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September 3, 2008 Contacts: Neil Tickner, 301 405 4622 or ntickner@umd.edu Climate Change Will Cost Maryland $Billions: UM Study
Combining existing data with new analysis, the CIER report, Climate Change Impacts on Maryland and the Cost of Inaction, concludes that the costs have already begun to accrue and will likely endure, though future interventions that limit climatic changes can ultimately reduce the total bill.
"The pain will be felt statewide," says University of Maryland public policy professor Matthias Ruth, who coordinated the research and directs the Center for Integrative Environmental Research. "Maryland's highly integrated economy, growing population and extensive, interconnected infrastructure make it very vulnerable to widespread direct and ripple economic effects. The economic data simply don't exist yet to project a precise bottom line, but the trend is clear - it will cost Maryland and the nation billions, and inaction or delayed action will only add to the cost." Ruth and his team conducted the research for the Maryland Commission on Climate Change. The report appears as a prefatory chapter in the Commission's Climate Action Plan, which was transmitted to Governor O'Malley in late August. SOME SPECIFIC FINDINGS
LESSONS FOR MARYLAND The new University of Maryland report offers five "lessons" derived from the researchers' analysis: 1. "There are already considerable costs to society associated with infrastructures, agricultural and silvicultural practices, land use choices, transportation and consumptive behaviors that are not in sync with past and current climatic conditions. These costs are likely to increase as climate change accelerates over the century to come." 2. "While some of the benefits from climate change may accrue to individual farms or businesses, the cost of dealing with adverse climate impacts are typically borne by society as a whole. These costs to society will not be uniformly distributed but felt most among small businesses and farms, the elderly and socially marginalized groups." 3. "Benefits from climate change may be fleeting - for example, climate does not stop changing once a farm benefited from temporarily improved growing conditions. In contrast, costs of inaction are likely to stay and to increase." 4. "Climate models and impact assessments are becoming increasingly refined...Yet, little consistency exists among studies to enable 'summing up'impacts and cost figures across sectors and regions to arrive at a comprehensive, state-wide result." 5. "To provide not just a comprehensive statewide assessment of impacts and cost, but to develop optimal portfolios for investment and policy strategies will require support for integrative environmental research that combines cutting-edge engineering solutions with environmental, economic and social analysis. The effort and resources required for an integrative approach will likely pale in comparison to the cost of inaction." COPY OF THE REPORT A copy of the complete CIER study (and related research) is available online: http://cier.umd.edu/climateadaptation/ RELATED CIER RESEARCH This past July, Ruth and his team released a similar analysis for ten states around the nation. Last year, Ruth conducted a similar nationwide analysis and concluded that the total economic cost of climate change in the United States will be major and affect all regions, though the cost remains uncounted, unplanned for and largely hidden in public debate. CIER addresses complex environmental challenges through research that explores the dynamic interactions among environmental, economic and social forces and stimulates active dialogue with stakeholders, researchers and decision makers. Researchers and students at CIER, working at local, regional, national and global scales, are developing strategies and tools to guide policy and investment decisions. For additional information, visit http://cier.umd.edu/. MEDIA CONTACT:
Neil Tickner
Matthias Ruth
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