http://www.technologyreview.com/review/513526/climate-change-the-moral-choices/

MIT Technology Review

Climate Change: The Moral Choices

The effects of global warming will persist for hundreds of years. What are
our responsibilities and duties today to help safeguard the distant future?
That is the question ethicists are now asking.

By David Rotman
April 11, 2013

One of the defining characteristics of climate change is poorly appreciated
by most people: the higher temperatures and other effects induced by
increasing levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere will persist for a
very long time. Scientists have long realized that carbon dioxide emitted
during the burning of fossil fuels tends to linger in the atmosphere for
extended periods, even for centuries. Over the last few years, researchers
have calculated that some of the resulting changes to the earth’s climate,
including increased temperature, are more persistent still: even if
emissions are abruptly ended and carbon dioxide levels gradually drop, the
temperature will stubbornly remain elevated for a thousand years or more.
The earth’s thermostat is essentially being turned up and there are no
readily foreseeable ways to turn it back down; even risky geoengineering
schemes would at best offset the higher temperatures only temporarily.It’s
a shocking realization, especially given how little progress has been made
in slowing carbon dioxide emissions. But it is precisely the long-term
nature of the problem that makes it so urgent for us to limit emissions as
quickly and radically as possible. To have a decent chance of meeting the
widely accepted international goal of keeping warming at or below 2 °C,
emissions need to be cut substantially over the next few years. By 2050
they must be reduced by half or more from 2009 levels.The mismatch between
when we need to act and when many of the benefits will accrue helps to
explain why climate change is such a politically and economically thorny
problem. How do you convince people and governments to invest in a far-off
future? Clearly, it is not a problem that can easily be addressed by most
politicians, given the immediate and pressing needs of their constituents.
Because it involves defining and understanding our responsibilities to
future generations, our action (or inaction) on climate change falls
squarely into the realm of moral and political philosophy.Over the last few
years a small but growing number of writers have begun to wrestle with some
profound questions. What ethical guidelines should economists follow when
evaluating today’s costs against future benefits? How should we weigh
uncertainties, including the risks of catastrophic changes wrought by
global warming? Would geoengineering be ethical? How does climate change
affect our perception of the world and our future role in it? The
conclusions they’ve reached are nuanced and can turn on esoteric
definitions of terms such as “justice” and “moral good.” But their
reasoning often provides keen insights into today’s most pressing policy
questions.In Climate Matters: Ethics in a Warming World, John Broome, a
moral philosopher at the University of Oxford, explains the methods and
arguments that help us understand the ethical implications of global
warming, and he demonstrates why this reasoning can offer useful insights
into how we should act. Trained in economics at MIT, Broome is particularly
interested in assessing the ethical judgments made by economists.
“Economists recognized, say, 50 years ago that economics is based on
ethical assumptions,” he says. “But a number of them seem to have forgotten
that in recent decades. They think what they do is somehow in an
‘ethic-free zone.’ And that plainly isn’t so. And climate change makes that
obvious.”One of the most controversial issues in economic analysis of
climate-change policy is how to weigh the cost of implementing changes now
against the benefits that future generations will realize—or the harm they
will avoid. It might be supposed that we should do everything we can
possibly do now, but that would probably be wrong, suggests Broome, since
extremely radical action would have such negative consequences for those
alive today that the effects would be felt for generations. Broome wrestles
with how to balance these factors in an ethically responsible way,
concluding that economists are, in general, right in adopting so-called
cost-benefit analyses to evaluate actions on climate change. But he
stresses that the ethical assumptions underlying such analyses are
critical—and that economists often ignore or misunderstand them.Even if
people are richer in the future, climate change might reduce the quality of
their lives.A standard tool in cost-benefit analysis is what economists
call the discount rate, which makes it possible to apply a value today to
an investment that won’t pay off until some future date. In Broome’s
example, if the discount rate is 6 percent per year, you could buy a given
amount of rice now, but you should pay 94 percent of that price today if it
were to be delivered in a year or 83.06 percent if it were to be delivered
in three years. The basic idea is that people will be richer in the future
as economies keep growing, so a given amount of a commodity or money will
have less value than it has now. The higher the discount rate, the less
value is assigned to a future commodity.The way economists calculate
discount rates has enormous implications for energy policy. In 2006,
Nicholas Stern, a prominent economist at the London School of Economics and
