Title: Climate Change: Economic Considerations for South Dakota
1Climate Change Economic Considerations for
South Dakota
Evert Van der Sluis Department of Economics
SD Climate Challenge Conference Sioux Falls, SD
September 29, 2007
2Overview
- Brief overview of climate change
- Whats economics got to do with it?
3Major Findings of Climate Research
- CO2, CH4, N2O, other gas concentrations ?
- Due to human activities
- Fossil fuels (coal, oil, natural gas)
- Deforestation
- Enhance natural greenhouse effect warm earth
- Human actions likely contributed to global
warming - By 0.6ºC (or more) since 1900
- Perhaps much longer
- Global warming scenarios by 2100
- 1.4 to 5.8ºC ?
- Sea-levels 10 to 90 cm ?
- Avoiding global warming requires emissions ? over
long period of time
Source MacCracken
4Northern Hemisphere Temperatures Over Time
Source MacCracken
5CO2 Emission ? May Cause Further Temperature ?
Projected Temperature Change
Projected CO2 Concentration
IPCC temperature increases
Source IPCC TAR, 2001
Source MacCracken
6What is Global Warming?
- More warming in high (than low) latitudes
- Melting sea ice, land glaciers, ice sheets
- Greater warming over land (than over oceans)
- More warming in winter (than in summer) in most
locations - But more intense heat waves in summer
Source MacCracken
7What is Global Warming?
- Total evaporation ?
- Soils dry more quickly
- Earlier onset of drought
- Total global precipitation ?
- In intense events
- Flood likelihood ?
- Most precip ? in mid- to high-latitudes
- But less rain in subtropics
- More unexpected changes
Source MacCracken
8Climate Change Will Likely Affect Peoples
Environments Globally
Source MacCracken
9Various Impacts
Health Impacts Weather-related mortality/heat
stress Infectious diseases Air quality-induced
respiratory effects
Ag Impacts Crop yields commodity
prices Irrigation demands Pests weeds
Climate Changes
Forest Impacts Forest composition change Shift
geographic range of forests Forest health
productivity
Temperature
Precipitation
Water Resource Impacts Water supply timing
change Water quality Water competition ?
Sea Level Rise
Coastal Area Impacts Beach erosion Coastal
wetland floods Flood defenses
Ecosystem Impacts Shifts in ecological zones Loss
of habitat species Coral reefs threatened
Adapted from EPA MacCracken
10Whats Economics Got To Do With It?Damages (or
gains?) from climate change
- Market impacts
- People place value on items purchased,
- i.e., through a market
- Non-market impacts
- Items we value care about,
- But not obtained through markets
11Market Impacts Examples
- Climate is production "input"
- Agriculture
- Forestry
- Fisheries
- Water supply
- Energy
- Disruptions due to climate
- Employment / production disruption
- Property damage
- Response / protection costs
12Non-market Impact Examples
- Human health
- Heat waves
- Vector-borne diseases
- Ecosystem losses
- Landscape
- Amenities lifestyles
13Externality
- Climate change its effects is example of an
externality - One persons actions impose adverse effects on
someone else - When externalities are present
- Competitive markets likely will not generate
outcomes that are in publics interest - Relying on voluntary actions to deal with
externality will not be satisfactory or useful
14What Can Be Done About Externalities?
- Internalize them into markets
- Some of the ways
- Common law
- Proscribe / prohibit practices
- Prescribe practices
- Prescribe performance
- Cost sharing
- Cross compliance
- Taxation
15Economics Climate Change
- Reduce GHG emissions
- Economic tradeoffs
- What are the costs?
- Who pays?
- What are the benefits?
- Who gains?
- Which policies are effective?
