Interview with Richard Tol

November 11th, 2006

Posted by: Roger Pielke, Jr.

The German magazine WirtschaftsWoche has posted online (auf Deutsch) an interview with economist Richard Tol discussing the economics of climate change. Benny Peiser has provided an English translation which we are happy to re-post here in full.


“WE’VE GOT ENOUGH TIME” – AN INTERVIEW WITH RICHARD TOL

WirtschaftsWoche, 11 November 2006

The eminent climate economist Richard Tol on climate alarmism and the right strategies for the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions

WirtschaftsWoche (WiWo): Mr. Tol, You have called the report on the financial consequences of climate change by economics professor Sir Nicholas Stern “alarmist”. How did you arrive at this judgement?

Tol: I speak of alarmism because Stern, in the summary of his report, estimated the damage [from climate change] to cost between 5 to 20 per cent of global GDP, but he is basing this on extremely pessimistic scenarios. He ignored other studies that estimate damages to be far below one per cent. This is how he arrives at the scary numbers. At the same time, the summary also gives the impression that the five per cent [of GDP damage] commences immediately and will continue for eternity if noting is done to counter it immediately. In the unabridged version, however, it is stated that the five per cent will be reached in 2075 at the earliest. This procedure is temerarious and an unacceptable way of political advice-giving.

WiWo: Now that the ice caps of the poles melt faster than even the leading sceptics have feared, isn’t it essential to ring the alarm bells?

Tol: First of all, the report does not review these developments at all, and secondly any alarm does not help. It will take 50 to 100 years to lower the emission of greenhouse gases to an agreeable level. In order to achieve this goal, soberness is demanded.

WiWo: Why did Nicholas Stern sound the alarm nevertheless? He was the chief economist at the World Bank and is generally considered to be a sober person.

Tol: At the outset, the study was a purely academic exercise. Then the British Chancellor of the Exchequer, Gordon Brown, who commissioned the Stern Review, discerned that the leader of the Conservative Party, David Cameron, put the Labour Party increasingly under environmental pressure by portraying himself greener than the government. In order to raise its [environmental] profile, the government thus strongly influenced the tenor of the study.

WiWo: The fact that the earth is warming up due to human behaviour is scientifically beyond doubt. Isn’t it then sensible to forcefully steer against it, as Nicholas Stern suggests?

Tol: We must do something and should now begin, that’s where I agree with Stern. But there is no risk of damage that would force us to act injudiciously. We’ve got enough time to look for the economically most effective options rather than dash into ‘actionism’ which then becomes very expensive.

WiWo: Stern calculates that a forceful fight against global warming is today twenty times cheaper than doing nothing.

Tol: That is completely exaggerated. Stern has set the costs of damage much too high and the costs of emission reduction much too low. This employment of incorrect numbers makes it easy for opponents of climatic protection to evade accepting a consensus. They correctly assert: What the Stern Review claims is rubbish. You can only have an effective climate policy if everyone takes part. We need a long-term solution, and it has to be global one. The Stern Review perturbs this agreement process to the extent that it performs a disservice to the goals of climate protection.

WiWo: How seriously, according to your estimates, are the economic consequences of global warming?

Tol: The situation is serious, but definitely not as seriously as Stern claims. According to my computations the greenhouse effect can cause annual damage of around 0,5 per cent of global GDP. In the next century, when the impact of global warming will be felt fully, the damage could amount to two to four per cent, if nothing would be done about it.

WiWo: What do you suggest as counter measure?

Tol: The means of my choice would be to raise world-wide taxes on emissions. But that is politically not feasible. Thus, emission trading remains as the second best solution. The state allocates certificates to businesses which – at the outset – permit them free emissions of carbon dioxide, as they do today, and without setting secondary costs. However, if they want to produce more, they must either produce more [energy] efficiently or buy from other businesses (which have reduced their carbon dioxide output) certificates at a kind stock exchange. Such a free market system helps the environment.

WiWo: In Europe, such a regulatory system has been in place since last year. Nevertheless, it hasn’t had much of an effect.

Tol: That is because of the fact that too many certificates were allocated. Consequently, little money can be made from the sales of certificates at the moment. Thus there are no incentives for lowering CO2-emissions. In order to have any lasting effect, the certificate trade would have to incorporate traffic, households and agriculture, additional greenhouse gases and the whole world economy. Europe alone cannot save the climate.

WiWo: Why should China and India, whose industries still produce a great deal with outdated technologies, join in the certificate trade?

Tol: It is exactly this outdated technology that makes it possible for China and India to achieve large CO2 reductions by way of relatively small investments. They could sell the emissions they reduce to Europe or the USA and could thus make a lot of money.

WiWo: The United Nations is currently trying to agree a new international climate treaty. How promising are such agreements?

