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4 degree Celsius rise in global temperatures may cut world GDP by 40 pc: Study

By IANS | Updated: April 1, 2025 13:31 IST

New Delhi, April 1 A team of Australian researchers on Tuesday said that 4-degree Celsius rise in global ...

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New Delhi, April 1 A team of Australian researchers on Tuesday said that 4-degree Celsius rise in global temperatures would cut world GDP by around 40 per cent by 2100 – a sharp increase from previous estimates of around 11 per cent.

New projections by the University of New South Wales (UNSW) Institute for Climate Risk and Response (ICRR) – published in the journal Environmental Research -- fixes an oversight in the current economic model underpinning global climate policy, toppling previous carbon benchmarks.

According to the analysis, the results support limiting global warming to 1.7-degree Celsius, which is in line with significantly faster decarbonisation goals like the Paris Agreement, and far lower than the 2.7-degree Celsius supported under previous models.

"Economists have traditionally looked at historical data comparing weather events to economic growth to cost climate damages,” said lead researcher Dr Timothy Neal, a ‘Scientia Senior Lecturer’ in the School of Economics and also the ICRR.

What they fail to account for, he said, are interruptions to the global supply chains currently buffering economic shocks.

“In a hotter future, we can expect cascading supply chain disruptions triggered by extreme weather events worldwide,” Dr Neal added.

He further stated that the economic case for stronger climate change actions is clear. “Because these damages haven’t been taken into account, prior economic models have inadvertently concluded that even severe climate change wasn't a big problem for the economy – and it’s had profound implications for climate policy,” said the lead researcher.

The local-only damage models have been used in the economic forecasting that has shaped the major powers’ climate policies and played a crucial role in international agreements.

The updated projection should underscore to all nations that they are vulnerable to climate change. “There’s an assumption that some colder countries, like Russia or Canada, will benefit from climate change, but supply chain dependencies mean no country is immune,” Dr Neal emphasised.

However, there’s still work to be done as "his research doesn’t account for climate adaptation, like human migration, which is politically and logistically complex and not yet fully modelled", said the study.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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