“The Economics of Climate Change” Sir Nicholas Stern

Arise, sir Nicholas!

I am currently watching “The Economics of climate Change” talk by Sir Nicholas Stern, which is hosted by the Press Association of Australia, and screened on ABC in Australia.

It is a pretty good speech. He makes a lot of points, as the spokesman for what is a 700 page document, but his overall message is this:

We need to sort out climate change by reducing the amounts of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere right now, or it is going to cost us heavily, both financially and as a society, in the future. That is the near future. Within 15 years.

I’m paraphrasing, or summerising what he said, because I can’t type that quickly, and I’m sure that is the main point.

However, he mentions some other facts:

Currently, the worst performers in terms of emissions are:

  1. USA
  2. China
  3. Indonesia – due mainly to their deforestation and the burning off related to this

The first 2 are perhaps understandable due to their size and relative industrialisation, however, the third seems ludicrous, and all three need to significantly reduce their carbon emissions.

Unfortunately, however, I fail to see any way to force the arm of entire nations, and as we’ve already seen, there is no recourse when a country decides it will disregard what the rest of the world tells it. Furthermore, it will surely be the view of developing nations that “you were allowed to emit a lot of carbon (when industrialising) so why can’t we?” And, they have a point. An example must be set by those countries who are committed to preventing climate change.

Anyway, the rest of the speech was a bit long, so its up to you to find out more.

I concur with most of what Sir Nicholas says…

About the Author

Rob Scott

Rob Scott is a 26 year old originating from Wensleydale, in the heart of the Yorkshire Dales National Park (UK). Rob founded 24 Hour Trading Ltd which currently owns and runs a series of websites. Rob writes extensively on a number of subjects here and in several other online publications, while, in his limited free time he develops his poetry. Subscribe to Rob Scott's RSS feed by clicking here. Rob has left Twitter and Facebook, after deciding there is no personal benefit to using either network.

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