Tol: They don’t accomplish much as the Kyoto Treaty has already revealed. Only few countries committed themselves to concrete goals at all, only few uphold their obligations, and some, like Canada recently, simply pull out again. And why not – there is no threat of sanctions!

WiWo: Does that mean that 6000 UN delegates in Nairobi are gathering for a useless chit-chat?

Tol: They should concentrate on organising an international trade with certificates and close co-operation regarding the introduction of low-carbon technologies. Unfortunately neither issue is on the agenda. In fact, according to our calculations, world-wide greenhouse gas emissions could be halved in one fell swoop if the world would employ the best available technologies.

WiWo: Isn’t it rather utopian to believe that all the countries in the world would agree on uniform technical standards?

Tol: It would often be sufficient if few market-dominating countries made advances in this direction. All the cars of this world, for example, are manufactured in just ten countries. If these countries would agree to reduce pollution output per HP by half in say ten years, that would relieve the environment enormously. The rest of the world would have no choice than to join in. Something similar applies to power stations, for which even fewer countries possess the technology. A bulk of problems would be solved if we succeeded to decouple energy consumption and emission output by means of modern technologies.

WiWo: Should the governments subsidise certain technologies financially?

Tol: We should certainly prevent civil servants to determine what is good or bad in this respect. Policy should be limited to determine certain goals, just like California, for instance, did with regards to car emissions. This would accelerate research and development most effectively.

WiWo: The German government reinforces the employment of renewable energies such as wind and sun. Wouldn’t a rapid expansion of nuclear energy protect global climate substantially better?

Tol: The huge amount of money that is flowing into wind energy in Germany is an off-putting example of what happens when governments select the technology. The people who are now earning very well on account of wind turbines had most excellent relations to the formerly Green [Party run] Department of the Environment. Much money is flowing although wind energy is very unreliable and will never provide more than ten per cent of the total energy requirement. In addition, wind energy is expensive and technical progress already today seems to be exhausted to a large extent. Nuclear power can be a solution. In any case, it is more reliable and, most likely, also cheaper in the long term.

WiWo: Some experts believe that it costs less to adapt to climate change instead of stopping it. Are they right?

Tol: We should do both. In order to prevent that rising sea levels flood coastal areas, the building of dykes is an inexpensive solution. But we should not let global warming proceed unconstrained, otherwise we risk that one day the water in the oceans evaporates.

WiWo: Next year, the IPCC, the scientific committee of the UN in charge of assessing climate change, will issue its next report. Is there sufficient economic expertise readily available in the IPCC?

Tol: Unfortunately, not at all. Over the years, the IPCC has become ever greener and the few economists, who were previously involved, have been pushed out. Obviously, this casts doubt on the quality of the results.

WiWo: On a personal note, how confident are you that the climate can be still salvaged?

Tol: I do not see any reason to panic. We’ve got enough time to act in response. And, it would appear that the Americans and Chinese, the two biggest climate sinners, will soon invest much more in modes of climate protection. The results of the American elections will strengthen climate activists in the USA so that I envisage new concrete climate programmes in the next three years. The Chinese will follow suit in the next decade, not least because otherwise they will be threatened by catastrophic environmental damage. That will generate a huge drive.

Copyright 2006, WirtschaftsWoche
Translation BJP

8 Responses to “Interview with Richard Tol”

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  1. Benny Peiser Says:

    Here is another question for Richard Tol:

    Just how likely do you think is it that Europe, the US, Canada or Australia are going to transfer $ billions worth of CO2 certificates to their most feared (i.e. Chinese, Indian or Russian) competitors? Wouldn’t the promotion (let alone implementation) of such a massive money-transfer scheme come close to political suicide?

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  3. Richard Tol Says:

    Benny:

    First, thanks for the translation.

    Emissions trade with “business as usual” targets for China and India can only be a start, drawing these countries into CO2 regulation with the promise of a new export market. (The OECD, by the way, would gain from the imports.)

    In the long run, if China and India are not interested in greenhouse gas emission reduction, then climate will continue to change.

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  5. Richard Belzer Says:

    My thanks also to Benny. I’d call my German rusty but that would imply more iron than oxidation.

    I am intrigued by the repeated efforts of the interviewer to badger Prof. Tol into agreeing that it is perfectly acceptable to mislead the public as long as it is for this good cause. I congratulate him for consistently (and persistenty) resisting, telling the interviewer that this tactic undermines the cause it purports to serve. I infer from his comments about the next IPCC report that it may be so “over the top” that it is easily discredited. In that case progress toward a consensus could be delayed another 5 years, or dashed entirely if it poisons the debate.