former chief economist of the World Bank, published “The Economics of
Climate Change,” an influential report that called for immediate and
significant spending (he has more recently called for even larger
investments; see “Q&A with Nicholas Stern.”) Stern used an unconventionally
low discount rate of 1.4 percent, which led him to place a high value on
the future benefits of today’s investments to address climate change. He
was immediately attacked by a number of academic economists. Most notably,
William Nordhaus of Yale University published A Question of Balance, in
which he argued that the appropriate discount rate should be about 5
percent. Nordhaus thus concluded that spending to deal with climate change
should be much more gradual, and that much of it should be delayed for
several decades.Typically, economists calculate the discount rate by using
money markets to determine the expected return on capital. The reasoning is
that the market is the most democratic means of assigning value. But while
that practice might work well to account for the value of commodities,
Broome argues that calculating the discount rate for action on climate
change is far more complex. For one thing, the conventional method doesn’t
fully account for the possibility that even if people are richer in the
future, climate change might reduce the quality of their lives in other
important ways—and thus it underestimates the value of current investments.
Broome ends up supporting a rate similar to Stern’s.But his larger point
is, more simply, that even such quantitative economic evaluations need to
fully incorporate moral principles.The discount rate is a matter of the
value of future people’s benefits compared to our own. More than anything
else, it determines what sacrifices the present generation should make for
the sake of the future. This is a moral matter.Broome also ponders the
implications of how we think about extreme risk. Most people accept that it
is worthwhile to invest in avoiding a particularly onerous outcome, even if
it is not a likely one. That’s why we buy fire extinguishers and home fire
insurance, even though a fire is unlikely. But how should we value the
ability to avoid a catastrophic outcome that is very improbable? Some
leading economists have begun arguing that heading off even the remote
chance of such outcomes should be the main object of climate-change policy.
Not surprisingly, Broome calls for using moral principles to evaluate just
how bad various outcomes could be and how much we should concentrate on
avoiding them. That means making difficult decisions about the value of
human lives and of natural systems; it also means calculating how “bad” it
would be if climate change reduced the size of the human population.
“Deciding whether it will be very, very bad takes ethical analysis,” he
says.Broome’s focus on the reasoning of economists is not arbitrary.
Economists have “largely been in the driver’s seat” in guiding governments’
policies on climate change, he says. “But they don’t always get their
ethical foundations right.” By not fully accounting for people’s future
well-being and such difficult-to-quantify values as the beauty of nature,
Broome says, many economists have seriously underestimated how much we
should be spending now to address climate change.What Would God Do?In his
2010 book, Requiem for a Species: Why We Resist the Truth about Climate
Change, Clive Hamilton, a professor of public ethics at Charles Sturt
University in Canberra, Australia, argues that it is already too late to
stop many of the dire consequences of global warming and that we’re almost
sure to make it far, far worse.After that book was published, ­Hamilton
says, he became convinced that the “growing gap” between the widely
accepted scientific evidence for the dangers of global warming and the lack
of any political progress toward addressing the problem would increase the
pressure to view geoengineering as a feasible option. He expects it to
become “the dominant issue in climate-change discussions within the next
five to 10 years.” So in his newest book, Earthmasters: The Dawn of the Age
of Climate Engineering, ­Hamilton takes a critical look at various
geoengineering proposals, such as the use of sulfur particles or manmade
materials to partially block the sun (see “A Cheap and Easy Plan to Stop
Global Warming.”) He is highly skeptical of any such schemes to rejigger
the earth’s atmosphere to fix climate change and deeply suspicious of the
motivations of many of its advocates.Hamilton uses the term “playing God”
to describe the hubris of some of the people suggesting geoengineering. He
doubts we would be very good at it, or very fair in applying a technology
that would be likely to harm some people and help others. Perhaps most
damning, he says that it raises moral problems—and strains common sense—to
propose using such risky measures because we have failed to tackle climate
change with existing technologies.If humans were sufficiently omniscient
and omnipotent, would we, like God, use climate engineering methods
benevolently? Earth system science cannot answer this question, but it
hardly needs to, for we know the answer already. Given that humans are
proposing to engineer the climate because of a cascade of institutional
failings and self-interested behaviours, any suggestions that deployment of
a solar shield would be done in a way that fulfilled the strongest
principles of justice and compassion would lack credibility, to say the
least.In Hamilton’s thinking, geoengineering is the latest example of our
hope that “techno-fixes” will rescue us from global warming. He points to
