Title: 11' Global Warming, Uncertainty, Irreversibility
111.Global Warming, Uncertainty, Irreversibility
LongTerm Policymaking (SPRING 2002)
Dept. of Ag Economics Oklahoma State
University
2INTRODUCTION (ch. 10 Hackett)
- Purpose
- to become aware of the concept of uncertainty
irreversibility with respect to environmental
natural resource policies - Learning Objectives. To understand/become aware
of - 1. To understand uncertainty irreversibility.
- 2. To become aware of the issue of global
warming. - 3. To consider the policy options with respect
to - possibly irreversible actions/events such as
global - warming.
3Background on concepts
- Uncertainty--involves the probability that some
event/action will or will not occur - precipitation
- new technology
- Irreversibility--suggests that some action/event
will transform a resource to the extent it cannot
be returned to its original state, limiting
future options - clear-cutting a forest
- draining a wetland
- damming a river
4Risk Perceptions may vary w/knowledge, severity
of result, whether individual choice . . .
Unknown Risk
Desire for regulation
Nitrogen Fertilizers
Nitrites
x
x
x
RadioactiveWaste
x
Pesticides
x
X Global warming
Lead Paint
x
DDT
Caffeine
Minor Risk
x
Severe Risk
x
x
Skate- boarding
Smoking
x
Nuclear War
Rec. Boating
x
x
Commercial Flying
x
Handguns
Adapted from Carlson et al. Agricultural
Environmental Resource Economics, 1993 also
Sanders
Known Risk
5Case Study Global Warming--background
- Greenhouse gases--carbon dioxide,
chlorofluorocarbons, methane, nitrous oxide,
ozone, hydrofluorocarbons, perfluorinated carbons - Their function--filter solar energy, limiting
infrared energy radiated back in to space - Greenhouse effect--as greenhouse gas
concentration increases, capturing of infrared
energy increases, temperatures are likely to
rise
6The Importance of Greenhouse Gases
- Provides a blanket that insulates the Earth by
trapping heat, a lot like panes of glass in a
greenhouse. . . part of what makes the planet of
work. - Without greenhouse gases, the Earth would be
much too cold for comfort . . . problem now is
that humans are thickening the blanket . . . .
. . natures thermostat is nudged up. - --From cnn.com special section on global warming
article Messing with the thermostat can be
devastating, Miles OObrien, November 27, 1997.
7The Claims about Global Warming Its
Real Skeptical
- Sea level will rise 2-3 feet, covering many
islands, changing coast lines contaminating
water supplies - Southern US climate becomes tropical changing ag
production - Northern US climate moderates, more like Southern
US today - Increase in heat-related deaths/diseases
(malaria, dengue fever)
- Only 24 of public is concerned
- Models under-estimate complex global ecosystem
(cant predict 7 days out, much less years) - Models under-estimate the technological fix
market economics - Doubtful that government intervention will do
anything but create more immediate problems
8Case Study Global Warming --Science in
Conflict
- Scientists continue to debate both
- 1. whether global warming is in fact occurring,
- 2. the level of severity of impact
- Trade-offs
- 1. If predictions are true nothing done to
stop it, large-scale changes in global climate
that will severely affect the planet our
geo-political-economic system. - 2. If predictions are not true but actions are
taken to minimize global warming (Kyoto
Agreement), wide-scale economic impacts on the US
will reduce competitiveness (30-50 increase in
fuel utility bills). -
9If Global Warming Perceived as Market Failure
SMCs
SMCp
Price
P2
DMBpMVpMWTPpMBs
P1
Quantity
Q2
Q1
10Major Contributors to Greenhouse Gases
- Per Capita Energy
- Country Emissions () Consumption (mil. Btu)
- US 19 335
- China 10
- Japan 5 171
- Brazil 4 33
- Germany 4
- India 4
- UK 2 169
- Indonesia 2
- Italy 2
11Issues Options with Global Warming
- KEY ISSUES
- Time Perspective?
- Sources?
- Geography (Trans-national?)
- Irreversibility?
- Science?
- FREE MARKET
- RESEARCH EXTENSION
- REGULATION
- SUBSIDIES
12Other Sources
- http//cnn.com/TECH
- (see interactive features see global warming
101)