The Climate Casino: Risk, Uncertainty, and Economics for a Warming World
by William D. Nordhaus
Yale University Press, 378 pp., $30.00
Forty years ago a brilliant young Yale economist
named William Nordhaus published a landmark paper, “The Allocation of
Energy Resources,” that opened new frontiers in economic analysis.
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Nordhaus argued that to think clearly about the economics of
exhaustible resources like oil and coal, it was necessary to look far
into the future, to assess their value as they become more scarce—and
that this look into the future necessarily involved considering not just
available resources and expected future economic growth, but likely
future technologies as well. Moreover, he developed a method for
incorporating all of this information—resource estimates, long-run
economic forecasts, and engineers’ best guesses about the costs of
future technologies—into a quantitative model of energy prices over the
long term.
The resource and engineering data for Nordhaus’s paper were for
the most part compiled by his research assistant, a twenty-year-old
undergraduate, who spent long hours immured in Yale’s Geology Library,
poring over Bureau of Mines circulars and the like. It was an invaluable
apprenticeship. My reasons for bringing up this bit of intellectual
history, however, go beyond personal disclosure—although readers of this
review should know that Bill Nordhaus was my first professional mentor.
For if one looks back at “The Allocation of Energy Resources,” one
learns two crucial lessons. First, predictions are hard, especially
about the distant future. Second, sometimes such predictions must be
made nonetheless.
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