16South Dakotas Economy
- Agriculture ( forestry)
- Directly affected by climate
- Other sectors
- Affected mostly by water supply
17Sectoral Studies
- Agriculture
- Water
- Commercial forestry
- Fire
- Public health
18Approach Broad Varied
- Work from common set of scenarios
- Based on hard sciences
- For each sector
- Review what is known
- Get qualitative info about scenarios
- Assess quantitative data about impact of
scenarios - May also use case studies
- Also identify
- What is not known
- Whats needed for more complete analysis in future
19General Approach to Ec Research on Climate
Change
- Develop impacts
- Physical
- Trace to social economic impacts
- Identify opportunities for adaptation policies
- Again quantify economic impacts where possible
- Carry impacts through to rest of economy
20Economic Policy Analysis Interaction
- Need both
- Economic analysis
- Policy analysis
- Q How much fossil fuel will industry X burn?
- A it depends
- On constraints on firms in industry
- On incentives they face
- ? Analyses of impacts mitigation must come
together
21Impact Scenario AnalysesExample from
California Study
- Contrast two global emission scenarios
- Business as usual with continuing high rate of
growth in greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions - Sustained global efforts to reduce GHG emissions
by 2100
Source Hanemann
22Time Lags(From California Study)
- Temperature projections similar for two scenarios
until about 2045 - Suggests that future climate (next 40 years)
already determined by past emissions - Emission reductions initiated now show a
significant effect after about 2045, with their
impact increasing over time
Source Hanemann
23Lessons Learned(From California Study)
- Spatial impacts important
- Impacts subject to nonlinearities thresholds
- Average assessments of impacts over space time
are misleading - Especially important for measuring
- Economic impacts
- Designing adaptation policies
- Adverse impacts of climate change likely
disproportionately large in worst years - The worst years get worse
Source Hanemann
24Non-linear Relationship Between Temperature
Yields
25Common Patterns(From California Study)
- No large changes on average, but.
- Bad years occur more frequently
- Economic harm more severe in bad years
- Raises issue of risk aversion insurance
- Additional economic questions
26My Speculation for SD Agriculture
- Negatives
- More extreme conditions
- Periods of water scarcity
- Periods of high temperatures
- Pests
- Positive(?)
- Longer growing season(?)
27Extreme Events (Heat Waves, Floods, Storms)
- Consequences spill over to larger economy
- Not just climate-sensitive sectors
- Agriculture
- Forestry
- Water
- Energy
- Property damage
- Disruption of normal production
28Existing Research
- There is little existing research on economic
consequences of - Changing plant varieties
- Alternative crops
- Range livestock management
- Hydrological issues
29Research Needs
- Need publicly funded research
- Climate change affects all of us
- Provide accurate information
- To make effective policy choices
30Concluding Comments
- Climate change is real
- All of us are affected by it
- All of us need to make adjustments
- Need studies on economic impacts of climate
change in South Dakota - Market-based impacts
- Non-market impacts
- To help make appropriate local policy decisions
31Selected Sources
- Michael Hanemann, UC Berkeley
- Michael C. MacCracken, Climate Institute, Intl
Association of Meteorology and Atmospheric
Sciences - Vincent Smith, Montana State University
32(No Transcript)
33Policy Options and Consequences
- Markets
- Internalization
- Common law
- Proscribing practices
- Prescribing practices
- Prescribing performance
- Cost sharing
- Cross compliance
- Taxation
34The Role of Economics in the Environmental
Policy Debate
- Problem arises with the trade-off between things
whose values are established by society (via
markets) and things whose values are not
established (e.g., environmental amenities) - Economics can provide means of estimating
non-market values so that comparisons are valid
35Non-market valuation
- Techniques involve implicit values and/or
simulated marketswillingness to pay - Hedonic estimation techniquesstatistical
estimation from data on amenities - Travel cost methodlook at how far people will
travel and how much it costs them - Contingent valuationsurvey households on how
much they would pay for different amounts of
something
36Energy policy
- Relatively recent direct influence on ag.
