Climate change could end mortgages as we know them
Climate
change could punch a hole through the financial system by making
30-year home mortgages — the lifeblood of the American housing market —
effectively unobtainable in entire regions across parts of the U.S.
That's what the future could look like without policy to address climate change, according to the latest research from the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. The bank is considering these and other risks on Friday in an unprecedented conference on the economics of climate change.
For
the financial sector, adapting to climate change isn't just an issue of
improving their market share. "It is a function of where there will be a
market at all," wrote Jesse Keenan, a scholar who studies climate
adaptation, in the Fed's introduction.
The battle between climate change deniers and the environment
movement has entered a new, pernicious phase. That is the stark warning
of one of the world’s leading climate experts, Michael Mann, director of
the Earth System Science Center at Pennsylvania State University.
Mann told the Observer that although flat rejection of
global warming was becoming increasingly hard to maintain in the face of
mounting evidence, this did not mean climate change deniers were giving
up the fight.
“First of all, there is an attempt being made by them to deflect
attention away from finding policy solutions to global warming towards
promoting individual behaviour changes that affect people’s diets,
travel choices and other personal behaviour,” said Mann. “This is a
deflection campaign and a lot of well-meaning people have been taken in
by it.”
For
decades, most scientists saw climate change as a distant prospect. We
now know that thinking was wrong. This summer, for instance, a heat wave
in Europe penetrated the Arctic, pushing temperatures into the 80s
across much of the Far North and, according to the Belgian climate scientist Xavier Fettweis, melting some 40 billion tons of Greenland’s ice sheet.
..... ‘There is a substantive and compelling body of medical and scientific
evidence supporting the position that this is a health emergency,’ she
said.
‘In Australia, strong voices are calling for the mitigation of climate
impacts on the health of current and future generations, including in
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander, rural and remote communities.
‘We acknowledge the serious threats posed to the health of children,
older Australians and those in rural and remote communities. Climate
change disproportionately affects the health of Australians with asthma,
respiratory conditions and heart disease. The research demonstrates
that women are at higher risk of death from climate change, in
particular from climate-change-linked natural disasters.’
Dr Roeske said more deaths from heatwaves can be expected, with young generations likely to have their mental health affected.
Health impacts in Australia are also likely to include more deaths from
the spread of infectious disease such as malaria and dengue, with
diarrheal illnesses also expected to grow.
‘This is a signal to our members and to our patients and communities
that GPs recognise climate change as a health emergency and are ready to
respond to the multiple health challenges ahead,’ Dr Roeske said.
‘We believe the Australian Government should recognise and help address the health impacts of climate change.’
Despite an unremitting stream of warnings and studies we still are not
doing what we must to protect the natural world and keep temperatures
from warming beyond critical upper temperature limits. We were warned
about our impact on nature seven years ago in the GEO-5 report. Undeterred we continued to perpetrate genocide against nature. In 2012 scientists warned us that our oceans are dying but we did not respond. We have now decimated entire aquatic ecosystems and all around the world coral reefs are dead or dying.
We were warned not to surpass 1.5 degrees Celsius above preindustrial
norms. We ignored these warnings and we keep pumping climate change
causing greenhouse gases
into the atmosphere at record breaking rates. We are now at 1 degree C
above preindustrial norms, two thirds of the way to the point of no
return.
Everyone from Stephen Hawkings to President Obama have warned us of the urgent need to act on climate change. The world's leading scientific organizations
have also repeatedly warned us about climate change. This includes the
American Association for the Advancement of Science, the Royal Society,
the Royal Institution, NASA, the US National Academy of Sciences, the US
Geological Survey, and the national science bodies of dozens of
countries.
We have amassed an unparalleled body of research that convincingly
demonstrates we are on the cusp of an apocalypse. "By now, we know all
we need to know" Anne Olhoff
said recently. Olhoff is the head of strategy, climate and planning and
policy for the UNEP DTU (Technical University of Denmark) Partnership.
"The science is pretty clear, and very frightening," she said.
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These warnings are not new. A half century ago climate models accurately predicted global warming. A brief review
of climate science shows us that we have known about the dangers of a
warming planet since the 1950s. In the last couple of decades scientists
have added to these warnings. In 2006 the Stern Review warned us that we had to urgently reduce our emissions to avoid the worst impacts of climate change. By 2012 dozens of studies made the case for anthropogenic climate change including a report from UNEP that warned that we are on the brink of a climate catastrophe. In 2013 The U.S. National Climate Assessment (NCA) report and an IPCC study reaffirmed that anthropogenic climate change is a real and growing problem.
PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) issued a climate warning in 2012 and so did the World Bank. We have seen countless scientific warnings including reports from PwC, AGU and the WMO, all of which have told us that we are are running out of time. Seven years ago the IEA and the WRI warned that we need to stop burning fossil fuels. Investors are continually being warned about the dangers of hydrocarbons and even oil companies have issued their own climate warnings. In fact, in the 1960s the fossil fuel industry's own science revealed that they are causing global warming.
We fail to act despite the preponderance of economic evidence
indicating that the benefits of climate action far outweigh the costs.
According to the Global Energy Transformation report, there are 160 trillion dollars worth of savings from climate action. Five years ago the wisdom of action was explained in the Risky Business Report. Climate change has also been the hot topic at the World Economic Forum (WED) in Davos Switzerland.
