Methodological aspects of recent climate change damage cost studies

Authors

  • Onno Kuik Vrije Universiteit
  • Barbara Buchner International Energy Agency
  • Michaela Catenacci Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattey
  • Alessandra Goria Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattey
  • Etem Karakaya European Environment Agency
  • Richard Tol Vrije Universiteit

Keywords:

Climate change damage costs, cost of inaction, methodological aspects, risk and uncertainty, discounting, equity.

Abstract

This paper discusses methodological aspects of recent climate change damage studies. Assessing the total and/or marginal damage costs of environmental change is often difficult and it is certainly difficult in the case of climate change. A major obstacle is the uncertainty on the physical impacts of climate change, especially related to extreme events and so-called 'low-probability high-impact' scenarios. The subsequent transposition of physical impacts into monetary terms is also a delicate step, given that climate change impacts involve both market and non-market goods and services, covering health, environmental and social values, and that impacts may be distant in time and space. The complexity of climate change cost assessment thus involves several crucial dimensions, including non-market evaluation, risk and uncertainty, baseline definition, equity and discounting. The paper discusses these issues and stresses the importance of political perspectives in integrated assessment research.

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Published

2008-06-02

Issue

Section

Articles