For decades, a primary weapon used by climate denialists, fossil fuel companies and their media allies has been the argument that the costs of climate action, compared to “business as usual”, are prohibitive in terms of taxpayer money, or lost economic growth, or jobs — even if the cost was only a notional one, in slower future growth or fewer future additional jobs.
It was a tool favoured particularly by the Howard government, which would justify climate inaction by calculating the purported cost of any initiative, dramatically inflating the expense by extrapolating it many years, or even decades, into the future, and misleadingly suggesting the resulting total was some sort of immediate impact awaiting anyone who tried to take action.
And the “business as usual” scenario against which the costs of action were compared never included the costs of preventable global heating.
This lie continues even now — the shrill demand from journalists (usually Murdoch journalists) at election campaign media conferences in 2019 and 2022 for the cost of Labor’s (hopelessly unambitious) climate policies purposefully ignored the costs of climate inaction.
Now we have the opportunity to see how damaging that “business as usual” scenario really is.
While the heatwave breaking heat records across southern Europe and northern Africa has garnered attention for its impact on tourism, that’s only a subset of the economic impacts being generated by the climate crisis in Europe, which is warming at a faster rate than any other continent.
Take one salient example. A severe long-running drought in the western Mediterranean has dramatically cut olive oil production in Spain — by far the world’s biggest producer, responsible for around 40% of global production — and in Italy and Portugal, the number two and four producers respectively. Only Greece, the number-three producer, has maintained production, and it’s currently being battered by a heat wave as well. The result: global olive oil prices have soared, first to levels not seen since the 2000s, and now to all-time record levels, with recent spot prices topping $7000 a metric tonne.
The economic costs already, and likely to be, incurred due to global heating are the subject of growing analysis. In April, the International Monetary Fund published a working paper examining inflation induced by climate change-related events since 1970 and concluded heat events lead to sustained price rises in advanced economies, “drought shocks” lead to price rises in both advanced and developing economies, and the rises are long-term in the latter, but that “storm shocks” don’t lead to long-run price effects.
“Storm shocks”, however, are more likely to have private and public infrastructure impacts: spring floods in the US Midwest were estimated to have caused US$3 billion in damage; winter floods in California (until recently in the grip of a shocking drought) were estimated to have caused US$5-7 billion in losses. US government data shows “billion-dollar disasters” are becoming more frequent in the US (partly as a result of population and economic changes, but also climate change).
Australians know the rising cost of climate-related events themselves — the Black Summer bushfires inflicted $5 billion in costs on farmers alone; $2 billion in healthcare costs; billions in reconstruction costs, and tens of billions in wildlife and ecosystem loss, as part of a total that may approach $100 billion in the long run.
In May, the European Central Bank published research suggesting “future warming will cause global increases in annual food and headline inflation of 0.92-3.23 and 0.32-1.18 percentage points per year by 2035 respectively”, adding that “the impacts of the 2022 summer extreme heat in Europe, finding that it cumulatively increased food inflation by 0.67 (0.43-0.93) percentage points. The impacts from an equivalent extreme would be amplified by 50% under 2035 projected warming.”
A July 2022 study suggested that CO2-equivalent emissions from the US, China, Russia, Brazil and India alone had together caused US$6 trillion in global economic losses since 1990.
All of this is separate from the death tolls associated with floods and heat events. While the pandemic demonstrated that many business lobbyists and their media supporters aren’t fussed by excess deaths if they get in the way of commerce, each death represents an economic loss as well as grieving and pain for loved ones. The 2022 European heatwave is estimated to have killed more than 60,000 people. Heatwaves in the US have increased in duration, frequency, intensity and seasonal spread, with each extra day killing more Americans.
The higher inflation, greater property damage, greater need for infrastructure spending and tens of thousands of additional deaths are the real “business as usual” scenario of climate inaction, in contrast to the rosy world of climate denialists arguing that the economy couldn’t afford climate action.
They’ve engineered a world that is not merely hotter, but more expensive, more volatile, more lethal and more demanding of taxpayers. The lie of “business as usual” will eventually cost trillions globally, along with millions of lives. And with El Niño returning to Australia this summer, the costs will only increase for us too.
Are you concerned about the cost of climate inaction? Let us know by writing to letters@crikey.com.au. Please include your full name to be considered for publication. We reserve the right to edit for length and clarity.
I’d naively thought that the clear decline of the Barrier Reef might jolt Australians into actin on Climate Change.
Then I got it wrong again when I thought that the widespread horror and publicity surrounding the 2019 bushfires might have triggered public demands for action.
Now I’m hardened enough to think that any dollar figures, be they many billions, will be like water off a ducks back in terms of the change they’ll drive.
We have a significant percentage of the world’s population who think this whole thing is a hoax. We have a huge number of people who just don’t seem to be able to grasp the extent to which climate change will alter and degrade society, civil order, food production, ecosystems and basically all life on earth in the next 100 to 200 years if we don’t act now.
Perhaps none of this is surprising when almost universally, we have governments, who, rather than telling it as it is, are busy hiding the truth. Here in Aus. we have them trying to make people feel personal guilt for using gas while the government works on increasing its production, using plastic while they do the same thing, doing nothing for electric cars and expanding fossil fuel exploration under the complete bs banner of it being green!
At a point in time where we have the knowledge to live a harmonious and balanced existence we choose instead to blindly follow increasingly dumber and madder leaders like Trump, Johnson and Scummo into a man made hell.
