Climate change already reducing global GDP: Report
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
Impacts from human-caused climate change cut 6.3 per cent from global economic output last year, the report says.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG
Follow topic:
PARIS - Climate change is already shaving billions off the world’s economy, with developing countries hardest hit, according to a new report published on Nov 28 ahead of COP28 climate negotiations.
The report by the University of Delaware estimated that impacts from human-caused climate change cut 6.3 per cent from global economic output last year, when weighted across populations.
The figures reflect both direct consequences of climate change – such as disruptions to agriculture and manufacturing, and reduced productivity from high heat – as well as spillover impacts on global trade and investments.
“The world is trillions of dollars poorer because of climate change and most of that burden has fallen on poor countries,” said lead author James Rising of the University of Delaware.
“I hope that this information can clarify the challenges that many countries already face today and the support they urgently need to address them,” he added.
When calculated without taking into account impacts borne by the average person, the global GDP loss was 1.8 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) – or about US$1.5 trillion (S$2 trillion) – in 2022.
“The difference between those two numbers reflects the uneven distribution of impacts, which concentrate in low-income countries and tropical regions that typically have more population and less GDP,” the authors said in a statement.
Least developed countries experienced higher population-weighted GDP loss of 8.3 per cent, with South-east Asia and Southern Africa particularly affected – losing 14.1 per cent and 11.2 per cent of their GDP respectively.
On the other hand, some developed countries benefited. Thanks to warmer winters, Europe saw a nearly five percent net gain in GDP last year.
But such gains are “poised to erode” as hotter summers offset milder winters, warns the report.
At last year’s COP27 talks in Egypt, nations agreed to set up a dedicated fund to help vulnerable countries cope with “loss and damage” from climate disasters and extreme weather.
While some details were recently agreed, the fund – and in particular who contributes to it and how much – will be a key point of negotiation at this year’s COP28 talks in Dubai, which begin on Nov 30.
Low- and middle-income countries have experienced a combined loss in capital and GDP totalling US$21 trillion, about half of the total 2023 GDP of the developing world, in the last 30 years, the report said.
The authors specify that losses are “conservative estimates” because the analysis does not account for non-market losses and impacts. AFP

