Globalization Blamed for Amplification of Climate Change Effects - Dispatch Weekly

June 14, 2016 - Reading time: 3 minutes

A new study have blamed globalization for the amplification of the worse effects of climate change thereby proving that it is not just warming of the Earth that is to blame.

The study by researchers at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research and Columbia University show that there is a link between enhanced connectivity of global network of supply and climate change. According to the study published in the journal Science Advances, globalization causes increase in the production losses and can spread more easily across countries because of the enhanced connectivity.

Lead author of the study Leonie Wenz points out through the study’s findings that there has been a marked change in the structure of the economic system around the world since the beginning of the 21st century. Wenz says that the structure effectively makes it possible for the production losses in one place to cause further losses elsewhere. The study examines the example of local heat-stress-related productivity reductions causing global effects. Across the world, production is interlinked.

“What is self-evident for us today is really a phenomenon of the last two decades,” Wenz explains.

From Typhoons to Heat-Stress on Workers: Local Events, Global Effects

Typhoon Haiyan in the Philippines destroyed more than half the world’s production of coconut oil which is one of the two most commonly used vegetable fats in food production worldwide. The 2011 flood in Queensland stopped production in the fourth biggest coal exploration site on Earth for weeks, with economic repercussions well beyond Australia. While single major shocks to economic networks like these illustrate how economic activity is globally linked, the researchers focused on the effects of small daily perturbations due to extreme temperatures leading to heat-stress among workers in construction, agriculture and other economic sectors. Previous research shows that increasing temperatures decrease productivity, because, for instance, workers get exhausted more rapidly.

The study covers economic flows between 26 industry sectors from mining and quarrying to textiles and wearing apparel and to post and telecommunications as well as final demand in 186 countries. Combining data on temperature, population and the global economic network from 1991-2011 and based on existing research on temperature effects on workers, the scientists run computer simulations of heat-stress consequences in order to find out more about the network’s vulnerability to the propagation of production losses in each year.

“This is the Basis for Implementing Appropriate Adaptation Measures”

“With unabated climate change, the effects of increasing weather extremes, like most recently seen in Paris, will have severe impacts on natural and societal systems,” says co-author Anders Levermann. “To estimate the costs of future climate change we need to assess global economic impacts of more frequent heat extremes and meteorological impacts, such as floods and tropical storms, and understand their relation to the economic network’s structure. This is the basis for implementing appropriate adaptation measures – in a warming world with more intense weather extremes it is likely that society needs to become more resilient and more flexible.”

DW Staff

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