Résumé
Mitigation reduces the expected future damages from climate change,flbut how does it affect the aggregate risk borne by future generations?flThis raises the question of the ‘climate beta’, i.e., the elasticity of climatefldamages with respect to a change in aggregate consumption. Inflthis paper we show that the climate beta is positive if the main sourceflof uncertainty is exogenous, emissions-neutral technological progress,flimplying that mitigation has no hedging value. But these results areflreversed if the main source of uncertainty is related to the carbonclimate-flresponse and the damage intensity of warming. We then showflthat in the DICE integrated assessment model the climate beta is positivefland close to unity. In estimating the social cost of carbon, thisflwould justify using a relatively high rate to discount expected climatefldamages. However, the stream of undiscounted expected climate damagesflis also increasing in the climate beta. We show that this dominatesflthe discounting effect, so that the social cost of carbon is in fact largerflthan when discounting expected damages at the risk-free rate.
Mots-clés
beta; climate change; discounting; integrated assessment; flmitigation; risk; social cost of carbon;
Codes JEL
- Q54: Climate • Natural Disasters • Global Warming
Remplacé par
Simon Dietz, Christian Gollier et Louise Kessler, « The climate beta », Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, vol. 87, janvier 2018, p. 258–274.
Référence
Simon Dietz, Christian Gollier et Louise Kessler, « The climate beta », TSE Working Paper, n° 15-608, novembre 2015.
Voir aussi
Publié dans
TSE Working Paper, n° 15-608, novembre 2015