Melting Permafrost Could Cost World Economy $43 Trillion by 2100: Study
Published on
Monday, September 21, 2015
byCommon Dreams
Doing nothing to slow the fast-warming Arctic carries an enormous economic price tag, warns new research
byJon Queally, staff writer
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Permafrost on the northeastern side of Spitsbergen, Svalbard, an island in the arctic region between Norway and the North Pole. (Photo: Olafur Ingolfsson)
The melting of the Earth's permafrost could unleash hundreds of billions of tons stored CO2 and methane by the end of this century, warned prominent researchers on Monday, with resulting economic costs that could reach $43 trillion in damages related to the runaway impacts of climate change.
In a paper published in the journal
Nature Climate Change, Prof. Chris Hope of Cambridge University and Prof. Kevin Schaefer, from the National Snow and Ice Data Center at the University of Colorado, say their
study shows that because the "Arctic is warming roughly twice as fast as the global average" and if current trends continue, the melting of huge sections of permafrost in the coming decades could result in hundreds of billions of ton of carbon dioxide (CO2) and billions of tons of methane (CH4) being released into the atmosphere.
Such an enormous increase of greenhouse gases would result in both economic and non-economic impacts, the researchers said. Computer models run by Hope and Schaefer
found that melting permafrost would lead to higher chances of catastrophic and cascading events, such as the melting of the Greenland and West Antarctic ice sheets which would lead to increased flooding and more extreme weather around the world. Economic impacts cited included direct influence on the gross domestic product (GDP) of countriessuch as the loss of agricultural output and the additional cost of coping with floods and heatwaveswhile non-economic impacts included negative effects on human health and natural ecosystems.
In 2013, as Common Dreams reported, a separate team of researchers exploring the possible economic impacts of melting permafrostsometimes described ominously as the
"methane bomb"could ultimately cost the global economy as much as $60 trillion.
Full article:
http://www.commondreams.org/news/2015/09/21/melting-permafrost-could-cost-world-economy-43-trillion-2100-study