review Chapter 13.
Understanding the relevance of climate model simulations to informing policy: An example of the application of MAGICC to greenhouse gas mitigation policy.
Australian Governments Economic Goals Low Inflation Strong and sustainable economic growth Full employment Equity in the distribution of Income External.
Investment Framework For Clean Energy For Development
Choices, Capabilities and Sustainability Second Conference on Measuring Human Development March 4 th -5 th 2012 Jean-Paul Fitoussi and Khalid Malik.
Nov 2014: China-US agreement on carbon emissions -President Obama pledges to reduce GHG emissions by -26 to 28% of 2005 levels by president Xi Jinping.
`` Presentation to the OECD policy Seminar: How to reduce debt costs in Southern Africa, Paris, 7 October 2004 Monetary Policy, Real Interest Rates and.
The Economics of Climate Change. The basic mechanism.
1 Brendan Devlin Adviser, Markets and Infrastructure Directorate B, DG ENER European Commission.
Cost-Benefit & Risk Analysis in Public Policy
Multilateral and bilateral development financing mechanisms that integrate climate change and key issues in making these programmes more effective Phil.
Stiftelsen Frischsenteret for samfunnsøkonomisk forskning Ragnar Frisch Centre for Economic Research Climate Agreements and Technology.
ECONOMIC AND FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS IWRM for River Basin Organisations.
Why it is high time for the Graham Sustainability Institute to include Population stabilization on its (policy, research) agenda Katta G. Murty IOE Emeritus.
Fiscal Policy & Aggregate Demand
Working with Uncertainty Population, technology, production, consumption Emissions Atmospheric concentrations Radiative forcing Socio-economic impacts.
1 IPCC Achieving sustainable development R.K. Pachauri Chairman, IPCC Director-General, TERI ECOSOC Keynote Address on the theme “achieving sustainable.
 Basic Economic Questions:  What to produce?  How to produce?  For whom to produce?  Economic System  The organization of an economy, which represents.
School of something FACULTY OF OTHER The UK Low Carbon Transition Plan: Where are we going? Dr Tim Foxon Sustainability Research Institute, and Centre.
Environmental Economics Class 6. Concepts Static efficiency Dynamic efficiency Static efficiency allows us to evaluate those circumstances where time.
Regulation Against Global Warming in an Unequal World Sylvestre Gaudin Hultberg.
The Way Forward -- US Perspective Presented by: Carl Burleson, Director, Office of Environment and Energy, FAA US CAEP Member.
TOPIC 9 ECONOMIC SUSTAINABILITY. The Definition of Economy The wealth and resources of a country or region, especially in terms of the production and.
UNDP Handbook for conducting technology needs assessments and Preliminary analysis of countries’ TNAs UNFCCC Seminar on the development and transfer on.
Regulatory Reform for a Better Business and Investment Climate – AN OVERVIEW – SIMON WHITE Strategies and Practices Toward a More Enabling Business and.
1 Intergenerational equity, risk and climate modeling Paper presented by John Quiggin * Thirteenth Annual Conference on Global Economic Analysis Penang,
Intergenerational Equity & Social Justice Concepts RD September 2001.
TOWARDS BETTER REGULATION: THE ROLE OF IMPACT ASSESSMENT COLIN KIRKPATRICK IMPACT ASSESSMENT RESEARCH CENTRE UNIVERSITY OF MANCHESTER, UK UNECE Symposium.
Four Economic Questions About Global Warming
Representing Catastrophic Risks in a Climate-Economy Model* Richard B. Howarth Environmental Studies Program Dartmouth College Presentation to the Conference.
Climate-change policy: the challenge to economics Tom Hickson: scientists > 99% in agreement about anthropogenic global warming (AWG) Economists and policy-makers.
Dr Mark Cresswell Scenarios of the Future 69EG6517 – Impacts & Models of Climate Change.
Cost benefit analysis (COBA) is a technique for assessing the monetary social costs and benefits of a capital investment project over a given time period.
Environmental sustainability & innovation Fred Steward Professor of Innovation & Sustainability Policy Studies Institute.
Warwick Business School The drivers of low carbon business strategies Andrew Sentance, Warwick Business School Warwick University Climate Policy Workshop.
1 Environmental Services Training Group LOCAL AUTHORITY ENVIRONMENT CONFERENCE 2015 Protecting Our Environment Hodson Bay Hotel, Athlone, May 2015.
Ecosystem Impacts and the Economic Costs of Climate Change Dr. Rachel Warren Tyndall Centre, University of East Anglia Funded by.
Framework for Expenditure Assignment Decentralization and Intergovernmental Fiscal Reform 24 March 2003 Dana Weist PRMPS.
Challenges and solutions Knut H. Alfsen CICERO Center for Internastional Climate and Environmental Research - Oslo Oslo,
Designing Climate-Change Treaties E. Maskin Institute for Advanced Study.
© dreamstime CLIMATE CHANGE 2014 Mitigation of Climate Change Working Group III contribution to the IPCC Fifth Assessment Report.
Equity and Global Climate Change Developing Countries and the Climate Change Challenge Alistair Maclean, Australian Embassy.
Climate Change: Economic and Policy Implications Robert B. Richardson, PhD Department of Community, Agriculture, Recreation and Resource Studies Michigan.
The Way Forward -- US Perspective
Cost-Benefit Analysis: Additional Considerations
Walled In: China’s Great Dilemma
1 Summary for Policymakers
Climate Surprises, Catastrophes
1 Summary for Policymakers
1 Summary for Policymakers
Walled In: China’s Great Dilemma
1 Summary for Policymakers
APNIC Executive Council Fee Study Report
The Way Forward -- US Perspective
Presentation transcript:

