Lord Stern on global warming: It's even worse than I thought
Author of definitive report on climate change sounds ominous new warning
The Independent (U.K.), March 15, 2009
Lord
Stern, the economist who produced the single most influential political
document on climate change, says he underestimated the risks of global
warming and the damage that could result from it.
The
situation was worse than he had thought when he completed his review
two-and-a-half years ago, he told a conference yesterday, but
politicians do not yet grasp the scale of the dangers now becoming
apparent.
"Do
politicians understand just how difficult it could be, just how
devastating rises of 4C, 5C or 6C could be? I think, not yet," Lord
Stern posed to the meeting of scientists in Copenhagen.
"A
rise of 5C would be a temperature the world has not seen for 30 to 50
million years. We've been around only 100,000 years as human beings. We
don't know what that's like.
"We haven't seen 3C for a few million years, and we don't know what that looks like either."
Lord
Stern said new research done in the past two or three years had made it
clear there were "severe risks" if global temperature rose by the
predicted 4C to 7C by 2100. Agriculture would be destroyed and life
would be impossible over much of the planet, the former World Bank
chief economist said.
Now
a professor at the London School of Economics, Lord Stern referred to
the higher temperature rises several times at the conference. The
scientists are meeting in the Danish capital as a precursor to the
major UN meeting in December which aims to find a successor to the
Kyoto Protocol climate treaty.
Commissioned
by Gordon Brown when Chancellor, and issued in October 2006, the
700-page Stern Review on the Economics of Climate Change is the single
most influential political document on global warming yet published. It
has been closely studied by the governments of every major country.
The
report said the costs of acting to counter climate change, by
stabilising emissions of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, might be
about 1 per cent of annual global GDP by 2050. But the cost of doing
nothing was found to be far greater - risking up to 20 per cent of the
world's wealth.
Yesterday,
Lord Stern revised this prediction, saying the cost of inaction would
be "50 per cent or more higher" than his previous highest estimate -
meaning it could cost a third of the world's wealth.
The
conference has been hearing detail on research done following the Stern
review, including claims sea levels are likely to rise twice as fast as
predicted in the last UN climate change report in 2007.
Lord
Stern said the world's population needed to be aware of the
implications of climate change, with many areas devastated by
hurricanes and others drying out.
"Much
of southern Europe would look like the Sahara. Many of the major rivers
of the world, serving billions of people, would dry up in the dry
seasons or re-route."
Billions of people would have to relocate as a result, he said.
"What
would be the implication of that? Extended conflict, social disruption,
war essentially, over much of the world, for many decades.
"This
is the kind of implication that follows from temperature increases of
that magnitude. I think it's vital that people understand the magnitude
of the risks, but also that they understand that [by cutting emissions]
we can reduce the probability of going there very dramatically," Lord
Stern said.
Then and now: How Stern's view changed
Temperatures
A
central assumption of the 2006 Stern Report was global temperatures
would rise by between 2C and 3C over the current century if nothing was
done to counter global warming.
Stern also mentioned the possibility of a 4C rise.
Yesterday,
Stern said 4C, 5C, 6C and even 7C degree rises were a real possibility
by the end of the 21st century, taking the world into new territory -
agriculture would be destroyed and life impossible in many areas.
Costs
Stern
created a sliding scale in the 2006 report which measured the costs of
doing nothing on climate change. At the upper limit was the chance the
damage would amount to 20 per cent of global Gross Domestic Product - a
fifth of the world's wealth.
Yesterday,
Stern revised his estimate saying the cost would be 50 per cent higher
"or more" than the previous highest guess - risking a third of the
world's wealth or a 30 per cent plus reduction in consumption per head.