Epistemic status: Fairly confident
Here are my thoughts on climate change, with EAs and EA-sympathetic people as the target audience:
1. Expected annual mortality in around 2100 is likely between 200,000 and 2 million.
2. Climate change by itself should not be considered a major near-term global catastrophic, >10% chance of causing >10% of human mortality or existential, non-negligible chance of ending human civilization as we know it, by 2100.
3. The effects of climate change on animal welfare is basically unstudied, and relies on crucial considerations we do not know the answers of.
4. It's rather unlikely that mainline climate change mitigation efforts are more cost-effective for improving quality of life or health outcomes for current living people than mainline global health or development spending.
5. The first 3 of the above points are relatively non-controversial among experts.
6. I consider myself fairly ignorant on this topic, but most educated laymen (including journalists and activists) who talk about climate change a lot on all sides seem even more ignorant than I am.
7. Depending on your moral preferences, other beliefs about the world, and general flexibility, it is probably wise to devote your altruistic energies to working on other cause areas.
8. EAs should be careful about messaging and turning off climate change-focused people, as there is a lot of strategic overlap including a quantitative focus, caring about “big problems” and frequently a longtermist outlook.
Meta: I'm experimenting with a new way to use the EA Forum. Instead of a top-level post explaining everything, I'll just have the eight main points I'm most confident in, and then add a bunch of side points /digressions in the comments, where upvotes/downvotes can help decide whether people end up reading those points.
Edit 2019/12/29: I bounded the timeframe of 2100 to points #1 and #2. I still personally believe the original (unbounded) claims, but I think my explicit evidence is too weak and I don't expect debating meta-level arguments to change many people's minds. I appreciate the pushback (public and private) trying to keep me honest.
On Facebook, a couple of people have asked me on the existential/global catastrophic risk posed by climate change causing or exacerbating widespread (nuclear) war.
Here's what I wrote.
(Note that this is what I personally believe, rather than something I'm confident experts on international relations will agree on)
I think climate change as an indirect GCR is less crazy than climate change as a direct GCR. But I still don't find it very compelling.
I think if you look at the entire history of human armed conflict, deaths attributable to wars are substantially lower than the GCR definition (population adjusted). Also most deaths historically have been incidental/civilian casualties, which have gone down over time for various reasons, including better medical sanitation and general wealth (so less likely that, eg. war -> pillage -> mass starvation).
So to argue that conflict from climate change leads to a GCR, you need a strong reason that "this time is different." One possible reason is access to nuclear weapons, but for this to be true, you need a compelling reason for people to differentially use nuclear weapons as a result of climate change at a fairly high probability. (There are reasons that also point in the other direction).
For food/water wars specifically, I'm reasonably convinced by Amartya Sen's research that pretty much all famines in recorded history are a result of distribution rather than production (his exact claim is that "no democracy has ever had a serious famine," which I think is too strong, but I think the general trend is correct).
In addition, the evidence for wars over food/resource contention is a lot weaker than I would have naively guessed before looking into it briefly. For example, here's an account from a science journalist who was commissioned to write a book about "water wars" and finding that there isn't enough credible evidence to write one:
https://www.nature.com/articles/458282a
So to recap,
1) I think it's relatively implausible that the relatively small food shortages from climate change will result in mass famines.
2) The famine -> war connection is also quite tenuous.
3) The war -> nuclear war connection isn't too strong either.
...And even if it could miraculously be prevented from actually causing any local negative weather events in other countries, it would certainly be perceived to do so, because terrible freak droughts/floods/etc. will continue to happen as always, and people will go looking for someone to blame, and the geoengineering project next door will be an obvious scapegoat.
Like how the US government once tried to use cloud-seeding (s... (read more)