Dubai Telegraph - Climate impacts set to cut 2050 global GPD by nearly a fifth

EUR -
AED 4.181608
AFN 72.872269
ALL 93.945291
AMD 418.677729
ANG 2.038603
AOA 1044.691156
ARS 1686.593665
AUD 1.657548
AWG 2.04953
AZN 1.93526
BAM 1.95058
BBD 2.290809
BDT 140.184848
BGN 1.925284
BHD 0.428841
BIF 3383.755506
BMD 1.138628
BND 1.471224
BOB 7.87692
BRL 5.890078
BSD 1.137426
BTN 107.475909
BWP 15.457092
BYN 3.298615
BYR 22317.106713
BZD 2.287518
CAD 1.621241
CDF 2590.378831
CHF 0.922254
CLF 0.026681
CLP 1050.088484
CNY 7.735781
CNH 7.735855
COP 3922.288436
CRC 515.905781
CUC 1.138628
CUP 30.173639
CVE 109.970705
CZK 24.250949
DJF 202.542635
DKK 7.474488
DOP 67.637213
DZD 151.829381
EGP 56.100085
ERN 17.079418
ETB 183.370946
FJD 2.561628
FKP 0.859254
GBP 0.860786
GEL 3.005775
GGP 0.859254
GHS 12.864573
GIP 0.859254
GMD 83.690192
GNF 9971.402889
GTQ 8.677739
GYD 237.923288
HKD 8.92998
HNL 30.439807
HRK 7.532367
HTG 148.659558
HUF 354.826085
IDR 20382.577922
ILS 3.397216
IMP 0.859254
INR 107.728716
IQD 1490.00602
IRR 1566751.981124
ISK 144.002299
JEP 0.859254
JMD 179.09443
JOD 0.807288
JPY 184.844282
KES 147.395654
KGS 99.573103
KHR 4573.67994
KMF 491.887108
KPW 1024.765503
KRW 1762.6758
KWD 0.35269
KYD 0.947855
KZT 552.257242
LAK 25510.059856
LBP 101853.145041
LKR 382.44645
LRD 207.00512
LSL 18.687897
LTL 3.362072
LVL 0.688745
LYD 7.307252
MAD 10.658776
MDL 20.10367
MGA 4840.08984
MKD 61.633248
MMK 2390.534982
MNT 4078.632506
MOP 9.18837
MRU 45.393326
MUR 53.731804
MVR 17.602817
MWK 1972.339103
MXN 19.919141
MYR 4.636268
MZN 72.701031
NAD 18.687897
NGN 1571.68275
NIO 41.85835
NOK 11.337034
NPR 171.957291
NZD 2.01639
OMR 0.437804
PAB 1.137456
PEN 3.884205
PGK 4.993702
PHP 69.765434
PKR 316.276595
PLN 4.289484
PYG 6926.281938
QAR 4.146086
RON 5.243723
RSD 117.375482
RUB 87.682843
RWF 1669.673096
SAR 4.272653
SBD 9.18308
SCR 15.280534
SDG 683.749132
SEK 11.087696
SGD 1.474324
SHP 0.850101
SLE 28.255883
SLL 23876.461785
SOS 650.037585
SRD 42.692284
STD 23567.298515
STN 24.434931
SVC 9.952279
SYP 125.85493
SZL 18.683345
THB 37.900938
TJS 10.543837
TMT 3.996584
TND 3.369069
TOP 2.741543
TRY 53.127672
TTD 7.732104
TWD 36.273377
TZS 2992.88111
UAH 51.048038
UGX 4168.843668
USD 1.138628
UYU 45.767721
UZS 13708.254849
VES 708.503828
VND 29957.299878
VUV 136.581889
WST 3.166456
XAF 654.211995
XAG 0.019843
XAU 0.000286
XCD 3.077198
XCG 2.049896
XDR 0.81363
XOF 654.189074
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.673482
ZAR 18.74466
ZMK 10249.016856
ZMW 20.59235
ZWL 366.637717
  • CMSC

