Integrated economic and climate projections for impact assessment
Author(s)
Paltsev, Sergey; Monier, Erwan; Reilly, John M; Scott, Jeremy; Sokolov, Andrei P
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We designed scenarios for impact assessment that explicitly address policy choices and uncertainty in climate response. Economic projections and the resulting greenhouse gas emissions for the “no climate policy” scenario and two stabilization scenarios: at 4.5 W/m2 and 3.7 W/m2 by 2100 are provided. They can be used for a broader climate impact assessment for the US and other regions, with the goal of making it possible to provide a more consistent picture of climate impacts, and how those impacts depend on uncertainty in climate system response and policy choices. The long-term risks, beyond 2050, of climate change can be strongly influenced by policy choices. In the nearer term, the climate we will observe is hard to influence with policy, and what we actually see will be strongly influenced by natural variability and the earth system response to existing greenhouse gases. In the end, the nature of the system is that a strong effect of policy, especially directed toward long-lived GHGs, will lag by 30 to 40 years its implementation.
Date issued
2013-10Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Center for Global Change Science; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Joint Program on the Science & Policy of Global Change; MIT Energy Initiative; Sloan School of ManagementJournal
Climatic Change
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Citation
Paltsev, Sergey et al. “Integrated Economic and Climate Projections for Impact Assessment.” Climatic Change 131.1 (2015): 21–33.
Version: Final published version
ISSN
0165-0009
1573-1480