Stern report/ratio
The Stern report/ratio on the economy of the climate change is a report on the effect of the climate change and the total warming on planet written by the economist Nicholas Stern for the government of the the United Kingdom. Published the October 30th 2006, this report/ratio of more than 700 pages is the first report/ratio financed by a government on the climate warming carried out by an economist and not by a meteorologist.
Its principal conclusions are that one pourcent GDP invested now would suffice for strongly mitigating the effects of the climate change (“ is a specific increase in the price index, same size as of the costs to which we are accustomed to face, for example with regard to the fluctuations of foreign exchange rates. That would slow down our activity by no means” and that differently would be to risk a recession up to twenty percent of the world GDP.
See too
- Negotiating out of carbon
- Finance of carbon
- Protocol of Kyōto
- Credit-carbon
- Finance of carbon
- Renewable energy
External bonds
- The U.K. Government' S Treasury Web pages butt the Stern review
- Text of the Stern report/ratio, by chapters
- the Stern report/ratio on the climate change - Conclusions to be retained by the European countries
- Climate: the States approve the Stern report/ratio, without being ready to amplify their action ''
References
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