Flood, Migration, War: Human Cost Of Climate Crisis
A new book, "Overheated: The Human Cost of Climate
Change," predicts a grim future for billions of people in this century. It
is a factual account of a staggering human toll, based on hard data. Author
Andrew Guzman, an authority on international law and economics, is a professor
and associate dean at UC Berkeley School of Law*.
Guzman has studied intractable economic problems, such as
poverty, recessions, and trade wars. But, in recent years, one problem loomed
larger than all the rest: climate change. It became impossible to fathom the
economic impact of state actions without including global warming in the
equation.
"Climate change is the most important problem facing
the international community in the 21st century," Guzman said. "It's
a problem that no country alone can solve, but a solution is imperative."
Countless books exist on the scientific aspects of climate
change, but not one on why people should care, said Guzman. So he decided to
write for a popular audience, to engage them, to capture their imaginations in
a way that would communicate the depth of the problem.
"Climate change is going to damage the very foundations
upon which we've built our civilization. I don't think people understand how
pervasive this problem is," Guzman said.
Examples of the impact of climate change include:
• Flooding and forced migration will push citizens to
crowded cities or refugee camps, creating ripe conditions for the spread of
infectious diseases. It could lead to a global pandemic similar to the 1918
Spanish Flu that killed 3 percent of the world's population. In the US today,
that would mean nine-ten million deaths.
• California's Sierra Snowpack, its most important water
source, will have shrunk by a third by 2050. No plan exists for how the state
will find enough water for its projected 50 million residents.
• Rising seas will displace populations, ruin farmland, and
destroy infrastructure. Bangladesh alone will lose 17 percent of its land mass,
the equivalent of the US losing Alabama, Tennessee, Kentucky, Ohio, and every
inch of land to the East.
• Rainfall-dependent crop production in Nigeria may fall by
50 percent. Social chaos and the fight over dwindling oil resources could lead
to the creation of a terrorist breeding ground.
• Water flow to the Indus River could drop off by 35
percent, as glaciers melt. India and Pakistan, which have had 4 wars since the
1940s, will have to share this shrinking resource. At issue is life and death
for tens of millions on both sides of the border -- and both countries have
nuclear weapons.
"Solving this problem is not going to be free. But as
long as politicians are punished for imposing economic costs now in exchange
for larger economic gains later, it will be an impossible problem to
solve," he said.
In fact, the world's largest emitters of the greenhouse
gases (GHG) that cause global warming -- the US, the EU, China, India, and
Brazil -- have failed to come to a substantive agreement to reduce carbon
output. Carbon dioxide is one of the most damaging of the GHG emissions. Guzman
is convinced that U.S. will balk at signing any international accord until its
people demand it.
"People have to accept the fact that, as with social
security, public education, or military expenditures, we have to pay now for
benefits later," he said.
As an economist, Guzman suggests a simple policy solution
for the United States: a carbon tax. Taxing carbon up the supply chain as far
as possible would raise the price of fossil fuels -- and encourage the
development of alternative energy.
Guzman isn't promoting one particular solution; he says a
Cap-and-Trade program to regulate GHG emissions could be just as viable. Most
important is that we take action. Raise the price of carbon sufficiently to
keep the planet from overheating and "prevent human tragedy on a scale the
world has never seen." It's a scenario that haunts him daily.
"I'm terrified for my children -- for everybody's
children," he said. "The world they are going to inhabit when they're
my age in 2050 is not a pretty place. If I have grandchildren, it'll be even
worse. One of the features of this problem, which is chilling, is that if you
just decide to live with it, it doesn't stabilize. It gets worse and worse with
every passing year or decade that we fail to act."
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