Pictet Group
Climate change: Answers to common questions
Amid the ongoing debate about climate change, investors often fail to appreciate the sheer weight of scientific evidence attesting to humanity’s impact on the planet. Equally, they might not know where further research is required before firm conclusions can be reached about how best to contain or reverse global w arming.
Written in thoughtful, clear and unemotive language by Professor Cameron Hepburn and Moritz Schwarz of the University’s Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment, it is an important resource for those of us who are not climate change specialists.
It addresses several contentions – that climate change is not happening or that, if it is, it will be mild – or that, in any event humans are not causing it. The authors also address questions about the impact of climate change – whether there might be benefits, the scale of likely damage, and humans’ ability to adapt.
It’s a document we at Pictet are proud to have sponsored. We understand that climate change affects all of our futures, wherever we are in the world, whatever our standing.
Authors:
Cameron Hepburn, Professor
Moritz Schwarz, Doctoral student
Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment
Institute for New Economic Thinking
University of Oxford
Overview
As the world marks the fifth anniversary of the Paris Climate Change Agreement, a new report by Oxford University in partnership with the Pictet Group offers a sobering assessment of the environmental problems facing our planet.
The study, by Professor Cameron Hepburn and Moritz Schwarz of the University’s Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment, seeks to dispel many of the lingering myths about climate change and sheds new light on the scale of the likely damage if decision makers fail to meet their carbon emission targets. Furthermore, amid the swirling debate about global warming, governments, businesses and investors “often fail to appreciate the sheer weight of scientific evidence attesting to humanity’s impact on the planet” the report warns.
Prof Hepburn’s and Mr Schwarz’s report was written as a response to questions the Oxford team has received from governments, business leaders and investors on the effects of global warming.
The document is structured into nine areas of doubt commonly expressed about climate science and economics, each of which is broken down into points of contention.
Type of doubt | Underlying question | Specific challenges |
Doubt re impact | Questions about existence or extent | 1 - “Climate change is not happening” 2 - “Warming will be very modest” |
Questions about source | 3 - “Humans are not causing climate change” | |
Questions about impact | 4 - “There are benefits from climate change” 5 - “Damage from climate change will be small or uncertain” 6 - “Humans will be able to adapt” | |
Doubt re mitigation | Response is futile | 7 - “There is no point in reducing emissions, Earth will keep warming anyway” |
Response is costly | 8 - “The cost of reducing emissions are very high” | |
Response is unequally shared | 9 - “Other countries are not playing their part” |