    I sense two critical problems confronting the climate change community. First, it has allowed (and indeed encouraged) climate change to be cast as a moral issue. Technical solutions, whether of an engineering or economic variety, cannot be reconcled with moral claims. Prof. Tol, whose other comments in the interview I applaud, seems to have slipped into this moral chasm by characterizing the USA and China as the greater climate “sinners.” In our decadent state, it’s possible that American elites (especially Democrats) will accept that self-abasement but the majority of voters will not. If the Democrats use their congressional majorities to promote a moral basis for action on climate change, they will surely lose in 2008 because Americans will not accept the accusation that they are an immoral people. Moreover, unlike its American counterpart, China’s elite will utterly reject the moral charge and be profoundly offended by it. To have a chance at being successful, the climate change community must get over its moral vanity.

    Second, this moral vanity encourages a socially pathological asymmetry: Because we represent the moral high ground, it is morally permisible for us to manipulate science to achieve our purposes but morally corrupt for our opponents to attempt to do the same.

    On the substance of Prof. Tol’s comments, he states that a carbon tax is the best approach but infeasible and that transferable emission permits is the second-best. I have previously commented on implementation problems with permits; there’s no need to bring them up again.

    I’d like to raise two new issues. First, Prof. Tol presumes that emission permits would be given away and not auctioned. I am much less confident in government’s ability to withstand the temptation to collect revenue. I expect governments to prefer carbon taxes, which are easier to impose the more that the climate change community talks in moral terms. I also expect that if taxes prove to be politically infeasible governments will seek ways to auction them, either directly (like spectrum) or indirectly (by erecting administrative hurdles or taxing transactions). (Note that any tax imposed on trading reduces the value of permits and undermines the effectiveness of a permit regime. In a contest between revenue and program effectiveness, governments will choose revenue.)

    Second, India might agree to a market-based mechanism; they have made major strides toward free markets since their socialist days. But I don’t see why the Chinese would be willing to do so. Allowing the market to set prices relieves them of the capacity to extract maximum rents. Why would they agree to give it up?

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  7. Richard Tol Says:

    First, I never used the word “sinner”. The journalist or his editor inserted this.

    Second, tradable permits are not ideal. Their big advantages are that it is easier (1) to harmonise international climate policy with permit trade and (2) to transfer money.

    I would think that China, India etc would rather have tradable permits that can be exported than a carbon tax — but these countries are far from considering a discussion on this, so that is pure speculation on my part.

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  9. winston Says:

    The world has seen conditions made intolerable for the value-free market in so many other things (slavery, child labor, leaded gasoline, CFCs to name but several) Richard, that I hold out little hope that reason can prevail in the case of greenhouse gases now.

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  11. Mark Bahner Says:

    “But we should not let global warming proceed unconstrained, otherwise we risk that one day the water in the oceans evaporates.”

    Is this an accurate translation?

    Dr. Tol, are you seriously proposing that greenhouse gas emissions would ever cause the earth’s surface temperature to even approach 30 degrees Celsius (from the present ~15 deg C), let alone 100 degrees Celsius (the boiling point of water)?

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  13. Richard Tol Says:

    We probably do not have enough fossil fuel on the planet to get the temperature that high.

    I occasionally say this to illustrate that global warming will have to stop at some point, starting with the most far-fetched example (evaporated oceans) that most people would agree would not be good …

    and then moving on to those impacts that we may cause and may want to avoid.

    A proper journalist, of course, stops writing after the first example.

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  15. Richard Belzer Says:

    Prof. Tol,

    I am pleased to learn that you were misquoted — or rather, that the magazine chose to manipulate your words for their own purposes. Elsewhere today on Prometheus I have posted a comment about environment reporters. It appears that I understated my case.

    I agree with you completely that permits are superior to carbon taxes insofar as they are able to limit graft and governmental revenue addiction, both of which cartbon taxes encourage. My concern about permits remains threefold:

    (1) Will governments create permits that are truly property rights that can be freely traded without constraint, restriction or taxation? So far as I know, there may be only one precedent for this by any national government: the New Zealand ITQ fisheries regime. I’m not sure we economists are as smart or clever in the real world as we are in theory.

    (2) Will the permits that are created be genuine? A property rights regime founded on bogus permits will fail to achieve its objectives. Moreover, bogus permits will damage public confidence in and support for peroperty rights-based incentives. Think about the damage done by Enron to the cause of electricity markets. Now multiply by a very large number.

    (3) Does a permit system rely for its success on nations incapable and/or unwilling to establish and enforce property rights? China and Russia are the least capable of managing their end of any bargain that relies on property rights. They can’t (or won’t) even stop the pirate DVD market; they don’t have or don’t honor real property rights; they routinely expropriate assets.

    These are problems we ought to be thinking hard about. If we cannot figure out solutions, then perhaps we need to begin looking for third-, fourth-, and fifth-best schemes.