Talbot M. Andrews, et al., Anticipating moral hazard undermines climate mitigation in an experimental geoengineering game, 196 Ecological Economics, June 2021
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0921800922000830?dgcid=author
Geoengineering is sometimes touted as a partial solution to climate change but will only be successful in conjunction with other mitigation strategies. This creates a potential for a “moral hazard”: If people think geoengineering alone will mitigate climate change, they may become overly optimistic and reduce support for other necessary mitigation efforts. We test this in a series of economic games where players in groups must prevent a simulated climate disaster. One player, the “policymaker,” decides whether to implement geoengineering. The rest are “citizens” who decide how much to contribute to incremental mitigation efforts. We find that citizens contribute to mitigation even when the policymaker uses geoengineering. Despite this, policymakers expect that citizens will engage in moral hazard. As a consequence, policymakers do not use geoengineering even though everyone would be better off if they did so. Anticipating moral hazard undermines mitigation even though moral hazard itself does not.
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WIL BURNS Visiting Professor Environmental Policy & Culture Program Northwestern University
Email: william...@northwestern.edu Mobile: 312.550.3079
1808 Chicago Ave. #110 Evanston, IL 60208 https://epc.northwestern.edu/people/staff-new/wil-burns.html
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I acknowledge and honor the Ojibwe, Potawatomi, and Odawa, as well as the Menominee, Miami and Ho-Chunk nations, upon whose traditional homelands Northwestern University stands, and the Indigenous people who remain on this land today.
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Talbot M. Andrews, et al., Anticipating moral hazard undermines climate mitigation in an experimental geoengineering game, 196 Ecological Economics, June 2021
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0921800922000830?dgcid=author
Abstract
Geoengineering is sometimes touted as a partial solution to climate change but will only be successful in conjunction with other mitigation strategies. This creates a potential for a “moral hazard”: If people think geoengineering alone will mitigate climate change, they may become overly optimistic and reduce support for other necessary mitigation efforts. We test this in a series of economic games where players in groups must prevent a simulated climate disaster. One player, the “policymaker,” decides whether to implement geoengineering. The rest are “citizens” who decide how much to contribute to incremental mitigation efforts. We find that citizens contribute to mitigation even when the policymaker uses geoengineering. Despite this, policymakers expect that citizens will engage in moral hazard. As a consequence, policymakers do not use geoengineering even though everyone would be better off if they did so. Anticipating moral hazard undermines mitigation even though moral hazard itself does not.
WIL BURNS
Visiting Professor
Environmental Policy & Culture Program
Northwestern University
Email: william...@northwestern.edu
Mobile: 312.550.3079
1808 Chicago Ave. #110
Evanston, IL 60208
https://epc.northwestern.edu/people/staff-new/wil-burns.html
Want to schedule a call? Click on one of the following scheduling links:
- 60-minute phone call: https://calendly.com/wil_burns/phone-call
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- 15-minute phone call: https://calendly.com/wil_burns/15min
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- 30-minute Zoom session: https://calendly.com/wil_burns/30-minute-zoom-call
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I acknowledge and honor the Ojibwe, Potawatomi, and Odawa, as well as the Menominee, Miami and Ho-Chunk nations, upon whose traditional homelands Northwestern University stands, and the Indigenous people who remain on this land today.
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So believing in CDR moral hazards is hazardous. Questions?
Talbot M. Andrews, et al., Anticipating moral hazard undermines climate mitigation in an experimental geoengineering game, 196 Ecological Economics, June 2021Abstract
Geoengineering is sometimes touted as a partial solution to climate change but will only be successful in conjunction with other mitigation strategies. This creates a potential for a “moral hazard”: If people think geoengineering alone will mitigate climate change, they may become overly optimistic and reduce support for other necessary mitigation efforts. We test this in a series of economic games where players in groups must prevent a simulated climate disaster. One player, the “policymaker,” decides whether to implement geoengineering. The rest are “citizens” who decide how much to contribute to incremental mitigation efforts. We find that citizens contribute to mitigation even when the policymaker uses geoengineering. Despite this, policymakers expect that citizens will engage in moral hazard. As a consequence, policymakers do not use geoengineering even though everyone would be better off if they did so. Anticipating moral hazard undermines mitigation even though moral hazard itself does not.
<image001.jpg>
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“Moral hazard” has travelled a
long way since its origins in
the insurance sector where for much of its life it referred to
perfectly moral
behaviour, one that anyone who even today buys insurance, still
does – we occasionally
behave slightly less carefully because insurance protects us
from loss and damage if the risk crystallises. Since
that incremental risk is priced into the cost of the insurance
and is shared across
the entire pool of those enjoying the benefits of the insurance,
everyone wins.
Following the 2008 financial collapse it acquired a pejorative
sense, when the incremental
risk had become huge but those taking those risks were entirely
protected from
the downside by governments regarding the some banks as 'too big
to fail' and bailing them out with public funds. Yet the risk
takers still enjoyed their fat bonuses. The essence of moral hazard
is that someone
is benefiting from taking extra risk while others pick up all or
most of the
tab if it goes wrong. Whether moral hazard is moral or immoral
depends on the balance of risk and benefit and how they're
shared.
