Express Global

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Monday, 2 December 2013

EU plans to waste $7 trillion on climate policies that will make no noticeable difference

Posted on 08:28 by Unknown
$7 Trillion to Fight Climate Change?


The EU proposes spending that much on projects that will barely reduce temperatures or lower sea levels.



By Bjørn Lomborg




Waves break on a jetty holding wind turbines in the Channel port of Boulogne-sur-mer, France.

Today’s policies to combat climate change cost much more than the benefits they produce. Unfortunately, bad political choices often make these policies even less cost-effective.

Consider the European Union’s 20-20 policy, which targets a 20 percent reduction in CO2 emissions below 1990 levels by 2020. It is important to examine this approach, not only because the EU is pursuing the world’s largest and most ambitious climate policy, but also because other climate policies suffer from similar shortcomings.

The most cost-efficient way to achieve the 20 percent target would be to operate a single, EU-wide carbon-market, which would cost the EU about $96 billion annually by 2020. But the benefits to the entire world would be much lower. Indeed, the onlypeer-reviewed overview of EU climate policy estimates that it can avoid climate-related damage of about $10 billion per year. So, for every dollar spent, the EU stands to avoid about 10 cents of damage.


This does not mean that climate change is not important; it means only that the EU’s climate policy is not smart. Over the course of this century, the ideal EU policy would cost more than $7 trillion, yet it would reduce the temperature rise by just 0.05 degrees Celsius and lower sea levels by a trivial 9 millimeters [note even these tiny changes based on flawed models are highly exaggerated]. After spending all that money, we would not even be able to tell the difference. 

Advocates of the EU’s policy often argue that we should pursue such policies nonetheless, because there is a risk that global warming will be much more severe than currently expected. But, though this argument is valid in principle, economic models show that this risk has only a moderate effect on the best policy. Moreover, the absence of any temperature increase over the past 10-17 years has made such worse-than-expected outcomes extremely unlikely.

The real risk concerns the potential for bad political choices to make climate policies worse than necessary. The EU did not just implement a single carbon market in order to meet its target for CO2 emissions. Instead, the EU made a bad deal a lot costlier through a host of partly contradictory policies.

For example, the EU demanded that renewables like wind and solar account for 20 percent of energy supplies by 2020, though this is by no means the cheapest way to cut emissions. In fact, putting up a wind turbine cuts no extra CO2, because total emissions are already capped under the EU-wide carbon-trading scheme. It simply means that when Great Britain installs a wind turbine, it becomes cheaper to burn coal in Portugal or Poland.

Taking into account such poor policies and averaging all macroeconomic models, the EU is more likely to pay around $280 billion per year to avert $10 billion in damage. In other words, the poor design of EU climate policies triples the cost and prevents only three cents of climate damage per dollar spent.

But it gets worse, because these models still assume that the EU picks the cheapest renewables to fulfill its requirements. Instead, most EU countries give higher subsidies to the most costly renewables.

For example, cutting a ton of CO2 with on-shore wind turbines in Germany probably costs about $35, avoiding about 14 cents of climate damage per dollar. But offshore wind turbines cost about $150 per ton of CO2, avoiding just three cents of climate damage per dollar.

Biofuels are even less efficient, costing more than $300 per ton of CO2 avoided, while doing just over one cent of good per dollar. And solar takes the absolute prize, costing more than $800 per ton of CO2 to do less than a cent of good per dollar spent.

These prices are not unique to Europe. China pays $38 per ton of CO2 avoided with wind power, for example, while the US pays around $600 for cutting a ton of CO2 with biofuels.
Moreover, when the EU decides to cut its domestic emissions, part of the reduction simply migrates elsewhere. If making a product in the EU costs more because of higher energy costs, the product will likely be made somewhere else, where energy is cheaper, and then imported into the EU.

In fact, new studies show that 38 percent of the EU carbon cuts leak elsewhere, meaning that European climate policy avoids not three cents of climate damage per dollar spent, but less than two. From 1990 to 2008, the EU cut its emissions by about 270 million metric tons of CO2. But it turns out that the increase in imports from China alone implied an almost equal volume of extra emissions outside the EU. Essentially, the EU had simply shipped part of its emissions offshore.

We need a smarter approach to tackling climate change. Rather than relying on cutting a few tons of incredibly overpriced CO2 now, we need to invest in research and development aimed at innovating down the cost of green energy in the long run, so that everyone will switch.

For now, our current climate policies are poor—and our politicians consistently find ways to make them even poorer. They may please farmers and other interest groups, but overall they simply drive up costs and reduce already-minimal benefits.

Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Posted in | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Executive Summary of the NIPCC Climate Change Reconsidered II Report
    Executive Summary from the NIPCC Climate Change Reconsidered II Report, released 9/16/13: Executive Summary  This report is produced by the ...
  • New paper finds South Pacific rainfall was up to 2.4 times more variable before the 20th century
    A new paper published in Geology reconstructs climate of the South Pacific over the past 446 years and "shows rainfall varied much mor...
  • New Material Posted on the NIPCC Web site
    New Material Posted on the NIPCC Web site Species Range Shifts in a Warming World (19 Nov 2013) It is considerably more complex - and conser...
  • WSJ: Fracking has done more for the poor than all of Obama's ministrations combined
    More on Fracking and the Poor The U.S. oil and gas boom added $1,200 to disposable income in 2012. Last week we reported on a study showing ...
  • Where, Oh Where, Has that Global Warming Gone?
    Terrifying Flat Global Temperature Crisis Threatens To Disrupt U.N. Climate Conference Agenda By Larry Bell, Forbes, 9/10/13 Bummer! Now, ju...
  • New paper finds chaotic response to natural climate drivers ENSO and solar activity
    A paper under open review for Climate of the Past reconstructs climate and levels of 9 lakes in East Africa and finds the climate of East A...
  • New paper finds IPCC climate models don't realistically simulate convection
    More problems for the models: A paper published today in Geophysical Research Letters finds climate models do not realistically simulate co...
  • Special Report: The Age of Plenty debunks alarmist claims of food shortages
    Paging Paul Ehrlich :  IEEE Spectrum , the journal of the world's largest professional association for the advancement of technology, ha...
  • Yale Climate Forum stumped by simple question on sea levels
    In response to the article The Inevitability of Sea-Level Rise posted at the Yale Forum on Climate Change & the Media, I asked the foll...
  • New paper finds another non-hockey-stick in Sweden
    A paper in open review for Climate of the Past reconstructs temperatures in northern Sweden for the past 800 years and finds another non-ho...

Blog Archive

  • ►  2014 (20)
    • ►  January (20)
  • ▼  2013 (480)
    • ▼  December (77)
      • New computer model claims global warming decreases...
      • Obama makes his 'social cost of carbon' trick final
      • Global warming causes lessmore snow
      • Global warming newsline 12/31/13 edition
      • 72 billion Hiroshima bombs of 'missing heat' went ...
      • New paper finds all of Greenland and West Antarcti...
      • Analysis finds electric cars depreciate much faste...
      • US 2013 oil boom is biggest ever, data shows
      • New paper finds globe was warmer, sea levels rose ...
      • New paper finds Arctic sea ice extent has increase...
      • UK taxpayers spent $49 million this year for wind ...
      • New paper finds Antarctica had much less sea ice d...
      • California planning to run on battery power due to...
      • How climate models dismiss the role of the Sun in ...
      • Review finds plants will avoid extinction from cli...
      • Public Bored And Disinterested By Climate Change F...
      • New paper finds another mechanism by which the Sun...
      • For global warming believers, 2013 was the year fr...
      • An amazing fraud by an architect of US climate pol...
      • Observations show IPCC exaggerates anthropogenic g...
      • New paper finds another reason to end the ethanol ...
      • Bravo! New study says mainstream media is avoiding...
      • Paper strongly supports the solar/cosmic ray theor...
      • Paper finds solar activity explains climate change...
      • Climate change caused African lakes to dry up 90 m...
      • Analysis finds NOAA satellite data is incompatible...
      • New paper shows climate models have exaggerated oc...
      • Cook's 'Skeptical Science' new global warming scar...
      • New paper finds the Gulf Stream has not slowed dow...
      • New paper suggests land-use changes played a big r...
      • Antarctic ice sheet is melting from below, unrelat...
      • More NASA GISS temperature tampering, this time in...
      • Biochemistry professor explains why man-made CO2 r...
      • Climate scientists 'can only reliably model cloud ...
      • AGU lecture says climate scientists need to get mo...
      • New report predicts US energy use per capita will ...
      • New paper finds corals are thriving in 'naturally ...
      • New paper finds Arctic sea ice is controlled by na...
      • New paper says learning about climate change is li...
      • Climate alarmists' search for proof going cold
      • New paper describes another solar amplification me...
      • Handy guide to the logical fallacies used by globa...
      • Satellite will launch in 2015 to measure Earth's r...
      • Fire And Ice; Volcanoes, Not CO2, Melt West Antarctic
      • US Navy predicts summer ice-free Arctic in 3 years
      • LA Times: 2013 US wildfire acreage was far below a...
      • Global warming scaremongering is having devastatin...
      • 20th century data supports Svensmark's cosmic ray ...
      • Analysis finds IPCC exaggerates effect of CO2 on c...
      • Latest proposed California taxpayer boondoggle: Gi...
      • Analysis finds both water vapor & increased CO2 ac...
      • New report shows wind power doesn't reduce CO2 emi...
      • Review paper finds 20th century warming in Asia wa...
      • Audubon Society says it's outrageous that the gove...
      • The dirty secrets of clean cars: Cars powered by f...
      • New paper predicts tropical cyclones will decrease...
      • New paper finds Antarctic climate is within natura...
      • New paper finds another non-hockey-stick in Turkey
      • How climate models dismiss the role of the Sun in ...
      • New papers find solar proton events could cause ei...
      • Global cooling is causing fungus infections to spr...
      • New paper finds warming & CO2 increase wheat produ...
      • Global-warming ‘proof’ is evaporating
      • New paper finds no change in maximum temperatures ...
      • Boston Globe Op-Ed: Invoking "consensus" to shut o...
      • Climate Change Isn't Our Top Public Health Threat
      • New paper predicts another Little Ice Age within t...
      • Review finds rising CO2 concentrations and tempera...
      • Review paper finds clouds act as a negative feedba...
      • Fossil fuels now beat wind and solar on environmen...
      • New paper finds a negative feedback mechanism of w...
      • New paper finds severe drought is more common duri...
      • World Agricultural Output Continues to Rise, Despi...
      • New paper finds rivers and lakes are large net sou...
      • New paper predicts Dalton-like minimum in solar ac...
      • EU plans to waste $7 trillion on climate policies ...
      • Global warming caused 1,000 US record cold tempera...
    • ►  November (64)
    • ►  October (65)
    • ►  September (130)
    • ►  August (108)
    • ►  July (36)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile