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- Title
Costing the Earth: A Numbers Game or a Moral Imperative?
- Authors
Roe, Gerard
- Abstract
It is a simple truism that public policy must be guided by an objective analysis of the physical and economic consequences of climate change. It is equally true that policy making is an inherently value-laden endeavor. While these two threads are interconnected, the relative weight given to each depends on the certainty that the technical analyses can deliver. For climate change, the envelope of uncertainty is best understood at the global scale, and there are some well known and formidable challenges to reducing it. This uncertainty must in turn be compounded with much more poorly constrained uncertainties in regional climate, climate impacts, and future economic costs. The case can be made that technical analyses have reached the point of diminishing returns. Should meaningful action on climate change await greater analytical certainty? This paper argues that policy makers should give greater weight to moral arguments, in no small part because that is where the heart of the debate really lies.
- Subjects
CLIMATE change; ACCLIMATIZATION; CLIMATOLOGY; ECONOMIC impact; POLITICAL planning
- Publication
Weather, Climate & Society, 2013, Vol 5, Issue 4, p378
- ISSN
1948-8327
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1175/WCAS-D-12-00047.1