The Economics of Climate Adaptation: An Assessment
Clicks: 5
ID: 281651
2024
The cost of the impacts of climate change have already proven to be larger
than previously believed. Understanding the costs and benefits of adapting to
the changing climate is necessary to make targeted and appropriate investment
decisions. In this paper, we use a narrative review to synthesize the current
literature on the economic case for climate adaptation, with the objective of
assessing the value (economic and otherwise) of climate change adaptation, as
well as the strength of the methods and evidence that have been used to date.
We find that skepticism is warranted about many of the estimates about costs
and benefits of climate adaptation and their underlying assumptions, due to a
range of complexities associated with (1) uncertainty in distinguishing the
economic impacts of climate change from seasonal variability; (2) difficulties
in non-market valuation; (3) lack of consistent data collection over time at
multiple scales; and (4) distributional inequities in access to proactive
adaptation and recovery funding. While useful for broad stroke advocacy
purposes, these estimates fall short of the refinement and rigor needed to
inform investment decision-making, particularly at micro and local scales. Most
estimates rely on cost benefit analysis and do not effectively address these
issues. An emergent and promising literature tackles alternative estimation
strategies and attempts to address some of them, including the complexities of
uncertainty and non-market valuation.
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Authors | Anna Josephson; Rodrigo Guerra Su; Greg Collins; Katharine Jacobs |
Journal | arXiv |
Year | 2024 |
DOI | DOI not found |
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