large—and, he says, largely fruitless—investments in carbon capture and
storage (CCS) as a way to negate the emissions from burning coal and writes
that the “false promise” of CCS has contributed to a “lost decade in
responding to climate change.” The problem is not only that such “energy
miracles” are unlikely to work as advocates hope but that the prospect of
them presents a moral hazard, tempting people to persist in risky actions
without expecting dire consequences. What’s more, says ­Hamilton, relying
on techno-fixes ignores the underlying economic, political, and ethical
failures that have produced the climate-change crisis in the first
place.More broadly, Hamilton emphasizes the “astonishing ethical
implications” of climate change over the long term—and of what would-be
geoengineers are proposing. We’re at “a historical point,” he says. “We
need to reopen the question of who we are as a species and what kind of a
creature we have become.” Yet the attentive reader will note that Hamilton
doesn’t rule out geoengineering in the future, if the situation becomes
desperate. Rather, he calls on us to examine the economic and political
motivations of geoengineering advocates and to understand that trying to
engineer the climate reflects a misplaced faith in technology’s ability to
solve political and social problems.We have barely begun to grapple with
the moral issues related to climate change.In A Perfect Moral Storm: The
Ethical Tragedy of Climate Change, Stephen M. Gardiner reaches similar
conclusions after a far different type of analysis. Unlike Hamilton,
Gardiner, a professor of philosophy at the University of Washington, has
little interest in the players and politics behind geoengineering. Instead,
he rigorously analyzes the moral justifications for considering the
technology.In particular, he questions the simplistic reasoning that since
geoengineering could turn out to be the “lesser evil” in some future
climate emergency, we should be researching it now to understand the
technology and its risks. That argument conceals many ethical challenges,
he contends. Is it ethical of us to expect a future generation to take on
the dangers and costs of geoengineering because we have failed to address
climate change? And wouldn’t a large research push on geoengineering just
increase the unfortunate possibility that it will be used?CrosswindsThough
they reflect very different interests and objectives, these books, taken
together, begin to shed light on why climate change has been such a
difficult problem to address and even define. After all, if it is
fundamentally a moral issue, then simple economic or technology-based
solutions will understandably fall short."">What’s more, climate change
poses particularly tough moral problems. The title of Gardiner’s book
refers to the convergence of three separate moral “storms,” or “obstacles
to our ability to behave ethically.” The biggest is the way future
generations are at the mercy of current ones —what he sometimes calls
generational buck-passing. The others involve the different impacts of
climate change around the world and among different populations, and the
prospect that theoretical uncertainties in areas such as intergenerational
ethics and climate science will make it difficult for us to act. Gardiner
spends nearly 500 pages trying to map the crosswinds of these storms,
concluding that “it will not be easy for us to emerge morally
unscathed.”Still, a clear first step would be to acknowledge the moral
issues associated with climate change and the likely need for some painful
decisions. Gardiner rightly points out that much of the public debate is
dominated by “technological and social optimists” who argue for “win-win”
solutions that will allow us to address the problem without any economic
sacrifices or hard ethical choices. Might green energy simply solve the
problem, not only for us but for future generations? We’re beginning to
know the answer; a clean-tech revolution hasn’t come close to happening, in
part because it would necessarily mean making difficult choices. What’s
more, says Gardiner, clinging to that hope obscures the real reasons we
need to do something about climate change:More generally, the current focus
on the green energy revolution rationale puts pressure in the wrong place.
The dominant reason for acting on climate change is not that it would make
us better off. It is that not acting involves taking advantage of the poor,
the future, and nature … The green revolution claim runs the risk of
obscuring what is at stake in climate change, and in a way that undercuts
motivation. The key point is that we should act on climate change even if
doing so does not make us better off: indeed, even if it may make us
significantly worse off. If we hide or dilute the moral issues, then this
important truth is lost, and the prospects for ethically defensible action
diminish.We have barely begun to grapple with the moral issues related to
climate change. Indeed, few are even likely to accept the basic role that
ethical issues should play in our policy decisions, and certainly our
responsibilities to the distant future are seldom part of the public
debate. But given the convincing evidence climate scientists have presented
that our actions over the next several decades will have direct
consequences for generations who will live many years from now, we must
consider the moral dimensions of our response. As Gardiner puts it at the
end of his book: “The time to think seriously about the future of humanity
is upon us.”

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