High impact, low probability

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High impact, low probability

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Title: High impact, low probability


1
High impact, low probability?
  • A brief empirical analysis of risk in the
    economics of climate change
  • Dr Simon Dietz
  • Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and
    the Environment
  • London School of Economics

2
This paper
  • The question
  • To what extent do the results of CBA of climate
    change depend on low-probability, high-impact
    events?
  • The approach
  • Intuitive empirical analysis with an integrated
    assessment model (PAGE)
  • The answer
  • Results strongly depend on tail risks, but for a
    set of plausible assumptions discounting still
    matters
  • The intuition
  • Tail risk of (arbitrarily) huge losses in utility
  • But (by definition) not very likely and very far
    off (t2100)

3
Weitzmans four exhibits
  • Exhibit A geologically instantaneous pulse of
    greenhouse gases
  • OK SRES and post-SRES BAU scenarios fit the bill
  • Exhibit B long-tailed climate sensitivity
  • Problem usually deterministic, or sampled from
    distribution with relatively low (and finite)
    upper support
  • Exhibit C significant positive feedback from
    carbon cycle
  • Problem often ignored in modelling, sometimes
    included but perhaps not on an adequate scale
  • Exhibit D welfare loss from extreme warming
  • Problem? Depends on assumption (can assume
    anything), but most models have quadratic loss
    function or less steep

4
Modelling strategy
  • Emissions
  • Non-probabilistic in PAGE (2002 version). Use A2
    scenario (high emissions) and compare BAU with
    550 stabilisation
  • Climate sensitivity
  • Compare truncated Stern Review pdf with
    Stainforth et al. pdf from climateprediction.net
  • Carbon cycle feedbacks
  • Probabilistic natural stimulation of CO2 in PAGE
  • Loss function
  • Compare truncated Stern Review pdf with lognormal
    distribution fitted over minimal a priori
    assumptions

5
Climate sensitivities compared
6
Loss functions compared
7
Probability of catastrophe
8
Probability of catastrophe BAU
9
Probability of catastrophe 550
10
Dependence on arbitrary upper bound
11
The intuition
  • For a CRRA utility function with strictly
    positive relative risk
  • aversion, marginal utility tends to infinity as
    consumption tends to
  • zero

12
Social cost of carbon as a function of the
arbitrary upper bound
13
Sensitivity to risk and discounting
14
Sensitivity to risk and discounting similar
magnitudes
15
High impact, low probability?
  • A brief empirical analysis of risk in the
    economics of climate change
  • Dr Simon Dietz
  • Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and
    the Environment
  • London School of Economics
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