What We Know and Don’t Know about Climate Change, and Implications for Policy

R. Pindyck
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引用次数: 31

Abstract

There is a lot we know about climate change, but there is also a lot we don’t know. Even if we knew how much CO2 will be emitted over the coming decades, we wouldn’t know how much temperatures will rise as a result. And even if we could predict the extent of warming that will occur, we can say very little about its impact. I explain that we face considerable uncertainty over climate change and its impact, why there is so much uncertainty, and why we will continue to face uncertainty in the near future. I also explain the policy implications of climate change uncertainty. First, the uncertainty (particularly over the possibility of a catastrophic climate outcome) creates insurance value, which pushes us to earlier and stronger actions to reduce CO2 emissions. Second, uncertainty interacts with two kinds of irreversibilities: CO2 remains in the atmosphere for centuries, making the environmental damage from CO2 emissions irreversible, pushing us to earlier and stronger actions and reducing CO2 emissions requires sunk costs, that is, irreversible expenditures, which pushes us away from earlier actions. Both irreversibilities are inherent in climate policy, but the net effect is ambiguous.
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我们对气候变化的了解和不了解,以及对政策的影响
关于气候变化我们知道很多,但也有很多我们不知道的。即使我们知道未来几十年将排放多少二氧化碳,我们也不知道气温将因此上升多少。即使我们能预测气候变暖的程度,我们也无法预测其影响。我解释说,在气候变化及其影响方面,我们面临着相当大的不确定性,为什么会有这么多不确定性,以及为什么在不久的将来我们将继续面临不确定性。我还解释了气候变化不确定性对政策的影响。首先,不确定性(尤其是灾难性气候结果的可能性)创造了保险价值,这促使我们更早、更有力地采取行动减少二氧化碳排放。第二,不确定性与两种不可逆性相互作用:二氧化碳在大气中存在了几个世纪,使得二氧化碳排放对环境的破坏不可逆转,促使我们采取更早、更有力的行动;减少二氧化碳排放需要沉没成本,即不可逆的支出,使我们远离早期的行动。这两种不可逆性都是气候政策所固有的,但其净效应尚不明确。
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