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© The Nobel Found
ation
Q Tell us about your experience
as an IIASA researcher in 1974
and 1975.
A At the time, I was a young
economics scholar at Yale doing
various kinds of economic and
energy models. There was an
extraordinary group of people at
IIASA, including Tjalling Koopmans,
Alan Manne, and Howard Raiffa – it
was a great place to spend a year.
At IIASA, I shared an office with a
climatologist named Allan Murphy
from Oregon State University. He
asked me: “Do you know about
climate change?” I answered:
“Well, a little bit, not much.” So
that's how it all got started.
I had a self-study project to
learn about the interaction of
economics, energy systems, and
climatology. I modified the energy
model that I had developed
to include greenhouse gas
emissions and the carbon cycle.
It was the first attempt to
integrate economics, energy
systems, and climate change
into what we now call an
integrated assessment model. Q That became the “Can
we control carbon dioxide?”
1975 working paper?
A Yes. As an aside, the American
Economic Review, the flagship
journal of economics that
publishes the Nobel essay
each year, may publish that
paper now as a companion.
Q How was that paper
first received?
A Initially, it got a mixed
reaction. Some people thought it
was weird, irrelevant, and maybe
even funny. Then, after a few
years, the issue became more
of a national and international
priority and eventually, it
ended up in Stockholm.
Q What has your work
since revealed about the
relationship between economic
growth, energy use, and
environmental consequences?
A If we go about slowing, or
even reversing, climate change
to one of the targets, such as 1.5
or 3°C, and we do it in an efficient way, the penalty to our living
standards will be small. That’s
the main lesson. We need to find
the right instruments and apply
them in a gradual, appropriate
way, with very high participation
from different countries.
The second lesson is about
international cooperation. We’ve
basically made no progress in
devising mechanisms to bring
nations together. I think we have
the wrong model in mind and we
are going down the wrong road
on international agreements.
Moreover, we now know that
raising the price of emissions
of carbon dioxide and other
greenhouse gases is a central
part of any mechanism.
...if I hadn't gone to
IIASA, I wouldn't have
done the work I did.
Q In what ways was IIASA
the right institution to support
your first foray into the
integration of climate, energy,
and economic models?
A There's no doubt in my mind
that if I hadn't gone to IIASA, I
wouldn't have done the work I
did. It was the catalytic process
of being in a pure research
environment – no teaching, no
administration – with scholars and
researchers who were interested
in a wide range of methodologies.
Meeting the people I did was
also absolutely critical: people
interested in economics, algorithms,
climatology, energy, technology,
and willing to support new ideas.
Bringing climate change
and economics together
Q&A with William Nordhaus, recipient of
the 2018 Nobel Prize in Economics. Interview
www.iiasa.ac.at/news/Nordhaus-18
www.iiasa.ac.at 25OptionsSummer
2019
zurĂĽck zum
Buch options, Band summer 2019"
options
Band summer 2019
- Titel
- options
- Band
- summer 2019
- Ort
- Laxenburg
- Datum
- 2019
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 32
- Kategorien
- Zeitschriften Options Magazine