Abrupt Climate Change and the Economy: A survey with application to Oregon
12 p. report and 2 maps depicting the potential impacts of catastrophic sea level rise on Oregon and on the Portland and Tillamook areas due to a collapse of Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets. The general warming of the Earth that is expected over the next century will have serious economic consequ...
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Resource Innovations, Institute for a Sustainable Environment, University of Oregon
2006
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ftunivoregonsb:oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/3030 2023-05-15T13:36:46+02:00 Abrupt Climate Change and the Economy: A survey with application to Oregon Climate Leadership Initiative Goodstein, Eban S., 1960- Doppelt, Bob 2006 5946244 bytes 6174578 bytes 128238 bytes application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1794/3030 en_US eng Resource Innovations, Institute for a Sustainable Environment, University of Oregon http://hdl.handle.net/1794/3030 Climate change Climatic changes -- Economic aspects -- Oregon Other 2006 ftunivoregonsb 2022-12-19T14:02:16Z 12 p. report and 2 maps depicting the potential impacts of catastrophic sea level rise on Oregon and on the Portland and Tillamook areas due to a collapse of Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets. The general warming of the Earth that is expected over the next century will have serious economic consequences for humans and natural ecosystems across the world. The Pacific Northwest is already experiencing adverse affects and more are likely the warmer it gets. [Resource Innovations (2005)] This will be true even if warming proceeds gradually. Globally, temperatures are expected to rise between 1◦ and 5◦ c (2◦-10◦ F) over the next hundred years. [IPCC (2001)] Regional warming is expected to be 5.4 ◦ F by mid-century. [Institute of Natural Resources (2004)] To put these numbers in perspective, during the last Ice Age, global temperatures averaged 9◦ F cooler than today, so a mid-range warming will approach a swing in global temperatures of Ice Age magnitude, only in the opposite direction. In Oregon, the most visible short run impacts will be felt through loss of snowpack and dramatic reductions in summer water supply for agriculture, and municipal and in-stream uses, as well as through sea level rise, and forest impacts. [Resource Innovations (2005)] This paper sketches the possibilities for more abrupt changes in the climate system, which would have potentially catastrophic impacts for the Oregon’s economy, and evaluates insurance motives for reducing global warming emissions in the state. This report was sponsored by the Climate Leadership Initiative (CLI) at the University of Oregon. The CLI is an educational, research, and technical assistance consortium aimed at increasing public understanding of the risks and opportunities posed by global warming. Website: http://climlead.uoregon.edu Other/Unknown Material Antarc* Antarctic Greenland University of Oregon Scholars' Bank Antarctic Greenland Pacific |
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Open Polar |
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University of Oregon Scholars' Bank |
op_collection_id |
ftunivoregonsb |
language |
English |
topic |
Climate change Climatic changes -- Economic aspects -- Oregon |
spellingShingle |
Climate change Climatic changes -- Economic aspects -- Oregon Climate Leadership Initiative Goodstein, Eban S., 1960- Doppelt, Bob Abrupt Climate Change and the Economy: A survey with application to Oregon |
topic_facet |
Climate change Climatic changes -- Economic aspects -- Oregon |
description |
12 p. report and 2 maps depicting the potential impacts of catastrophic sea level rise on Oregon and on the Portland and Tillamook areas due to a collapse of Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets. The general warming of the Earth that is expected over the next century will have serious economic consequences for humans and natural ecosystems across the world. The Pacific Northwest is already experiencing adverse affects and more are likely the warmer it gets. [Resource Innovations (2005)] This will be true even if warming proceeds gradually. Globally, temperatures are expected to rise between 1◦ and 5◦ c (2◦-10◦ F) over the next hundred years. [IPCC (2001)] Regional warming is expected to be 5.4 ◦ F by mid-century. [Institute of Natural Resources (2004)] To put these numbers in perspective, during the last Ice Age, global temperatures averaged 9◦ F cooler than today, so a mid-range warming will approach a swing in global temperatures of Ice Age magnitude, only in the opposite direction. In Oregon, the most visible short run impacts will be felt through loss of snowpack and dramatic reductions in summer water supply for agriculture, and municipal and in-stream uses, as well as through sea level rise, and forest impacts. [Resource Innovations (2005)] This paper sketches the possibilities for more abrupt changes in the climate system, which would have potentially catastrophic impacts for the Oregon’s economy, and evaluates insurance motives for reducing global warming emissions in the state. This report was sponsored by the Climate Leadership Initiative (CLI) at the University of Oregon. The CLI is an educational, research, and technical assistance consortium aimed at increasing public understanding of the risks and opportunities posed by global warming. Website: http://climlead.uoregon.edu |
format |
Other/Unknown Material |
author |
Climate Leadership Initiative Goodstein, Eban S., 1960- Doppelt, Bob |
author_facet |
Climate Leadership Initiative Goodstein, Eban S., 1960- Doppelt, Bob |
author_sort |
Climate Leadership Initiative |
title |
Abrupt Climate Change and the Economy: A survey with application to Oregon |
title_short |
Abrupt Climate Change and the Economy: A survey with application to Oregon |
title_full |
Abrupt Climate Change and the Economy: A survey with application to Oregon |
title_fullStr |
Abrupt Climate Change and the Economy: A survey with application to Oregon |
title_full_unstemmed |
Abrupt Climate Change and the Economy: A survey with application to Oregon |
title_sort |
abrupt climate change and the economy: a survey with application to oregon |
publisher |
Resource Innovations, Institute for a Sustainable Environment, University of Oregon |
publishDate |
2006 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/3030 |
geographic |
Antarctic Greenland Pacific |
geographic_facet |
Antarctic Greenland Pacific |
genre |
Antarc* Antarctic Greenland |
genre_facet |
Antarc* Antarctic Greenland |
op_relation |
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/3030 |
_version_ |
1766083550753325056 |