Close Menu
  • Last News
    • Cities
    • Climate
    • Energy
    • Impact
    • Markets
    • Opinions
    • Policy
    • Reports
    • Research
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

News, investigations, and analysis — our top stories every morning to start your day right.

Trending
Illustration of the colossal mosasaur fossil discovery in Mississippi, depicting the prehistoric marine predator. Image generated by AI.
“Unbelievable Sea Monster Unearthed”: Terrifying 30-Foot Lizard Fossil Discovery in US Sparks Fear and Fascination Among Experts and Enthusiasts Alike
Illustration of a working quantum computer. Image generated by AI.
From Mud to Megabits: Norwegian Breakthrough Turns Simple Clay Into Unbelievable Quantum Tech Platform That Could Reshape Computing
Illustration of the KRAMPUS thermobaric-armed unmanned ground vehicle in action. Image generated by AI.
“Robot Tank Incinerates Targets Instantly”: New Thermobaric War Machine Unleashes Firepower Over 800 Yards With Devastating Precision
Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn RSS
Sustainability Times
Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn RSS
Subscribe
  • Featured
  • Cities
    Illustration of Archer Aviation's Midnight eVTOL air taxi flying over Los Angeles during the 2028 Olympics. Image generated by AI.

    Flying Over LA Gridlock: These American Air Taxis Promise a Spectacular Debut During the 2028 Olympic Games

    May 20, 2025 at 4:07 PM
    Illustration of the sinking urban landscape affecting major U.S. cities due to groundwater depletion (AI-generated, unrealistic). Credit: Ideogram.

    “America’s Cities Are Sinking Fast”: 28 Urban Giants Like New York and Houston Are Quietly Crumbling Beneath Our Feet

    May 13, 2025 at 7:00 AM

    Chinese Product Designer Yihan Luo Showcased “Pikapoo” at Milan Design Week 2025

    May 7, 2025 at 5:23 PM

    Winter Storms to Bring More Snow and Ice Across the U.S.

    February 8, 2025 at 10:50 AM

    A survey of a single backyard in Australia reveals over a thousand species

    December 10, 2023 at 10:55 PM
  • Climate
    Illustration of the Metropolitan Area Outer Underground Discharge Channel beneath Kasukabe. Image generated by AI.

    “268 Olympic Pools Below Ground”: World’s Largest Hidden Reservoir Discovered in Shocking Subterranean Water Breakthrough

    May 22, 2025 at 4:08 PM
    Illustration of extreme heat conditions affecting regions like Death Valley, Jacobabad, and Basra. Image generated by AI.

    “Earth Is Boiling Over”: These 9 Scorching Hot Spots Are Blistering Proof Our Planet Is Heating Up Faster Than Ever Before

    May 17, 2025 at 6:54 AM
    Illustration of wildfire smoke impacting air quality and health. Image generated by AI.

    Wildfire Smoke Disaster: This Groundbreaking Study Links U.S. Blazes to 15,000 Deaths and an Economic Hit of $160 Billion

    May 15, 2025 at 9:48 AM
    Illustration of the challenges and complexities of plastic recycling (AI-generated, unrealistic). Credit: Ideogram.

    “Recycling Is a Lie”: New Reports Expose That Most Plastic Can’t Be Reused—and Even Recyclers Are Now Under Fire

    May 12, 2025 at 4:05 PM
    Illustration of billions of periodical cicadas emerging across the United States landscape (AI-generated, unrealistic). Credit: Ideogram.

    “Billions Are Coming”: US Prepares for Biblical Cicada Swarm Not Seen in 17 Years as Ground Begins to Tremble

    May 11, 2025 at 4:54 PM
  • Energy
    Illustration of small modular reactors planned for installation in the Chernobyl exclusion zone. Image generated by AI.

    “Ukraine to Restart Nuclear Power in Chernobyl”: This Shocking Mini-Reactor Plan Sends Global Shockwaves Through Energy and Safety Circles

    May 24, 2025 at 5:57 AM
    Illustration of the Horizon Aircraft Cavorite X7 achieving full wing transition. Image generated by AI.

    “Canada’s Flying Marvel Transforms”: First eVTOL Achieves Full Wing Transition in Stunning Aviation Milestone

    May 21, 2025 at 10:04 AM
    Illustration of a triboelectric nanogenerator using adhesive tape to convert mechanical energy into electricity. Image generated by AI.

    Human Motion Becomes Power Source as US Researchers Unlock Groundbreaking Tech to Harvest Electricity from Every Movement

    May 21, 2025 at 9:00 AM
    Illustration of the National Ignition Facility's inertial confinement fusion experiment. Image generated by AI.

