Study Finds US Emissions Responsible for $2 Trillion in Damage to Other Nations

Wibbitz Top Stories 2022-07-12

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Study Finds US Emissions , Responsible for $2 Trillion , in Damage to Other Nations.
According to a new analysis, the United States
has inflicted over $1.9 trillion in damage to other
countries through greenhouse gas emissions.
'The Guardian' reports that the study
is the first measurement of nations'
liability in driving climate change.
The study found the U.S. to be
the largest historical emitter
of planet-heating gases. .
Those emissions have resulted in heatwaves,
crop failures and other consequences
in other, mostly poor, countries.
China, Russia, India and Brazil
are the next largest contributors to global
economic damage as a result of their emissions. .
Those five nations have
caused a total of $6 trillion
in losses worldwide.
That accounts for about 11%
of annual global GDP since 1990. .
There is this huge inequity. Countries like
the US have disproportionately damaged
low-income countries in the global south
and disproportionately benefited cooler,
higher income countries in the global north, Justin Mankin, Geographer at Dartmouth
and co-author of the paper, via 'The Guardian'.
Carroll Muffett, chief executive of the Center for International Environmental Law, suggests that the new study could be the first step towards ending the inequity. .
We are moving slowly towards some sort
of accountability for this. As the evidence
mounts and the record of US obstructionism
in the climate context is established, I don’t
think it and other countries will be able
to escape their liability in perpetuity, Carroll Muffett, Chief executive of the Center for International Environmental Law, via 'The Guardian'.
We are moving slowly towards some sort
of accountability for this. As the evidence
mounts and the record of US obstructionism
in the climate context is established, I don’t
think it and other countries will be able
to escape their liability in perpetuity, Carroll Muffett, Chief executive of the Center for International Environmental Law, via 'The Guardian'

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