sectorethanol and biodiesel - Ethanol subsidy since 1978 (now .51 per gallon
as tax exemption) - Biodiesel subsidy since 2005 (tax exemption)
37Effects on ag. sector
- Changes price relationships among commodities
- Changes land use patterns and quantities of
various commodities produced - Affects trade flows of commodities (and
petroleum) - Affects consumer prices of food (and energy)
38(No Transcript)
39Projects
- Local biomass feedstocks availability for
fueling ethanol production - With Richard Shane Larry Stearns
- Biofuels production from agriculture a
cross-country comparison - With Edouard Renault Mariétou Seck (Ecole
Nationale Supérieure Agronomique de Toulouse
students) - Value-Added Agriculture Activities in a Changing
Food and Fiber System (emphasizing biofuels) - New project
- Proposed project Developing sustainable harvest
strategies for cellulose-based biofuels the
effect of intensity and season of harvest on
wildlife and biomass production - With on-campus colleagues
- Other involvement NC-506 Sustainable
Biorefining Systems for Corn in the North Central
Region - Multidisciplinary group of researchers from
several U.S. states - IA, IL, IN, KS, MI, MN, MO, ND, NE, SD, WI, OH, OR
40US Energy Department Projections
- World petroleum demand
- 1.3 per year ?
- Chinas petroleum needs
- 3.2 per year ?
- Indias oil requirements
- 2.3 per year ?
41World Energy Outlook
World energy consumption growth
- 70 ? by 2030
- 70 ? outside OECD countries
- 20 ? in China
- 60 ? due to transportation
- 18 cars / 1,000 people in China
- 800 in US
World Energy Consumption
42World Energy Outlook
World CO2 Emissions by Region
43(No Transcript)
44Source http//www.wtrg.com/prices.htm
45World Ethanol Production, 2005
46World Corn Exports in 2005/2006
47World Ethanol Imports, 2006
48Given Current Energy Projections
- U.S., China, India, EU, Japan, South Korea
- Each expected to be importer of ethanol over next
decade - Brazil will be major exporter of ethanol
- Already exports about 25 of production
- gt 1 billion gallons
49Corn Ethanol Productionuse 27 of 07 corn crop
nearly 9 billion gallons
50Ethanol Corn Production Trends
U.S. Corn Production
U.S. Ethanol Production
51Current Status - Ethanol
52Biodiesel ProductionUse 17 of 07 soy oil crop
500 million gallons
53Global Coarse Grain Stocks Tight
of total use
19 Record corn prices
2006/07F 12
Crop Year
54U.S. Corn Carryover Stocks(in Weeks Supply)
55Corn Acres Planted Highest Since 1945
56Projected Corn Ethanol ProductionExpect 12 bil.
gal. in 2016/1730 of corn crop
57Ethanol Imports Augment DemandImports Soar, led
by Brazil
Source Census and Customs CBI TRQ data
58World Ethanol Imports, 2006
59Projected Soy Biodiesel Production Expect 700
million gallons in 2016/17 23 of soy oil
production
60Ethanol-Corn Price Spread(Weekly Data)
2000
2002
2004
2006
1999
2001
2003
2005
2007
61Ethanol-Corn Price Spread(Annual data with
alternative ethanol price scenarios)
Ethanol priced historical premium
Priced gasoline
Priced 70 gasoline
62Millions of Barrels per Day (Oil Equivalent)
- Source Smalley, and Bookout, Two Centuries of
Fossil Fuel Energy International Geological
Congress, Washington DC July 10,1985.
Episodes, vol 12, 257-262 (1989).
63- Global temps ? by 1.5 K in over past 150 years
- Weather changes threaten loss of polar ice,
rising sea levels, unpredictable rain falls, crop
failures, and loss of many species - Energy solutions must account for global warming
64Transforming Global Energy Resources
- Global oil supply ?
- Global warming
- Which resources for energy?
2004
14.5 Terawatts 220 MBOE/day
?
2050
30 -- 60 Terawatts 450 900 MBOE/day
65U.S. Energy Sources
Source EIA