    “Scientists Break the Fusion Barrier”: This Record-Busting US Laser Experiment Achieved More Energy Out Than In

    May 21, 2025 at 5:48 AM
    Illustration of Thorizon's molten salt reactor technology converting nuclear waste into clean energy. Image generated by AI.

    “Nuclear Waste Becomes Power Goldmine”: European Firm to Generate 100 MW for 40 Years Using Radioactive Leftovers

    May 20, 2025 at 10:10 AM
  • Impact
    Illustration of the KRAMPUS thermobaric-armed unmanned ground vehicle in action. Image generated by AI.

    “Robot Tank Incinerates Targets Instantly”: New Thermobaric War Machine Unleashes Firepower Over 800 Yards With Devastating Precision

    May 24, 2025 at 7:05 AM
    Illustration of the Jiu Tian drone carrier capable of deploying 100 drones over 4,500 miles. Image generated by AI.

    This Gigantic Chinese Mothership Can Launch 100 Drones Over 4,500 Miles and Redefines the Future of High-Tech Air Combat

    May 22, 2025 at 8:49 AM
    Illustration of Superwood, a revolutionary material developed by InventWood to be stronger and more durable than natural wood. Image generated by AI.

    Wood Breakthrough Stuns Engineers as New Molecular Process Makes It Tougher Than Steel and Lighter Than Aluminum

    May 21, 2025 at 6:05 PM
    Illustration of robotic centipedes navigating agricultural terrain. Image generated by AI.

    These Creeping Vineyard Robots Use Insect-Like Legs to Annihilate Weeds With Ruthless Precision and Rock-Bottom Costs

    May 20, 2025 at 8:01 AM
    Illustration of the SG-1 Fathom autonomous underwater glider patrolling the ocean. Image generated by AI.

    German Firm Unleashes Underwater Spy Drone Swarm Capable of Operating Stealthily for 3 Months in a Game-Changing Maritime Shift

    May 19, 2025 at 4:46 PM
  • Markets

    Most sources of protein in the US contain vast quantities of microplastics

    January 11, 2024 at 5:47 AM

    Banking on change: How your accounts have climate impact

    December 26, 2023 at 7:13 PM

    Sparxell’s glitter is golden with nature-based color, design

    December 19, 2023 at 9:29 PM

    Lab-grown coffee tastes pretty darn good, scientists say

    December 12, 2023 at 10:42 PM

    Vegan diets can work wonders in preventing cardiovascular disease

    November 30, 2023 at 10:14 PM
  • Opinions

    Smoke, Mirrors, and Smears: Inside the Campaign Against Gaurav Srivastava (Review)

    May 14, 2025 at 10:45 AM

    Nathan Law and the High Cost of Dissent: A Review of Targeted, Episode 3

    May 13, 2025 at 9:46 AM

    From charts to conversations: a real review of Hint App, The Pattern, and TimePassages

    May 13, 2025 at 5:12 AM

    Where Time Touches Light: Yefan Liu and the Future of Cultural Design

    April 18, 2025 at 3:39 AM
    “Ancient Predator Resurfaces: The Terrifying Epicyon, Massive Canid Beast With Bone-Crushing Jaws, Shakes Experts to Their Core”

    “He’s Back From Extinction”: The Gigantic Epicyon Returns With Bone-Crushing Jaws That Terrified Prehistoric America

    April 16, 2025 at 7:53 AM
  • Policy
    Illustration of an RS-24 Yars intercontinental ballistic missile launch "training." Image generated by AI.

    “6,800 Miles of Fury”: Russia Plans Nuclear-Capable Missile Launch Training in a Bold Escalation of Global Military Tensions

    May 22, 2025 at 6:48 AM
    Illustration of China's strategic economic maneuvers and diplomatic outreach. Image generated by AI.

    Trump Outraged as China Launches Worldwide Economic Push, Stretching Its Influence Across the Globe in Defiance of U.S. Pressure

    May 22, 2025 at 6:01 AM
    Illustration of China's Chutian satellite constellation in very low Earth orbit. Image generated by AI.

    “US Issues Dire Warning”: China’s Bullet-Like Satellites Are Actively Spying From Low Orbit, Triggering Alarms in Washington

    May 19, 2025 at 5:45 PM
    Illustration of China's advanced missile technology and the U.S. response with the Golden Dome defense initiative. Image generated by AI.

