Current:Home > reviewsLosing Arctic Ice and Permafrost Will Cost Trillions as Earth Warms, Study Says -WealthGrow Network
Losing Arctic Ice and Permafrost Will Cost Trillions as Earth Warms, Study Says
View
Date:2025-04-12 09:18:36
Arctic warming will cost trillions of dollars to the global economy over time as the permafrost thaws and the sea ice melts—how many trillions depends on how much the climate warms, and even a half a degree makes a difference, according to a new study.
If nations don’t choose more ambitious emission controls, the eventual damage may approach $70 trillion, it concluded.
For tens of thousands of years, grasses, other plants and dead animals have become frozen in the Arctic ground, building a carbon storeroom in the permafrost that’s waiting to be unleashed as that ground thaws.
It’s considered one of the big tipping points in climate change: as the permafrost thaws, the methane and CO2 it releases will trigger more global warming, which will trigger more thawing. The impacts aren’t constrained to the Arctic—the additional warming will also fuel sea level rise, extreme weather, drought, wildfires and more.
In a study published Tuesday in the journal Nature Communications, a team of scientists for the first time is putting a long-term price on the climate impacts caused by the rapidly increasing temperatures in the Arctic. The authors—a mix of economists and climate scientists—looked at the costs across various future scenarios, including those with limited global warming (for which the calculations include the costs of mitigating climate change) and those with far higher temperatures.
Even if the goals of the Paris climate agreement are achieved—if the world keeps warming below 2°C from pre-industrial temperatures, or ideally below 1.5°C—the costs will be significant. At 1.5°C of warming, thawing permafrost and loss of sea ice will have cost the global economy an estimated $24.8 trillion in today’s dollars by the year 2300. At 2°C, that climbs to $33.8 trillion.
If countries only meet their current pledges under the Paris Agreement, the cost will rise to $66.9 trillion.
Those figures represent only a fraction of the total cost of climate change, somewhere between and 4 and 5 percent, said lead author Dmitry Yumashev, but they send an important message to policymakers: namely, that the costs associated with keeping global warming to 1.5°C are less than the costs of the impacts associated with letting warming go to 2°C or higher.
“The clear message is that the lower emissions scenarios are the safest option, based on the cost estimates we presented here,” Yumashev said.
Permafrost Feedback Loop Worsens Over Time
The authors were able to determine the costs associated with Arctic warming by running various scenarios through a complex computer model that takes the myriad impacts of climate change into account.
These models provide the basis for a significant body of scientific literature around climate change, but perhaps the most widely respected published work—the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s Fifth Assessment Report, which provided a scientific basis for the Paris climate agreement—did not adequately account for the impacts of permafrost when it modeled what’s at stake with climate change. The science on permafrost at that point was too preliminary.
What models now show—and what is reflected in this most recent work—is that the problematic permafrost feedback becomes increasingly worse as the temperature climbs.
Helping Policymakers Understand the Impact
While the idea of tipping points isn’t new, the assignment of costs to specific feedback loops is, said Paul Ekins, an energy and climate economist who was not involved in the new study.
“They come up with some pretty startling results in terms of extra damages we can expect if and when these tipping points are triggered,” he said. “I think it very much is a question of ‘when’ unless we get a grip on climate change very quickly.”
Ekins said he hopes that quantifying the economic risks might help motivate policymakers to act more decisively.
Kevin Schaefer, a coauthor of the study who specializes in permafrost carbon feedback at the National Snow and Ice Data Center, shares that hope. “What we’re talking about is a set of tools that we’re hoping we can put into the hands of policymakers on how to proceed by knowing a realistic estimate of economic impacts,” he said.
veryGood! (8)
Related
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Georgia, Michigan, Ohio State lead the preseason college football NCAA Re-Rank 1-133
- 1-year-old dies after being left in hot day-care van, and driver is arrested
- Knicks sue Raptors, allege ex-employee served as a mole to steal scouting secrets
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- 1 student killed, 23 injured after school bus flips in Ohio to avoid striking minivan
- New president of Ohio State will be Walter ‘Ted’ Carter Jr., a higher education and military leader
- Hawaii officials urge families of people missing after deadly fires to give DNA samples
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Angelina Jolie Gets Her Middle Fingers Tattooed With Mystery Message
Ranking
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Attorney John Eastman surrenders to authorities on charges in Georgia 2020 election subversion case
- John Warnock, who helped invent the PDF, dies at 82
- Ex-New York police chief who once led Gilgo Beach probe arrested on sexual misconduct charges
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Biden administration spending $150M to help small forest owners benefit from selling carbon credits
- Love Is Blind: After the Altar Season 4 Trailer Reveals Tense Reunions Between These Exes
- Jonathan Taylor granted permission to seek trade by Indianapolis Colts, according to reports
Recommendation
'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
Burger King gave candy to a worker who never called in sick. The internet gave $400k
Watch these firefighters go above and beyond to save a pup from the clutches of a wildfire
Windows are shattered in a Moscow suburb as Russia says it thwarts latest Ukraine drone attack
Friday the 13th luck? 13 past Mega Millions jackpot wins in December. See top 10 lottery prizes
Lauryn Hill announces 25th anniversary tour of debut solo album, Fugees to co-headline
Deputy wounded in South Carolina capital county’s 96th shooting into a home this year
Firefighters in Greece have discovered the bodies of 18 people in an area with a major wildfire