Dear Ken,
 
A good suggestion. The list that you provide is a reasonable one. I would add 
that my understanding is that moral hazard refers to a specific kind of market 
failure. It is not just risky behavior. A simple definition that I think 
corresponds quite well to the way that the term is commonly used Is:
 
"The risk that the existence of a contract will change the behavior of one or 
both parties to the contract, e.g. an insured firm will take fewer fire 
precautions. " Asymmetric information between the contracting parties is a 
typical feature moral hazard problems. The insurer or principal knows less than 
the insured or agent about the latter's behavior or state. 
 
Climate engineering is not such a case. It's a policy choice by government. 
There is no contract. There is no information asymmetry. True, risk is 
involved, but GHG control also implies accepting some risks in order to curb 
others. Nobody argues that emission limits entail moral hazard, and no one 
should. People can agree or disagree about the prudence of either or both 
approaches. As you know, I would buy some of both, but neither of the policies 
has much in common with insurers' or share owners' options as they try to align 
the incentives of the insured or their firm managers' with their own interests. 
 
These just seem to me to present issues that are quite different from the 
optimization problems under uncertainty entailed by climate change. And as my 
previous post suggested, trying to force climate policy into this mold seems to 
me to invite misunderstanding of the issues at hand.  
 
Lee     

________________________________

From: [email protected] on behalf of Ken Caldeira
Sent: Sat 9/18/2010 12:23 PM
To: Lane, Lee O.
Cc: [email protected]; geoengineering; David Keith
Subject: Re: [geo] Re: Fwd: NERC Geoengineering dialogue report published today


Lee,

It would help in this discussion to provide a clear definition of "moral 
hazard" and then say why or why not that definition is relevant in this context.

If you look on the web, you can get quite a range of definitions:  
http://www.google.com/search?q=define%3A+moral+hazard

The first definition that comes up is:

Moral Hazard (economics) the lack of any incentive to guard against a risk when 
you are protected against it (as by insurance)

The UN Capital Development Fund defines it as follows:

Moral Hazard arises from the incentive of an agent holding an asset belonging 
to another person to endanger the value of that asset because the agent bears 
less than the full consequences of any loss.

So, the question is "Why are these definitions not relevant to climate 
intervention?"

By the way, most but not all definitions of "moral hazard" do not imply that 
"moral hazard" has anything to do with morality.

Climate intervention seeks to diminish risk and not simply transfer risk, which 
is one distinguishing factor.

Here is a little parable:

Let's say that people think you should change farming practices to slow runoff 
to decrease flooding downstream. Let's further say that people downstream build 
dikes to prevent flooding despite poor upstream land use practices. Would we 
say that a moral hazard of building dikes is that it will relieve pressure on 
people living upstream to improve their land use practices (which could have 
other co-benefits, such as limiting nutrient runoff)?

[The analogy is that CO2 emission reduction gets at fundamental cause of 
problem, has other co-benefits (e.g. w.r.t. ocean acidification) but that 
climate intervention may really reduce risk and not just transfer risk.]

Anyway, Lee, it would be nice if you would provide what you think is a good 
definition for "moral hazard" and then clearly explain why you think it does 
not apply in this case.

Best,

Ken

PS. David Keith may want to chime in, as I think he was one of the first to use 
"moral hazard" in this context and now wishes he had been more precise with his 
language.

___________________________________________________
Ken Caldeira

Carnegie Institution Dept of Global Ecology
260 Panama Street, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
+1 650 704 7212 [email protected] 
http://dge.stanford.edu/labs/caldeiralab  @kencaldeira



On Sat, Sep 18, 2010 at 8:56 AM, Lane, Lee O. <[email protected]> wrote:


        Dear Josh,

         

        I would suggest that in the future we would all be better off without 
the term "moral hazard". Moral hazard, as I suspect you know, is a kind of 
market failure. The concept is perfectly useful for describing a class of 
problems that arise in insurance markets and other kinds of risk-spreading 
contracts. It does not, I would argue, fit the case of climate engineering (CE) 
at all well.

