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UID:submissions.pasc-conference.org_PASC22_sess124@linklings.com
SUMMARY:MS5C - The Climate in Climate Economics
DESCRIPTION:Minisymposium\n\nAnthropogenic climate change and the associat
 ed economic damages constitute a substantial negative externality. Economi
 c policy can mitigate this externality and potentially even lead to signif
 icant welfare gains across all economic agents. In order to determine the 
 optimal mitigation strategies, economists need to develop quantitative mod
 els that produce a realistic link between CO2 emissions and global warming
  and that are informed by research in climate science as presented in the 
 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) reports, that is, the “st
 ate-of-the-art” in climate science. One fundamental challenge is that the 
 computational costs for Earth system models are so significant that they a
 re not suitable for studying the two-way feedback between the Earth system
  and human behavior. Therefore, economic models focusing on this feedback 
 have to rely on a much-simplified representation of the Earth system compo
 nent. To this end, this minisymposium aims to bring together leading scien
 tists from computational economics, machine learning, and climate science 
 that work at the intersection of coupling the two fields in a sound and tr
 actable way.\n\nThe Climate in Climate Economics\n\nFolini, Kubler, Malova
 , Scheidegger\n\nIn "The climate in climate economics," Doris Folini et al
 . derive a set of four computational tests any climate emulator needs to p
 ass to replicate the basic features of fully-fledged climate models so it 
 can be used safely as a "black-box" module in dynamic (stochastic) economi
 c models to compute f...\n\n---------------------\nFiscal Policy for Clima
 te Change and Welfare\n\nOswald, Le Grand, Ragot, Saussay\n\nFiscal policy
  offers a number of levers to reduce carbon emissions. Climate change miti
 gation can for example be implemented through carbon taxation on the produ
 ction or consumption side, or through debt-financed public investments in 
 emission-reducing infrastructure. Yet these various instruments m...\n\n--
 -------------------\nEstimating Global Impacts to Agriculture from Climate
  Change Accounting for Adaptation\n\nHultgren, Carleton, Delgado, Greensto
 ne, Hsiang...\n\nClimate change threatens global food systems, but the ext
 ent to which adaptation will reduce losses remains unknown. Here, we empir
 ically estimate the net impact of producer adaptations around the world us
 ing longitudinal data on six staple crops spanning 12,658 sub-national uni
 ts, capturing two- th...\n\n---------------------\nFaIR: A Reduced-Complex
 ity Climate Model for Scenario Evaluation and Integrated Assessment\n\nSmi
 th, Leach, Jenkins\n\nThe FaIR (Finite-amplitude Impulse Response) model i
 s an open-source reduced complexity<br />climate model “emulator” that pro
 duces simulations of global mean temperature and ocean<br />heat content c
 hange from emissions, greenhouse gas concentrations, or radiative forcing.
  It<br />conta...\n\n\nDomain: Climate, Weather and Earth Sciences, Humani
 ties and Social Sciences
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