    “Space Nukes Are Here”: China’s Orbital Weapons Trigger Alarms and Revive Trump’s Massive Golden Dome Defense Ambitions

    May 18, 2025 at 10:09 AM
    Illustration of France's future robotic army advancements (AI-generated, unrealistic). Credit: Ideogram.

    “France Overtakes U.S. War Tech”: Battle Robots to Hit the Front Lines by 2027 as America Lags Behind in Military AI Race

    May 14, 2025 at 8:07 AM
  • Reports
    Illustration of the SABRE South Collaboration’s experimental setup for detecting dark matter in the Stawell Underground Physics Laboratory (AI-generated, non-realistic illustration). Credit: Ideogram.

    “Scientists Stunned by Mysterious Light”: Bold Experiment Uses 4-Inch Glowing Crystal Core to Unveil Secrets of Elusive Dark Matter

    May 5, 2025 at 6:05 AM
    Illustration of a precision laser being fired from Earth to a satellite orbiting the Moon during daylight (AI-generated, non-realistic illustration). Credit: Ideogram.

    China Hits the Moon With a Laser: First Daylight Lunar Reflection in History Stuns Scientists and Ignites Global Space Race

    May 4, 2025 at 5:09 PM
    Illustration of the SR-72 hypersonic jet soaring through the sky (AI-generated, non-realistic illustration). Credit: Ideogram.

    “China Stunned by US Jet”: SR-72 Hypersonic Aircraft to Fly at Over Mach 5 in 2025, Triggering Shock and Panic in Beijing

    May 4, 2025 at 6:03 AM
    Illustration of China's expansive underground military command center near Beijing (AI-generated, non-realistic illustration). Credit: Ideogram.

    China Unveils Its Military Mega-Project: Satellite Images Reveal Construction of the Largest Military Hub on Earth Spanning Over 1,000 Acres

    May 3, 2025 at 6:54 AM
    Illustration of China's new amphibious anti-tank missile system on the ZTD-05 vehicle (AI-generated, non-realistic illustration). Credit: Ideogram.

    “China Unleashes Amphibious Beast”: This Armored Truck-Turned-Tank Can Now Hunt Enemy Targets Across Rivers and Swamps

    May 2, 2025 at 5:52 AM
  • Research
    Illustration of the colossal mosasaur fossil discovery in Mississippi, depicting the prehistoric marine predator. Image generated by AI.

    “Unbelievable Sea Monster Unearthed”: Terrifying 30-Foot Lizard Fossil Discovery in US Sparks Fear and Fascination Among Experts and Enthusiasts Alike

    May 24, 2025 at 8:47 AM
    Illustration of a working quantum computer. Image generated by AI.

    From Mud to Megabits: Norwegian Breakthrough Turns Simple Clay Into Unbelievable Quantum Tech Platform That Could Reshape Computing

    May 24, 2025 at 7:51 AM
    Illustration of an underwater volcano nurturing millions of giant eggs in a marine ecosystem. Image generated by AI.

    “Scientists Left Speechless”: This Underwater Volcano Just Unleashed Over a Million Giant Eggs in a Sudden Eruption

    May 23, 2025 at 3:16 AM
    Illustration of the simulated process of false vacuum decay using ultracold atoms in a laboratory setting. Image generated by AI.

    “Universe Ends Like This”: Scientists Recreate the Most Terrifying Cosmic Apocalypse Scenario Ever Seen in a Lab Setting

    May 23, 2025 at 3:16 AM
    Illustration of the newly discovered predator, Dulcibella camanchaca, in the Atacama Trench. Image generated by AI.

    “Predator Found at 26,000 Feet”: Scientists Discover First-Ever Hunter Living in the Abyss of an 8,000-Meter Ocean Trench

    May 23, 2025 at 3:16 AM
Sustainability Times

We’ll need to put a price on a liveable climate

Rosemary PotterRosemary PotterNovember 27, 2018 at 8:56 PM0
Share Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email Copy Link
Follow Us
Google News
The price of a livable climate: economists know better? Image credit: Christine Roy via Unsplash
The price of a livable climate: economists know better? Image credit: Christine Roy via Unsplash
Share
Twitter Facebook LinkedIn WhatsApp Email Copy Link

How much would you pay to ensure a stable climate in the future? Should we tax coal use to help renewables spread faster? And what is the cost of not acting today for the generations to come?

Questions like these are crucial to climate policies and economists who often guide government choices have all sorts of opinions on the issue. Those opinions are not pure science, however, but may be based on values people hold, the logic of markets and government priorities. Thus, if you are worried about the future of the climate, it is well worth understanding the connection between values, economics and climate actions.

