Food, Not Steel, Is Our Biggest Climate Challenge
Apr 1, 2021ADAIR TURNER
Since the Stern Review on the Economics of Climate Change, published in
2006, the estimated costs of achieving net-zero greenhouse-gas emissions from
the world’s energy, building, industrial, and transport systems have plummeted.
And in many sectors, such as road transport, consumers will pay less for going
green.
LONDON – Climate-policy discussions often focus on who will pay the cost of
achieving a zero-carbon economy, with a particular focus on industrial sectors
such as steel and cement. But the overall costs are strikingly low, and our
biggest challenge lies in the food system, not industrial products.
The latest report by
the United Kingdom’s Climate Change Committee, for example, shows that cutting
UK greenhouse-gas emissions to net zero by 2050 would reduce British GDP by
only 0.5%. The Energy Transitions Commission’s “Making Mission Possible”
report estimates a similar total cost of 0.5% of global GDP to reduce emissions
from the world’s energy, building, industrial, and transport systems to zero by
mid-century.
These estimates are well below those produced by older studies. The seminal
Stern Review on the Economics of Climate Change, published in 2006, suggested
costs of 1-1.5% of GDP to achieve only an 80% reduction in emissions.
This welcome change reflects the dramatic and unanticipated decline in
costs for key technologies – with onshore wind electricity costs down 60% in just ten
years, solar photovoltaic cells down over 80%, and batteries 85%. These costs are now so low that
using zero-carbon products and services in many sectors will make consumers
better off.
For example, future “total system costs” to run near-zero-carbon
electricity systems – including all the storage and flexibility needed with
unpredictable sources such as wind and solar – will often be below those for
today’s fossil fuel-based systems. And within ten years, consumers around the world
will be better off buying electric autos, paying slightly less for the vehicles
and far less for the electricity that powers them than they do for the diesel
and petrol they buy today
In some hard-to-abate sectors such as steel, cement, and shipping, however,
decarbonization is likely to impose a significant cost. Well before 2050,
zero-carbon steel could be produced by using hydrogen as the reduction agent
rather than coking coal, or by adding carbon capture and storage to traditional
blast furnaces. But doing so might increase costs by 25%, or about $100 per ton
of steel. Long-distance ships could be powered by ammonia or methanol, but fuel
costs might increase by over 100%, and freight rates by 50%. As Bill Gates puts it in his new book How to Avoid a Climate Disaster, in some
sectors, we face a “green cost premium” versus today’s carbon-emitting
technology.
So it is vital to focus research and development and venture-capital
investment on breakthrough technologies that might reduce this premium. But it
is also important to recognize that even if the “green premium” lingers, the
cost of decarbonizing these sectors will be so small that consumers will hardly
notice.
Ask yourself how much steel you bought last year. Unless you are a
purchasing manager, the answer is probably none directly. Instead, consumers
indirectly purchase steel embedded in the products and services they consume –
in autos, in washing machines, or in health services delivered at a hospital built
with steel. World Steel Association figures indicate that “true
steel use per capita” is 300-400 kilograms (661-882 pounds) annually in Europe
and the United States. So, if the steel price rose by $100 per ton, consumers
would be just $30-40 worse off.
That trivial cost reflects the crucial difference between the green premium
on intermediate goods and the “green consumer premium” on final products. An
increase in the steel price of even 25% will add less than 1% to automobile
prices. Shipping freight rates might rise by 50%, but that would increase the
price of imported clothes or food by a similarly trivial amount.
But higher costs for intermediate products still pose a major policy
challenge. A steel company that commits to a zero-carbon target will find
itself at a crushing disadvantage if its competitors do not. Imposing a carbon
price on heavy industrial sectors could overcome this problem, but only if the
price is applied worldwide or combined with border carbon tariffs against
countries unwilling to impose it.
In shipping, regulation by the International Maritime Organization could
ensure that all companies move in step, and the impact on consumer costs would
be trivial.
By contrast, food prices and consumer food preferences are non-trivial
issues. Few of us buy steel directly, but everyone buys food, which even in
rich countries accounts for 6-13% of total household
expenditure and much more for lower-income groups. For
consumers, a 10% green premium for food would matter more than even a 100%
premium for steel.
Within the food sector, moreover, meat production is highly
emissions-intensive. Methane emissions from livestock and manure have a global
warming effect greater than the three gigatons of carbon dioxide from steel
production, and an additional five gigatons of CO2 results from
land-use changes, such as when forest is converted to soybean production for
cattle feed.
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Here, too, technological solutions may be possible, but major challenges
remain. Consumers do not care about the specific character of the steel they
indirectly consume, but beef eaters have strong opinions about the texture and
taste of steak, which synthetic meat production cannot yet replicate. And while
the green premium for synthetic meat over animal meat is falling, it must get
close to nil to avoid material impact on consumer budgets.
This could change, however, if people decided that they would be happy with
less meat and more vegetable-intensive diets, which also cost less. In that
case, food could become like road transport, with consumers gaining from the
shift to zero carbon rather than facing a cost burden.
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Writing for PS since 2010
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Adair
Turner, Chair of the Energy Transitions Commission, was Chair of the UK
Financial Services Authority from 2008 to 2012. His latest book is Between Debt and the Devil.
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