An overly simplistic title, but some very good models. 

Sidenote: if we could find a way to engage evangelical Christians with the real 
data behind climate change, it would turn US politics upside down...

E

The Only Woman to Win the Nobel Prize in Economics Showed Us How to Solve the 
Climate Crisis - Evonomics
http://evonomics.com/woman-nobel-prize-economics-elinor-ostrom-planet/
(via Instapaper)

By James Dyke

We’re now certain that 2015 was the warmest year ever recorded. However, rather 
than reduce green house gas emissions – something that has to happen quite 
urgently in order to avoid crashing through the safety barrier of 2℃ warming – 
we continue to pump more into the atmosphere.

Thus far, the collective international response to climate change has been 
similar to a frog passively sitting in heated pan of water. We are in danger of 
being cooked alive from inaction.

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We will have to wait and see if the latest and largest UN climate change summit 
in Paris will buck this trend and produce effective responses to climate 
change. Previous meetings have exposed a bewildering spectrum of issues, 
concerns, vested interests and general political dysfunction. By comparison, 
the physical science of climate change is simple.


Why has it proved so difficult to agree to limit carbon emissions?

One reason stems from the fact the Earth’s atmosphere is a public good, just 
like street lighting, schools or public parks. A public good is non-rivalrous 
in that my use of it does not reduce your or anyone else’s access to it. A 
stable climate is a global public good as it is something all of humanity 
enjoys. We all, to a greater or lesser extent, affect it too. It makes no 
difference if carbon dioxide is released in Beijing, Birmingham or Baltimore.

If the atmosphere is a global public good then, in the absence of enforcement 
via international law to limit carbon emissions, you may conclude we are 
doomed. There is nothing to stop someone from emitting more than their fair 
share – this is the free rider problem.

If enough people act selfishly (and much of economic theory begins with the 
assumption that humans are self-interested), then the Earth’s sinks for carbon 
pollution will be swamped and dangerous climate change will ensue. This would 
be an example of a tragedy of the commons which has become an influential 
feature of western economic thinking since the latter half of the 20th century. 
However, the situation is perhaps not quite so clear cut.

Can we avoid climate tragedy?

In 2009, US political scientist Elinor Ostrom received the Nobel Prize in 
Economic Sciences for her work on the management of public goods and 
common-pool resources. What Ostrom established is that, contrary to certain 
grim predictions, there are numerous examples of effectively managed public 
goods: Nepalese forests, American lobster fisheries, community irrigation 
schemes in Spain and many other systems are looked after sustainably through 
following a combination of eight principles.

Ostrom’s 8 principles for managing a commons

1. Define clear group boundaries.

2. Match rules governing use of commons goods to local needs and conditions.

3. Ensure that those affected by the rules can participate in modifying the 
rules.

4. Make sure the rule-making rights of community members are respected by 
outside authorities.

5. Develop a system, carried out by community members for monitoring members’ 
behavior.

6. Use graduated sanction for rule violators.

7. Provide accessible, low-cost means for dispute resolutions.

8. Build responsibility for governing the common resources in nested tiers from 
the lowest level up to the entire interconnected system.

The implications are profound. Rather than assume the market or central control 
are the most effective mechanisms to manage goods and services, Ostrom showed 
that groups of people can self-organise around common interests.

But it hasn’t escaped the attention of those trying to get international 
agreement on greenhouse gas emissions that some of these principles will not 
apply. In fact, if you are feeling particularly pessimistic, these principles 
can almost serve as a checklist of why such agreement will prove impossible. 
National boundaries do not stop the circulation of atmospheric gases, for 
instance, and there is no international body to police and enforce carbon 
emissions.

Global concerns, local action

So it seems all the more remarkable that agreements to limit carbon emissions 
and even reduce them from the atmosphere have been achieved. What’s more, these 
agreements are popping up all over the place. More than 80 major cities across 
the globe are currently coordinating climate action. There are now a number of 
carbon trading communities that encompass a range of states in North America. 
EU member nations have agreed binding reductions while earlier this year the 
two largest emitters of carbon dioxide, the US and China, established important 
bilateral commitments to control carbon emissions in their respective countries.

These are all examples of polycentric governance. Having multiple levels of 
organisation allows flexibility and effective regional solutions to some of the 
obstacles that large, rigid governance can produce.

Are such efforts sufficient to avoid dangerous climate change? No. Nor are the 
national commitments to reduce emissions ahead of Paris. But what these 
regional initiatives show is that local communities can act independently of 
international agreements by making a global public good a local concern.

This may still seem puzzling to some economists and political scientists. While 
some of these initiatives make economic sense, what is the good of unilaterally 
self-imposed emissions limits if other regions don’t play ball? The answer to 
this question not only points the way to more effective action, but highlights 
a gaping hole in some people’s and institutions’ understanding of climate 
change: it’s the right thing to do.

Climate change is as much a moral issue as a scientific one. Taking more than 
your fair share is wrong. Changing the climate which leads to people being 
harmed is wrong.

Any effective agreement that emerges from Paris will not have come out of a 
vacuum, but as a consequence of many individuals’ and communities’ agitation 
for change – some locally, some through the internet.

If we are going to address climate change, then recognising our shared values 
and interests is crucial. Humans are fundamentally a social species. We’ve only 
very recently appreciated that we are also a planet-altering species. Our moral 
senses know intuitively what we need to do in the light of such knowledge. Our 
economic and political institutions need to catch up rapidly.

Originally published at the Conversation.

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