No way out? The double-bind in seeking global prosperity alongside mitigated climate change
Timothy J. Garrett

TL;DR
This paper presents a simple thermodynamic-based global economic and climate model showing that achieving low CO2 levels while maintaining prosperity may be impossible, risking a double-bind scenario of collapse or dangerous warming.
Contribution
It introduces a novel, thermodynamics-consistent global model linking energy consumption, wealth, and CO2, highlighting the difficulty of simultaneous prosperity and climate mitigation.
Findings
IPCC scenarios underestimate future CO2 rise
Decoupling wealth growth from emissions is unlikely
High CO2 levels threaten civilization stability
Abstract
In a prior study, I introduced a simple economic growth model designed to be consistent with general thermodynamic laws. Unlike traditional economic models, civilization is viewed only as a well-mixed global whole with no distinction made between individual nations, economic sectors, labor, or capital investments. At the model core is an observationally supported hypothesis that the global economy's current rate of primary energy consumption is tied through a constant to a very general representation of its historically accumulated wealth. Here, this growth model is coupled to a linear formulation for the evolution of globally well-mixed atmospheric CO2 concentrations. While very simple, the coupled model provides faithful multi-decadal hindcasts of trajectories in gross world product (GWP) and CO2. Extending the model to the future, the model suggests that the well-known IPCC SRES…
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