Extreme weather events may cost global economy up to $5T: study

A study by Lloyd's of London estimates that extreme weather events, including food, water shocks, could lead to global economic losses from $3 trillion to $17.6 trillion over a five-year period, with a weighted average loss of $5 trillion.

Researchers from the US and British governments determined that climate change had increased the likelihood of events such as an ear of corn blackening in the sun during a heat wave in Farmingdale. / Photo: AP Archive
AP Archive

Researchers from the US and British governments determined that climate change had increased the likelihood of events such as an ear of corn blackening in the sun during a heat wave in Farmingdale. / Photo: AP Archive

Global economic losses could reach $5 trillion under a "plausible increase" in extreme weather events linked to climate change that cause crop failures and food and water shortages, insurance marketplace Lloyd's of London said.

Lloyd's, which carried out the research alongside the Cambridge Centre for Risk Studies, stressed on Wednesday that its "systemic risk scenario", which models the global economic impact of extreme weather, was hypothetical.

But it said the work would improve business and policymaker understanding of their exposure to critical threats such as extreme weather.

When adjusting the estimated $5 trillion in losses over a five-year period for the probability of those extreme weather events occurring, the expected global economic losses were $711 billion, Lloyd's said.

"The global economy is becoming more complex and increasingly subject to systemic threats," said Trevor Maynard, Executive Director of Systemic Risks at the Cambridge Centre for Risk Studies.

He added that the research would "help businesses and policymakers explore the potential impacts of these scenarios".

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Extreme weather events

Lloyd's modelled global economic losses of extreme weather events by estimating the impact of food and water shocks on global gross domestic product over a five-year period.

The weighted average loss across the three severities it modelled - major, severe and extreme - was $5 trillion over the five years, ranging from $3 trillion in the lowest severity scenario up to $17.6 trillion in the most extreme.

Lloyd's also modelled for events concentrated in regions - it said extreme weather events centred in Greater China would lead to the biggest losses, of $4.6 trillion.

The Caribbean region would lose 19 percent of its GDP over five years if the extreme weather events were concentrated there, Lloyd's estimated.

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