It’s not a good time to understand the very depressing medium-long term effects of climate change and the way action is not progressing at the moment, it’s more than likely that our children will see the true horror of what’s going to be inevitable for them and more so for their children. We’ll be gone but our legacy looks like 3 or 4 degrees of warming and that’s nothing to be proud of.
Not to mention Russia taking the opportunity to restart imperial war in Europe, and escalating conflict in the Middle East and Africa, and failed states in the Pacific. When things start to fall apart, you can either work together or fight over the remaining resources and power. It’s a choice that seems to have been made.
We have gone beyond evidence. I don’t want to go all Kubler-Ross here, but I think the bulk of Australia and the world’s population know what’s happening, but prefer to remain in denial. It’s all too big for many of them. That’s why people like Trump, Morrison, Johnson, Putin, Rupert the M, etcetera are all so popular (perhaps Putin excepted). It’s because the populist leader telling you what you want to hear is a return to a time when no one had to face the rapidly unfolding horrors of world-wide catastrophe, a blissful breathing space when God smiled on humankind and we were given domain over the earth. It’s the same reason people take drugs or get drunk when they’re on a downward slide or in grief; it postpones the inevitable, but it keeps you sane for a small period.
The fossil fueled Anglosphere, esp above median age voters with short term horizons…. names you mention are merely the PR enablers for a very long game hiding behind, the fossil fueled Christians for ‘freedom & liberty’ from regulation, taxes and government.
However, they see no contradiction in demanding and receiving state socialism to keep fossil fuels central while encouraging climate (& Covid) science denialism, following beliefs and sentiments e.g. just pray to God, or balem immigrants and population growth.
The good news is that emissions have been falling while economic growth has continued, how? Simple free market economics due to renewable source costs falling and faster transition away from fossil fuels (Anglosphere is a laggard, but also occurring).
Burns-Murdoch in FT article Sep ’22 ‘Opinion Data Points: Economics may take us to net zero all on its own The plummeting cost of low-carbon energy has already allowed many countries to decouple economic growth from emissions’
Embedded in the article is a very descriptive chart comparing 28 countries, all experiencing steady decline in emissions with economic growth; win win.
https://www.ft.com/content/967e1d77-8d3c-4256-9339-6ea7025cd5d3
Well stated FD.
A mate of mine watches the Alt Right material on YouTube as his sole source of information. He’s shifted from denying climate change to acknowledging it exists, but denying its cause is anthropogenic. It’s due to the Earth’s magnetic poles shifting, solar flares or something (not sure about about that as his understanding of astronomy is vanishingly small), we’re due for a ice age it’s all happened before and is natural …
Pointless arguing with him, that fuels the conspiracy theories and a rant about Joe Biden, Daniel Andrews and Meghan Markle.
Think of it this way. I recently watched an interview with the late, great Christopher Reeve on YouTube. He made the remark, among others, that the media are always trying to work out how or what to label you.
Why? For an accurate summary or description? No, quite the opposite. Reality’s mess is an inconvenience.
The label obscures it for the convenience of gossip writers, media managers, and their audience.
This is not a side-effect. In the modern age, where you can’t know or like everyone, labels are a way of managing-by-ignoring that the problem is too big.
The problem with reality is that it is too big. This cannot be faced by our managers, because it is hard for us to reverse course, when society is based on ignoring half the stuff in it — and specifically the stuff we cannot face…
That made sense in my head.
The Mad Monk told us climate science is “absolute crap”, and in corkscrew logic that climate change is “probably doing good”.
It reflects on us badly that such an idiot can have held high office.
While all of us reading this excellent piece by BK nod sadly and either go back to doing what little we can or despairingly do nothing at all, the rich and powerful don’t give a rat’s a—. Platitudes about “we’re all in this together” / “the heatwaves and floods, droughts and food-shortages will affect us all” are patent nonsense. The 1% of the 1% will keep raping and pillaging the planet, aided and abetted by their government myrmidons, in the knowledge that they will always be able to move to a safe place, with plenty of willing servants (willing to escape the conflagration), protected by a private army.
Only when it’s too late – which maybe it already is – will the masses rise up and demand that their governments act to save them.
Not sure why the rich need “a private army” when governments are more than happy to protect them from due process & just desserts…in the desert that will be the Future, if any.
All this namby-pamby bleeding heart environmentalist stuff.
Let Europe burn, I say! And anywhere else on the planet, too.
Will NO-ONE consider the profits of the fossil fuel industry?
Labor giving up to new mines and fracking in Beetaloo !!!! what a bunch of lying neo lib and tge others are too vile but Fadden do not give a shidffg
It is far too expensive to stop climate change.
Save the money for … eating? burning?
During the May convention of the gas & petroleum industry in Adelaide there was much consternation when members of Extinction Rebellion demonstrated, especially when one abseiled off the Morphett Street Bridge during morning peak hour. This put traffic into gridlock for approximately a hour after which the locals were furious about the inconvenience. Having their routine or plans disrupted was intolerable. In comparison just imagine how climate change will inconvenience & undermine society.
I think our anger at these groups is anger that they are drawing these inconvenient truths to our attention.
How angry are “we”? I wonder if most of the anger isn’t a beat-up by the Murdoch Press.
It’s unbelievable.
We are watching a world at war with the climate but won’t declare it.
We know this is coming for us in Australia in a few months. This summer is going to be hell. People are going to lose homes. Yet the government is more concerned with nuclear subs than water planes.