Beware of EPA social cost of carbon models (Shawn Ritenour) USofA

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Beware EPA ‘Social Cost of Carbon’ Models Shawn Ritenour -- February 14, 2018 “Wouldn’t it be nice if we could scientifically determine the cumulative costs of benefits that result over the next three hundred years from our choices in the present? It may be nice, but it is impossible. “Because [mainstream climate] models produced such wildly different results depending on the projections and assumptions baked in the mathematical cake, economist Robert Pindyck concluded after an extensive review of such models that they are so badly flawed as to make them virtually useless for policy.” When former President Obama wanted to curtail carbon dioxide emissions, he instructed his economic advisors to construct a way to calculate their effect on society. The metric adopted by the EPA to guide them in their quest to regulate the economy is a metric called the “social cost of carbon” (SCC). What is CO2? Right at the start we should note an important distinction. Carbon is an element; carbon dioxide a compound. Carbon is a solid; carbon dioxide a gas. Carbon—in the form, e.g., of fly ash, dust, fine particulate matter, can harm health; carbon dioxide is harmless except at very high concentrations (above 10,000 parts per million—versus ordinary atmospheric concentration of 400 ppm) and even then only after long, uninterrupted exposure. Unlike carbon, carbon dioxide is odorless, colorless, and, except under conditions just described, nontoxic—indeed, indispensable to photosynthesis and so to all life. “Carbon” makes people think of black soot, smoke, smoggy skies; “carbon dioxide” doesn’t. That’s why proponents of reducing carbon dioxide emissions call them carbon emissions instead. The term is deceptive and plays on ignorance and fear. The Nitty Gritty The EPA uses three models to estimate the SCC: Climate Framework for Uncertainty, Negotiation and Distribution (FUND), Dynamic Integrated Climate-Economy (DICE), and Policy Analysis of the Greenhouse Effect. Together such models are called integrated assessment models. While such attempts 1


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Beware of EPA social cost of carbon models (Shawn Ritenour) USofA by John A. Shanahan - Issuu