         

        The relative priority of climate engineering and GHG control is a 
matter of public policy. It does not involve insurance markets or contracting. 
The asymmetric knowledge, so typical of moral hazards, does not obtain.   

         

        In fact, if CE works and does not cause unacceptable side effects, it 
would lower the expected damage from an adding a ton of CO2 to the atmosphere. 
As a result, optimal carbon tax rates or emission allowance prices would fall, 
and the optimal pace of controls would slow. 

         

        True, even if CE works well, it may exhibit diminishing marginal 
returns, and it does not combat ocean acidification. Thus, controls retain some 
value; so does adaptation. The three approaches, as Scott Barrett has often 
noted, are imperfect substitutes. (Doing more of one implies doing less of the 
others, but there is a limit to how far that substitution can stretch.) Each of 
the three is likely to encounter rising marginal costs; hence, relying 
over-much on any one of them will lower over-all cost effectiveness.

         

        In this context, the term moral hazard adds nothing but confusion. Its 
misuse can be taken to imply that sole reliance on GHG control is somehow the 
correct response. Indeed the naïve may take it that controls are the only 
"moral" response. The more we think, speak, and write in these evocative but 
misleading terms the harder it becomes to see that climate policy should entail 
finding the most cost beneficial mix of strategies for dealing with a compound 
challenge in the face of uncertainty. 

         

        Josh, I suspect that you know all of this; indeed, you could probably 
write it more articulately than I have. My guess is that you use the term 
merely as a convenience. Its misuse has seemed to take root in the debate about 
CE. Maybe it is too late to expunge it. Still, I would urge that we at least 
avoid sowing further confusion-even if it involves taking a little extra 
trouble to explain. 

         

        Best regards,

         

        Lee Lane   

         

        

          

         

         

         

        One of the more interesting findings pertains to the "moral hazard"
        argument against geoengineering, that is, people will embrace
        geoengineering as an excuse to avoid emissions reductions, and current
        levels of fossil fuel consumption will persist if not increase. Moral
        hazard has emerged as one of the principal arguments against climate
        engineering, despite the fact that geoengineering advocates generally
        support aggressive mitigation as the preferred option, and are quick
        to note the limitations of specific strategies, such as continued
        ocean acidification and the so-called "termination problem" in the
        case of stratospheric aerosol injections.
        
        Evidence from the public dialogue summarized in the NERC report
        indicates that participants viewed mitigation and geoengineering as
        complementary policies, not as mutually exclusive alternatives.
        Stakeholders saw a link between geoengineering and emissions controls,
        and preferred a suite of mitigation and geoengineering measures to
        reliance on any single approach. "This evidence is contrary to the
        'moral hazard' argument that geoengineering would undermine popular
        support for mitigation or adaptation," notes the report. While this
        study represents only one set of empirical data gathered in one
        particular sociocultural context, it is to my knowledge the first time
        the moral hazard argument has been tested, and demonstrates little
        support for this proposition.
        
        Josh Horton
        [email protected]
        http://geoengineeringpolitics.blogspot.com/
        
        
        On Sep 9, 10:45 am, Emily <[email protected]> wrote:
        >   best wishes,
        > Emily.
        >
        > Dear Colleague,
        >
        > NERC has published the final report of Experiment Earth? , our public
        > dialogue on geoengineering. It can be found 
at:http://www.nerc.ac.uk/about/consult/geoengineering.asptogether with a
        > short leaflet summarising the findings and recommendations from the 
report.
        >
        > The latest issue of NERC's Planet Earth magazine also contains an
        > article about the public dialogue, which can be found 
here:http://planetearth.nerc.ac.uk/features/story.aspx?id=744
        >
        > Regards,
        >
        > Peter
        >
        > Peter Hurrell
        >
        > Stakeholder Liaison Officer | Policy and Partnerships Team
        >
        > Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)
        >
        > Putting NERC science to use: find out more through NERC s Science
        > Impacts Database <http://sid.nerc.ac.uk/>
        >
        > --
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