    0.1300

    22.06

    +0.59%

  • RBGPF

    0.6100

    65.61

    +0.93%

  • RYCEF

    0.2900

    18.68

    +1.55%

  • GSK

    0.3100

    52.81

    +0.59%

  • JRI

    0.0700

    12.86

    +0.54%

  • BCC

    -1.7600

    79.26

    -2.22%

  • NGG

    0.7500

    83.76

    +0.9%

  • RIO

    0.5500

    94.29

    +0.58%

  • RELX

    -0.0500

    31.29

    -0.16%

  • BCE

    -0.6600

    22.26

    -2.96%

  • CMSD

    0.1300

    21.9

    +0.59%

  • AZN

    2.5400

    190.95

    +1.33%

  • VOD

    -0.2000

    13.69

    -1.46%

  • BP

    0.2200

    37.35

    +0.59%

  • BTI

    -0.0200

    62.74

    -0.03%

Climate impacts set to cut 2050 global GPD by nearly a fifth
Climate impacts set to cut 2050 global GPD by nearly a fifth / Photo: Frederic J. BROWN - AFP/File

Climate impacts set to cut 2050 global GPD by nearly a fifth

Climate change caused by CO2 emissions already in the atmosphere will shrink global GDP in 2050 by about $38 trillion, or almost a fifth, no matter how aggressively humanity cuts carbon pollution, researchers said Wednesday.

Text size:

But slashing greenhouse gas emissions as quickly as possible remains crucial to avoid even more devastating economic impacts after mid-century, they reported in the journal Nature.

Economic fallout from climate change, the study shows, could increase tens of trillions of dollars per year by 2100 if the planet were to warm significantly beyond two degrees Celsius above mid-19th century levels.

Earth's average surface temperature has already climbed 1.2C above that benchmark, enough to amplify heatwaves, droughts, flooding and tropical storms made more destructive by rising seas.

Annual investment needed to cap global warming below 2C -- the cornerstone goal of the 2015 Paris Agreement -- is a small fraction of the damages that would be avoided, the researchers found.

Staying under the 2C threshold "could limit average regional income loss to 20 percent compared to 60 percent" in a high-emissions scenario, lead author Max Kotz, an expert in complexity science at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK), told AFP.

Economists disagree on how much should be spent to avoid climate damages. Some call for massive investment now, while others argue it would be more cost-effective to wait until societies are richer and technology more advanced.

- Poor countries hit hardest -

The new research sidesteps this debate, but its eye-watering estimate of economic impacts helps make the case for ambitious near-term action, the authors and other experts said.

"Our calculations are super relevant" to such cost-benefit analyses, said co-author Leonie Wenz, also a researcher at PIK.

They could also inform government strategies for adapting to climate impacts, risk assessments for business, and UN-led negotiations over compensation for developing nations that have barely contributed to global warming, she told AFP.

Mostly tropical nations -- many with economies already shrinking due to climate damages -- will be hit hardest, the study found.

"Countries least responsible for climate change are predicted to suffer income loss that is 60 percent greater than the higher-income countries and 40 percent greater than higher-emission countries," said senior PIK scientist Anders Levermann.

"They are also the ones with the least resources to adapt to its impacts."

Rich countries will not be spared either: Germany and the United States are forecast to see income shrivel by 11 percent by 2050, and France by 13 percent.

Projections are based on four decades of economic and climate data from 1,600 regions rather than country-level statistics, making it possible to include damages earlier studies ignored, such as extreme rainfall.

- A likely underestimate -

The researchers also looked at temperature fluctuations within each year rather than just averages, as well as the economic impact of extreme weather events beyond the year in which they occurred.

"By accounting for these additional climate variables, the damages are about 50 percent larger than if we were to only include changes in annual average temperatures," the basis of most prior estimates, said Wenz.

Wenz and her colleagues found that unavoidable damage would slash the global economy's GPD by 17 percent in 2050, compared to a scenario with no additional climate impacts after 2020.

Even so, the new calculations may be conservative.

"They are likely to be an underestimate of the costs of climate change impacts," Bob Ward, policy director of the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment in London, commented to AFP ahead of the study's publication.

Damages linked to sea-level rise, stronger tropical cyclones, the destabilisation of ice sheets and the decline of major tropical forests are all excluded, he noted.

Climate economist Gernot Wagner, a professor at Columbia Business School in New York who was also not involved in the study, said the conclusion that "trillions in damages are all locked in doesn't mean that cutting carbon pollution doesn't pay."

In fact, he said, it shows that "the costs of acting are a fraction of the costs of unmitigated climate change".

Global GDP in 2022 was just over $100 trillion, according to the World Bank. The study projects that -- absent climate impacts after 2020 -- it would be double that in 2050.

D.Farook--DT