Department of Water Resources
A daily compilation of significant news articles and comment
November 14, 2008
5. Agencies, Programs, People –
Climate change may carry huge price tag for California
About $2.5 trillion of real estate assets in
By Margo Roosevelt
Eroding beaches, disappearing snowpacks, subdivisions decimated by wildfires -- climate change in
For the first time, the costs of global warming's projected effects in the nation's largest state have been quantified: About $2.5 trillion of real estate assets in California are at risk from extreme weather events, sea level rise and wildfires, with a projected annual price tag of between $300 million and $3.9 billion, according to a new report, "California Climate Risk and Response," written by UC Berkeley researchers Fredrich Kahrl and David Roland-Holst.
The final number will depend on how much the Earth warms under various scenarios and whether the nations commit to slashing greenhouse gas emissions.
"This is a good review of existing studies," said Anthony Brunello, a California Resources agency official. "It assesses the real, comprehensive statewide impacts for the first time."
Brunello and other
"Our report makes clear the most expensive thing we can do about climate change is nothing," Roland-Holst said. But he adds, "This is not a Doomsday report . . . . If we make the right investments, we can avert much of the damage in any scenario."
The report covers seven economic sectors and envisions issues such as the collapse of the ski industry, a water-starved hydroelectric system and an increase in warming-related smog. The research was funded by Next 10, a nonprofit set up by high-tech entrepreneur F. Noel Perry.#
http://www.latimes.com/news/science/environment/la-me-climate14-2008nov14,0,408336.story?track=rss
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