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Session Chair: Alessandro Taberna, European Institute on Economics and the Environment, Euro-Mediterranean Center on Climate Change
Location:Auditorium B: Frøystein Gjesdal
Presentations
Attributing historical climate change to in labour force impacts
Dasgupta Shouro
Euro-Mediterranean Center on Climate Change (CMCC), Italy
Discussant: Edoardo Santoni (University of Ferrara)
The extent to which changes in labour force outcomes can be attributed to historic climate change is currently unknown. Here, we combine robust estimates of the impact of climatic stressors on labour supply, labour productivity, and a combined metric of the two - effective labour, with novel historic climate forcing data to quantify the effect of historic climate change on labour. We do this at the global and regional level, taking explicit account of heterogeneity of working conditions. Globally, effective labour in outdoor working conditions was 1.8 percentage points lower in 1901-2019 than it would have been without climate change. The attributable declines have increased over time, rising to 3.6 percentage points between 2001 and 2019. The highest declines have been in the relatively lower-income regions of Western Africa, South-Eastern Asia, and Middle Africa, where climate change has increased workforce inequalities. We also estimate the economic effects through impacts on GDP and find up to a 12% GDP loss for some regions. Our findings can help improve the design of better labour protections, improve worker health, enhance productivity and economic growth, and inform better climate adaptation and resilience.
Heat and work-related injuries: How temperature measurements affect the outcomes
1University of Ferrara and GLO; 2University of Roma Tre; 3University of Ferrara and SEEDS; 4University of Roma Tre
Discussant: Johannes Emmerling
Climate change is producing significant transformations in the labour market, in
intensifying inequalities due to its heterogeneous effects. This paper proposes an empirical analysis for Italy on the causal relationship between high temperatures and
work-related injuries, at the provincial and daily levels, for the period 2014-2022, by
exploiting within-country local variation. Our analysis is the first to compare the
estimated effects of heat on injuries at the workplace using, besides air temperature,
two other meteorological indicators which are comprehensive human heat stress indexes
not applied yet in economics: the wet-bulb globe temperature (WBGT) and the uni-
versal thermal climate index (UTCI). Our findings confirm that higher temperatures
significantly increase the risk of work-related injuries, with coefficients rising across
temperature thresholds and varying by indicator. Heterogeneity analyses reveal that
vulnerability differs by gender, age, nationality, economic sector, and geographical area.
The study highlights the importance of employing advanced climatic metrics and stratified analyses to better understand the impact of heat stress on occupational health,
especially in regions like Italy that are highly susceptible to global warming.
Nowcasting Climate Change Impacts: A Novel Approach Using Growth Forecasts as Counterfactual
Johannes Emmerling1, Paul Waidelich2
1CMCC, Italy; 2ETH, Switzerland
Discussant: Alessandro Taberna (European Institute on Economics and the Environment, Euro-Mediterranean Center on Climate Change)
The existing literature on the macroeconomic impacts of climate change has
established links between climatic shifts and economic growth. However, impact
projections vary across studies and are difficult to validate in hindsight,
as the counterfactual growth path is unknown. This paper addresses this issue
by leveraging the IMF’s semi-annual World Economic Outlook forecasts from
1990-2022 as a baseline counterfactual. First, we validate that these forecasts
do not capture climate impacts by showing that the identifying variation for
regression models in the literature stems from growth variation not predicted by
IMF. Then, we produce GDP nowcasts for different damage functions by adding
climate impacts to IMF forecasts for recent years and validate nowcasts against
actual growth. We find that most damage functions would have improved IMF
growth forecasts, albeit not more than roughly 20%. Importantly, the most severe
damage functions nowcast substantial recessions in many high-income countries
between 2014–2019 that cannot be reconciled with actual observations. Our
findings highlight the potential of nowcasting to validate and constrain damage
functions, which typically focus on distant futures.
Mind the gap: linking individual adaptation decisions to global climate mitigation policy
Alessandro Taberna1, Johannes Emmerling1, Tatiana Filatova2, Massimo Tavoni1
1European Institute on Economics and the Environment, Euro-Mediterranean Center on Climate Change, Italy; 2Delft University of Technology
Discussant: Shouro Dasgupta (Euro-Mediterranean Center on Climate Change (CMCC))
Integrated Assessment Models (IAMs) are foundational tools for assessing climate change impacts and informing policy decisions. However, traditionally, IAMs rely on aggregate variables and decisions of actors representing global regions. As a results, IAMs are criticized for oversimplifying representation of heterogeneity and human behavior, in particular on climate adaptation. This paper introduces the first bidirectional coupling between a Cost-Benefit IAM (RICE50+) and an agent-based model (CRAB) that incorporates multiple adaptation strategies against different climate hazards. Our framework enables climate-economy interactions where global temperature changes affect local flood probabilities and labor productivity, while regional adaptation investments feed back into macro-level damage functions and resources left for mitigation strategies. Using detailed spatial and behavioral data from the Netherlands and USA, we demonstrate significant regional variation in adaptation patterns and efficiency. Cost-benefit analysis reveals consistently positive but regionally variable returns of private adaptations (benefit-cost ratios of 5.0 in USA and 2.0 in Netherlands). Moreover, we find that adaptation complements rather than substitutes mitigation efforts. This coupled modeling approach provides a robust platform for evaluating climate strategies that bridge local adaptation decisions with global climate dynamics.