Not taking climate change seriously is not in itself a moral hazard. Those on this listserv mostly take it very seriously, but I suspect that the great majority of the almost 8bn people currently alive on this planet are too busy dealing with the daily routine of staying alive and caring for their loved ones to devote too much energy to climate change. They are not guilty of immoral moral hazard.
If references to moral hazard are intended to make people wake up to their climate change responsibilities, it should be reserved for those who know how serious it is but prefer to increase the risks from climate change in pursuit of their selfish interests, than reduce them by deploying their power for the wider good. There are plenty to whom this applies. I don’t need to list them here but they range all the way from some of the world's largest corporations and the politicians in their pockets, down to individuals who persist with egregious overconsumption.
When using moral hazard to highlight bad behaviour, be clear about whom the guilty are, be specific about what they’re doing that they shouldn’t, how it serves their interests and harms others, and what they should be doing to atone for their sins.
CDR (and more generally,
greenhouse gas removal (GGR)) is now a necessary component of
any effective response to climate change. GGR properly
implemented would reduce climate change risks. It's not a
belief that GGR is a moral hazard that makes it a moral hazard,
rather it's the cynical use by some of GGR as an excuse to slow the transition away from fossil
fuels, and thereby increase those risks. Naming and shaming them might be more effective if they had any shame.
See a short piece on this topic
at Illuminem -
https://illuminem.com/energyvoices/35e225de-11e0-4899-aeed-77bba5c33b5a.
Robert Chris
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So believing in CDR moral hazards is hazardous. Questions?
Talbot M. Andrews, et al., Anticipating moral hazard undermines climate mitigation in an experimental geoengineering game, 196 Ecological Economics, June 2021Abstract
Geoengineering is sometimes touted as a partial solution to climate change but will only be successful in conjunction with other mitigation strategies. This creates a potential for a “moral hazard”: If people think geoengineering alone will mitigate climate change, they may become overly optimistic and reduce support for other necessary mitigation efforts. We test this in a series of economic games where players in groups must prevent a simulated climate disaster. One player, the “policymaker,” decides whether to implement geoengineering. The rest are “citizens” who decide how much to contribute to incremental mitigation efforts. We find that citizens contribute to mitigation even when the policymaker uses geoengineering. Despite this, policymakers expect that citizens will engage in moral hazard. As a consequence, policymakers do not use geoengineering even though everyone would be better off if they did so. Anticipating moral hazard undermines mitigation even though moral hazard itself does not.
<image001.jpg>
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/CarbonDioxideRemoval/2839AF71-2331-46C7-B9F7-6B93FF07B314%40sbcglobal.net.
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"Some of the proposed methods are: Marine Cloud Brightening (MCB), Mirrors for Earth’s Energy Rebalancing, Wind driven sea water pumps, Surface Albedo Modification (formerly Floating Sand), Iron Salt Aerosol, Stratospheric Aerosol Injection (SAI), Floating Sand, and Cirrus Cloud Thinning (CCN), see Baiman 2021, p. 615-616). Mirrors for Earth’s Energy Rebalancing (MEER) would offer local and regional cooling solutions based on deployment of arrays of mirrors on the earth’s surface[1], and wind driven sea water pumps could increase Arctic winter ice formation, slowing summer ice melt and methane release (Desch et 2017)."
On Apr 16, 2022, at 1:23 PM, Dan Miller <d...@rodagroup.com> wrote:
Yes, believing CDR is a moral hazard is a moral hazard that will result in mass death.The idea of CDR being a moral hazard is rooted in the idea that we will not take climate action seriously and we will politely ask fossil fuel companies to please reduce their emissions, if it’s not too much of a bother.Of course, we could put a price on carbon and use clean energy standards to force the phase out of fossil fuels. We could then also implement CDR with no risk of “moral hazard”.See my Global Climate Action Plan for a set of policies that reduce emissions *and* removes CO2 from the atmosphere.Of course, so far, we are not taking climate action seriously… and that is a moral hazard!Dan--
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<Global Climate Action Plan V3.pdf>

Thanks, Ron. At the end of the day, I remain skeptical that any of these studies can really tell us much. Beyond your arguments below, these studies operate in an extremely sanitized simulation of the real world, and, particularly, I wonder if policymakers would portray geoengineering options in the same way that they are portrayed to the people in these experiments if they decided that geo. was a good idea. This might exacerbate moral hazard considerations. Having said that, I think we’ve reached a point where we simply don’t have the luxury not to pursue CDR options, though we should try to keep major emitters’ feet to the fire to optimize emissions reductions. wil
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Hi Dan
That's because climate scientists are concerned to protect their reputations by not being accused of over-claiming their concerns, while risk managers are concerned about protecting their clients' profits but not under-calling the risks.
Who should we be listening
to?
Regards
Robert
Typo! Corrected below.
Regards
Robert
Hi Dan
That's because climate scientists are concerned to protect their reputations by not being accused of over-claiming their concerns, while risk managers are concerned about protecting their clients' profits by not under-calling the risks.