ABSTRACT

Despite their obvious importance, the ethical implications of climate change are often neglected in economic evaluations of mitigation and adaptation policies. Economic climate models provide estimates of the value of mitigation benefits, provide understanding of the costs of reducing emissions, and develop tools for making policy choices under uncertainty. They have thus offered theoretical and empirical instruments for the design and implementation of a range of climate policies, but the ethical assumptions included in the calculations are usually left unarticulated.

This book, which brings together scholars from both economics and ethical theory, explores the interrelation between climate ethics and economics. Examining a wide range of topics including sustainability, conceptions of value, risk management and the monetization of harm, the book will explore the ethical limitations of economic analysis but will not assume that economic theory cannot accommodate the concerns raised. The aim in part is to identify ethical shortcomings of economic analysis and to propose solutions. Given the on-going role of economics in government thinking on mitigation, a constructive approach is vital if we are to deal adequately with climate change.

This volume will be of great interest to students and scholars of environmental ethics, economics, political science, political philosophy and the philosophy of economics.

chapter 1|8 pages

Introduction

ByADRIAN WALSH, SÄDE HORMIO, DUNCAN PURVES

chapter 2|13 pages

Do not ask for morality

ByJOHN BROOME

chapter 3|19 pages

The ethics of discounting: an introduction

ByMARC D . DAVIDSON

chapter 6|16 pages

A new defence of probability discounting

ByKIAN MINTZ - WOO

chapter 8|19 pages

Dimensions of climate disadvantage

ByJOHN O ’ NEILL

chapter 10|21 pages

The ethical failures of climate economics

ByCLIVE L . SPASH AND CLEMENS GATTRINGER

chapter 11|15 pages

A Lockean approach to greenhouse gas emission rights

ByHANS - PETER WEIKARD