The contemporary economics of climate action

Imagine that your phone will break in a year and repairing it will cost €100. How much would you pay if you could prevent the damage? From an economic standpoint, it is good to think of other ways you could use €100; for example by depositing them to your bank account under a 5% interest rate. In this case you’ll have €105 and it would only make sense to pay €95 or less now to prevent the damage.

The same approach is used for all types of investment decisions, not least climate action. For example, if climate change would lead to €100 billion in losses in 50 years, which is a period over which today’s emissions will start making most of their impact, at a regular discount rate of 3% you would invest no more than €22.8 billion. That’s still a lot of money, but is it enough?

(photo: Flickr)

Economists actively discuss effectiveness of different discount rates, usually arriving at some estimation that further informs real economic choices: for example the value of the carbon tax or the share of country’s GDP devoted to climate action. Orthodox economists usually suggest discount rates around 3-5%, while more ecologically inclined ones tend to go between 0% and 2.5%, arguing that the costs of inaction will be much worse than the cost of acting today.

And though discussions on the proper rate are quite fervent, the approach as such is considered a gold standard for investment decisions on protecting the climate while not wasting a penny. William Nordhaus even got a Nobel this year for work in this realm.

Meanwhile, this doesn’t tell the whole story.

Imagine a different situation. What if you were told that your dog, Buddy, might die in a year because of a spreading disease if you don’t vaccinate him now? It would cost €50 to buy the vaccine. But, no need to worry, a new dog of the same breed would cost you only €20. Which price would you choose to pay? Would you calculate if it’s economically viable to save your dog? Would you abandon the whole idea of having the dog because it leads to uncomfortable decisions? Or, maybe, would you be ready to pay even more, way more, if needed, for saving Buddy and even feel offended that I suggested to trade his life?

It actually works exactly the same way for the climate and our planet. However, this time it is the only planet we have and it is about the lives and homes of millions of people, hundreds of vanished species and destroyed ecosystems, which, of course, might feel much less personal than Buddy, whom you have known for years. For the cases like this, it is sustainability scientists and climate activists who feel unsettled due to irreversible damage and planetary threats of unstable climate. What price would you put on that?

Many still would put a price on it and do so on a regular basis. Sometimes it helps to get more money invested into solar energy or low-carbon transport. But sometimes it leads to the slowing down of climate action and luckily there are other ways to approach the issue.

Climate-friendly economics is possible

Among the most promising approaches are positive discounting rates, outcompeting the dirty economy with sustainable solutions and, finally, rethinking the economic benefits of growth as such.

The positive discounting rate basically means that we should now pay even more to avert the damage in the future. And while for many economists this might sound like nonsense, there are some good reasons to consider the idea. For example, in health economics it is well known that people would willingly pay more to ensure better health now and into the future rather than hoping that future medicines will help them get better at a lower price.

And how different is the health of our living environment compared to the health of our body, especially when they are tightly intertwined?

Meanwhile, future generations might happen to live in much worse climates and have less money because of increased droughts and extreme weather event, thereby valuing good climates much higher than we currently do. And as some of them will have more money, others will become even more vulnerable because of higher inequality, going hand-in-hand with unchecked economic growth.

You don’t need to go far to see the consequences of inaction, as a company called Aethaer is already successfully selling fresh air from England to polluted regions of China for $215 per liter. This is the price some people are ready to pay since previous generations had different priorities on their mind and polluted the country’s air without a thought for the future. And while consumption in many other countries is directly linked to air pollution in China, it may still sound surprising to us that air might even have a price.

The next argument comes from Gunter Pauli, founder of the blue economy concept. His idea is simple yet effective: don’t wait for the rules of the game to change, but use sustainable and competitive solutions to get the dirty industry out of the market. And this is not simply wishful thinking. Pauli himself presented over a hundred solutions from all over the world in his famous Blue Economy report for the Club of Rome.

A vivid example is the price of solar compared to fossil fuels, dropping down with the speed of a waterfall and exemplifying how human dedication to innovation influences the logic of markets. The idea has also become a cornerstone of the circular economy, which is increasingly regarded for its win-win impacts on both climate and society. For urban-areas effective climate action has also been linked to nature-based options like green roofs and expansion of green areas. From an economic standpoint these are considered no-regret solutions, since while positively impacting the climate they also provide immense social benefits.

(photo: Flickr)

Still, the question remains whether the adoption of renewables and other climate-friendly solutions will be fast enough to achieve the Paris goals of keeping global warming within manageable limits. Many of the future scenarios suggest that we might not succeed because of how our economy develops and this suggests digging deeper into the very idea of growth. 

