The bottom line is that cool states come out ahead, while warmer locations are hurt by global warming. Not good for the southeast states (particularly Florida and Texas) and most of Arizona. But generally quite good for the Pacific Northwest. Only a thin strip on the eastern slopes of the Cascades has a slight negative impact and the coastal zone does quite well.
Hsiang et. al, 2017 Science Magazine
You can see some of the component contributors below. For our region, big gains in agriculture from the added warmth. Large drops in mortality (cold is a killer). Far less energy costs for heating. No increase in coastal damage because our land is generally well above sea level.
Hsiang et. al, 2017 Science Magazine
It is interesting to compare the Hsiang et al economic analysis with one examining meteorological threats from global warming found in one of my earlier blogs (see below). Each color represents a different threat (e.g, red would be storm surge from hurricanes). The white area indicates one area of little increase in threat: the Pacific Northwest.
But I am not sure that paper considers all the costs. Warming will bring less snowpack in the mountains as the freezing level rises, so less snow melt available in the summer. Thus, we will have to either learn to be more efficient with water (e.g., more drip irrigation in eastern Washington) or build expensive dams and reservoirs (costing billions of dollars).
Although the total precipitation will not change dramatically (small increase), we do expect the heaviest events to bring 30-40% more rain...and thus more flooding. Thus, we will need to move folks away from rivers, something that could easily cost billions more. And away from steep slopes (like Oso).
Our east-side forests are in terrible shape due to fire suppression and poor forest practices (clear cutting rather than thinning, leaving slash, etc). As a result, we have seen increasing number of large, intense fires, and local warming will make this worse. We thus need to spend billions more to restore our forests to better shape to prepare.
So global warming will cost us in these and other ways; as a result, the benefits of lower heating bills, less ice/snow on the roadways, and enhanced agriculture will be balanced in part by steps needed for adaptation.
Global warming will probably end up being a wash for us. But this will not be true of those living in warmer sections of the U.S., and for much of world's population that lives in he subtropics (such as India, SE Asia, Africa's Sahel, and Mexico). Thus, the moral imperative is for us to reduce our carbon emissions, while at the same time building the climate resilience of the region.
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Atmospheric Sciences 101: I will be teaching the introductory weather class this autumn (10:30 AM, Kane Hall, UW). Open to UW students and the community (and inexpensive to audit if you are over 60 through the UW Access Program).
from Cliff Mass Weather and Climate Blog http://ift.tt/2uNO21g
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