In 2017 two scientific warnings
stand out, the U.S. Global Change Research Program's fourth National
Climate Assessment (NCA4) and an open letter from the Alliance of World
Scientists. The letter is titled "Warning to Humanity: A Second Notice"
and it was published in BioScience. It was signed by more than 15,000
scientists from 184 countries. It warned humanity about the dangers of
climate change. The warning specifically said that humanity must change
its ways in order to protect the planet. It specifically points to
rising greenhouse gas emissions and deforestation.
A 2018 UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
study reaffirmed that we are teetering on the cusp of a man-made
climate calamity. The IPCC report warned that governments must take
urgent action to avoid "rapid, far-reaching and unprecedented changes in
all aspects of society". The report warned that by 2030 we will will
breech the upper threshold limit (1.5 C). A 2019 IPCC report warned that we are seeing accelerated ice melt and sea level rise.
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In 2019, more than 10,000 scientists from 153 countries declared a
"climate emergency". The study is called "World scientists' warning of a
climate emergency". The seriousness of the threat was addressed by
biologist Jesse Bellemare who said "the climate crisis is real, and is a
major, even existential, threat to human societies." Bellemare is an
associate professor of biology at Smith College who is a signatory of
the study’s emergency declaration.
Researchers have warned us that we are facing the end of civilization. The well documented effects of catastrophic warming includes cataclysmic flooding from
sea level rise, more frequent and devastating extreme weather, massive wildfires, and chronic food shortages. But there may be an even worse
fate awaiting us in a world ravaged by runaway climate change. Simply
put, if we fail to act we are headed for a horrific disaster that will
adversely impact life on Earth.
Climate change is here and the only question that remains is just how
bad it will get. That is still up to us, but with each passing year we
ebb ever closer to tipping points
from which we may not be able to recover. The window of opportunity to
act is closing and the longer we wait the harder it will be.
"Newspaper reports describe temperatures in Bourke reaching 48.9
degrees Celsius on three occasions, and the maximum temperature
remaining above 38C for 24 consecutive days.
As Australia endures a series of intense and record-breaking heatwaves
this summer, the 1896 event is sometimes viewed as evidence that
Australia has always experienced extraordinary heat, and that the
effects of climate change are overblown.
But climate scientists
say that is an oversimplification, and the heatwaves we experience today
are significantly hotter than those in the past."
"The temperature recording methods used in 1896 were flawed
Methods
of recording temperature were not standardised until the early 1900s,
leading to inflated temperature readings before then. The global
standard for temperature measurement includes the use of a Stevenson
screen, which is a white louvred box allowing ventilation and ensuring
thermometers inside are never exposed to the sun.
A Stevenson
screen was not installed in Bourke until August 1908, meaning
temperature readings from before that could be inflated by as much as
2C.
University of Melbourne climate researcher Linden Ashcroft
said thermometers in Bourke were likely placed in sub-standard
conditions in 1896.
"Some thermometers were under verandahs, or they were against stone buildings," she said."
It is widely understood that in the main, conservative far-right
political movements support fossil fuels and oppose the veracity of
climate change and climate action. In the U.S. Republicans have worked with the old energy industry to subvert the facts for many years. Thanks to insidious disinformation
campaigns 73 percent of Republican voters have been hoodwinked into
believing that climate change is not a serious threat and 70 percent do
not believe that humans are the cause. The resistance to climate action
does not stop at disinformation. Republicans have actively thwarted the
democratic process through redistricting (gerrymandering) and voter suppression.
In Oregon Republican lawmakers refused to appear in the state
legislature to avoid passing a sweeping climate change bill by the
Democratic majority.
No individual has done more harm to global climate action that Donald
Trump. He has dismissed climate change as a "hoax" and his
administration's resistance to science is unprecedented. This president and his Republican minions actively support the expansion of fossil fuels and wanton deregulation. The Trump administration's raft of anti-environmental policy positions including withdrawal from the Paris Climate Agreement.
Trump has helped to pave the way for climate denial from far-right politicians in Brazil,
Finland, Germany and the Netherlands. They have stoked opposition to
climate action to build support for anti-science policy. The result is
the right wing leaderships in Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic and
Estonia have all killed their net-zero emissions plans this year.
The key to resistance to science-based climate action can be found in
marrying opposition to fossil fuel tax hikes and resistance to climate
action. The so called yellow vest protests in France and other parts of
Europe illustrate this point. Opposing increases in gas prices serves as
both a mustering point of resistance and a segue to oppose climate
action. However, this is a manufactured crisis as gas taxes were already
high.
In a play on Trump's nationalistic "make America great again" French
President Emmanuel Macron has vowed to "make our planet great again".
French right wing political leaders have seized on Macron's climate
leadership to galvanize opposition to climate action. As one slogan put it, "Macron is concerned with the end of the world. We are concerned with the end of the month."
Similar contrarian sentiments can be found in other countries that support climate action including Sweden
which is widely recognized as one of the most climate forward nations
on the planet. Resistance to gas tax hikes in Sweden are called Bensinupproret.
The leader of the movement's 600,000 Facebook members is Peder Blohm
Bokenhielm he dismisses climate action as "hysteria". In climate
friendly Finland, opposition to climate action is also being used by the
right for partisan purposes. Finns Party chairman Jussi Halla-aho also
dismisses climate action as "hysteria".
However, it is becoming increasingly difficult to ignore climate
science, even for right wing politicians whose policy agendas are
commonly rooted in obfuscation and outright deception. The new
center-right European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen,
placed climate policy at the top of her "agenda for Europe," ahead of
even economic policy. "I want the European Green Deal to become Europe's
hallmark," she explained.