Sustainability, Conflicting Interests and Generational Equity Professor Anil Markandya April 2008

Sustainability Probably the biggest sustainability problem is the conflict between interests of present and future generations Comes up most acutely on climate change But also present in other decisions with long term consequences: nuclear and hydropower, infrastructure investments.

The Discount Rate Economists use the discount rate to make investment and policy decisions that have impacts over time. Future costs and benefits are valued less than present ones. DR is crucial: value of £1000 over time… Time /DR Now100 Yrs 200 Yrs 1% % %

Reasons for Discounting Impatience (+) (δ ) People will be richer in the future (+) (μ) The future is more uncertain (-) (s) Since s increases with time Implications are that we should discount longer term projects at a lower rate. UK and French governments now adopt this policy

What Rates Are Used? UK govt. rates: 3.5% rate for 1-30 years, a 3% rate for years, a 2.5% rate for years, a 2% rate for years, 1.5% for years, and 1% for longer periods Private sector uses higher rates (varying with risk of course) High rates can make it difficult to justify many environmental investments but this can be countered by higher values of environmental services in the future.

Special Case of Climate Change Very long term impacts High uncertainty Stern took very low rate (0.1%), criticized by several economists. But based on above it may be appropriate. (δ = 0; μ = 0.01; η = 1; s = 0.13)

Fat Tails Problem Problem is not only ‘uncertainty’ but not knowing the probabilities of different outcomes (e.g. climate sensitivity). “Known unknowns vs Unkown unknowns” D. Rumsfeld With unknown unknowns the distribution of possible outcomes has a ‘fat tail’ Fat Tail!

Implications of Fat Tails With fat tails we cannot resolve uncertainty by adding a risk premium as in the discount formula We have to rely on learning – reducing uncertainty over time – and flexibility. (Reverend Bayes ( )). Or we have to impose some ‘sustainability constraints’ Revised knowledge implies revised policies.

An Economist’s Perspective The climate-change experiment, whose eventual outcome we are trying to infer now, concerns the planet’s response to a geologically-instantaneous exogenous injection of GHGs. This planetary experiment of an exogenous injection of this much GHG this fast is probably unprecedented in Earth’s history even stretching back hundreds of millions of years. Can anyone honestly say now from very limited information or experience what are reasonable upper bounds on the eventual degree of global warming or climate change that we are currently trying to infer will be the outcome of such a first-ever planetary experiment? M. Weizman, Harvard University 2007.

Uncertainty Flexibility and Policy Substantial reduction in uncertainty is possible in next 2-5 decades. (20-40%) This could imply a slightly less stringent policy in the next few decades than if we did not expect to learn (if we seek to max. net benefits). But if we seek to achieve a target rate of stabilization learning reduces stringency now even less. I would argue that a target rate of stabilization is more consistent with a sustainability framework.

Another Conflicting Interest: Rich and Poor Rich will have to make a bigger sacrifice to meet climate objectives. By and large the poor are more negatively affected by any future climate change. Poor countries will have to make some sacrifices as well if we are to meet targets. Rich carry a debt of responsibility for the GHG concentrations.

What Advice Can We Give? An increase in knowledge is very important (support research in this research) But the need for more knowledge is not an excuse for lack of action. Action can and should be flexible. International agreements with cuts by all parties are essential Efficiency and equity objectives can be decoupled – use of MBIs with ‘fair’ allocations of rights.

Thank You