While discounting theory is based on the presumption that economic growth is always good, there is a growing tribe of economists stating that things like income or consumption provide very limited answers to human wellbeing. We can not value economic outcomes only for the numbers they hold and above certain thresholds GDP growth may lead to making much of Earth simply uninhabitable. This has profound implications for lowering the impacts of the economy on climate and you discover more on this from concepts like degrowth, which suggests that degrowing our economy in some areas might be good for nature and society alike.

While it is unlikely that the way economists make their estimates or the way system functions will change overnight, there are still things you can influence to change the course of action for better. 

Key takeaways for a thriving climate

First, when it comes to the climate, ethics should go before money. We can’t value life the same way we value consumption. And the practical way to go about it is to commit to a livable climate prior to any economic considerations. Sometimes, it even makes sense to consider negative discount rates, at best combined with multiple criteria to guide decisions, and not only economic ones.

Second, learn about the worst possible local impacts of climate change in the next few decades and use them as a baseline for action. Check if your municipality has planned sufficient mitigation and adaptation measures and get them to consider the threats seriously and do as much as possible, prererably focusing on nature-based solutions.

Also, no matter how fast we transition towards renewables or how well we plan for climate change, it will also always depend on social norms and personal choices that comprise our daily lives. Get to know you family’s impact on climate and think of what you can do to achieve the best outcomes with the least effort. As you commit to sustainable choices and put your values first, standard market economics will have far less impacts on your life.

Finally, think how to spread the transition. Start talking with your community and acquire the knowledge and resources you can utilise togother to adapt locally. And as each of us takes personal and social responsibility of engaging into climate action, all of us together will have a much better chance of creating a sustainable and thriving Earth.

Did you like it? 4.6/5 (25)

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

News, investigations, and analysis — our top stories every morning to start your day right.

Climate Change CO2-Emissions
Follow on Google News Follow on X (Twitter)
Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email Copy Link
Previous ArticlePesticides have accumulated in European soil
Next Article Chicago is as hot as Las Vegas: U.S. climate report demands action
Rosemary Potter
  • X (Twitter)

Rosemary Potter is a Chicago-based journalist for Sustainability Times, covering global sustainability challenges, environmental policy, science, business and climate resilience. A graduate of Northwestern’s Medill School of Journalism, she blends investigative depth with a global perspective. Her reporting amplifies voices driving change across borders, industries, and ecosystems. Contact: [email protected]

Keep Reading
Illustration of the KRAMPUS thermobaric-armed unmanned ground vehicle in action. Image generated by AI.

“Robot Tank Incinerates Targets Instantly”: New Thermobaric War Machine Unleashes Firepower Over 800 Yards With Devastating Precision

Illustration of rising temperatures intensifying internal competition within species populations. Image generated by AI.

Biologists Alarmed as Newly Discovered Chain Reaction Threatens to Trigger Mass Extinction Across Multiple Species Worldwide

Illustration of the Metropolitan Area Outer Underground Discharge Channel beneath Kasukabe. Image generated by AI.

“268 Olympic Pools Below Ground”: World’s Largest Hidden Reservoir Discovered in Shocking Subterranean Water Breakthrough

Add A Comment

Comments are closed.

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

News, investigations, and analysis — our top stories every morning to start your day right.

Trending
Illustration of the colossal mosasaur fossil discovery in Mississippi, depicting the prehistoric marine predator. Image generated by AI.
“Unbelievable Sea Monster Unearthed”: Terrifying 30-Foot Lizard Fossil Discovery in US Sparks Fear and Fascination Among Experts and Enthusiasts Alike
Illustration of a working quantum computer. Image generated by AI.
From Mud to Megabits: Norwegian Breakthrough Turns Simple Clay Into Unbelievable Quantum Tech Platform That Could Reshape Computing
Illustration of the KRAMPUS thermobaric-armed unmanned ground vehicle in action. Image generated by AI.
“Robot Tank Incinerates Targets Instantly”: New Thermobaric War Machine Unleashes Firepower Over 800 Yards With Devastating Precision
News by category
  • Featured
  • Cities
  • Climate
  • Energy
  • Impact
  • Markets
  • Opinions
  • Policy
  • Reports
  • Research
Information
  • About Us
  • Meet the Team
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Legal Mentions
  • Privacy Policy

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

News, investigations, and analysis — our top stories every morning to start your day right.

Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn RSS
© Sustainability-Times.com. All rights reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.