Arctic warming will cost world billions: Pew study - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 15, 2024, 11:04 PM | Calgary | -0.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Business

Arctic warming will cost world billions: Pew study

Climate warming in the Arctic will cost the global economy billions of dollars in 2010 alone, according to a Pew Environment Group study released Friday.

Climate warming in the Arctic willcostthe global economy billions of dollars in 2010 alone, according to astudybythe U.S.-based Pew Environment Group releasedFriday.

Theenvironmental advocacy organization held a news conference in Iqaluit whereG7 finance ministers and central bank governorsare meeting to discuss global economic reform to emphasize its view that protection of theenvironment should also be on the agenda.

A study by the Pew Environment Group suggests that warming of the Arctic will cost the global economy at least $2.4 trillion by 2050. ((Canadian Press))

Thestudyestimated that melting sea ice and permafrost as well as dwindling snow cover wouldcost the worldbetween $61 billion and $370 billion US in 2010.

The authors predict that will rise to at least $2.4 trillion by the year 2050.

The study is the first to put an estimated dollar value on global warming resulting from the Arctic's declining ability to act as "air conditioner" of the planet.

It arrived at its number by estimating how much the loss of snow, ice and permafrost would have on warming,expressing that in equivalent tonnes of carbon dioxide and multiplying that increase by what it called the "social cost of carbon." Those include estimates of the costof climate change on agriculture, energy production, water availability, sea level rise, and flooding.

One of the report's authors, economist Eban Goldstein of Bard College in New York, said the Arctic is warming at twice the rate of the rest of the world.

He said the combination of melting ice, increased sunlight absorption by darker barren ground and the release of methane as the permafrost thaws will this year warm the Earth the equivalent of 40 per cent of total U.S. industrial emissions.