The Role of Uncertainty in Controlling Climate Change
Yongyang Cai

TL;DR
This paper discusses how incorporating various uncertainties into Integrated Assessment Models can significantly influence climate policy decisions and highlights the need for more realistic models and advanced computational methods.
Contribution
It reviews the role of uncertainty in IAMs and emphasizes the importance of including parameter, model, and risk uncertainties for better climate policy analysis.
Findings
Uncertainty in damages and tipping risks affects policy outcomes.
Incorporating uncertainties can lead to different optimal policies.
Advanced models are needed to handle complex uncertainties.
Abstract
Integrated Assessment Models (IAMs) of the climate and economy aim to analyze the impact and efficacy of policies that aim to control climate change, such as carbon taxes and subsidies. A major characteristic of IAMs is that their geophysical sector determines the mean surface temperature increase over the preindustrial level, which in turn determines the damage function. Most of the existing IAMs are perfect-foresight forward-looking models, assuming that we know all of the future information. However, there are significant uncertainties in the climate and economic system, including parameter uncertainty, model uncertainty, climate tipping risks, economic risks, and ambiguity. For example, climate damages are uncertain: some researchers assume that climate damages are proportional to instantaneous output, while others assume that climate damages have a more persistent impact on…
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Taxonomy
TopicsClimate Change Policy and Economics · Global Energy and Sustainability Research · Environmental Impact and Sustainability
