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POLICY: Researchers say the social cost of carbon will be 6 times the Obama <br />administration's estimate <br />Even Lehmann, E E reporter <br />Published: Tuesday, January 13, 2015 <br />Climate change could have much larger impacts on the economy than the U.S. government is <br />anticipating, according to an analysis released yesterday that suggests the social cost of carbon <br />should be six times higher. <br />A paper by two Stanford University researchers argues that the true cost of releasing greenhouse <br />gases is about $220 a ton because rising temperatures could badly hinder a nation's economic <br />growth over decades or centuries. The Obama administration estimates that the social cost of <br />carbon is $37 a ton. <br />The paper, published yesterday in the journal Nature Climate Change, adds to a growing number of <br />voices calling for improvements to the complicated process of establishing the cost estimate, which <br />is used to measure the benefits of regulations. A dozen federal agencies set the price using three <br />computer models that project emission rates, economic activity and climate damages. <br />The Stanford paper bases its findings on prior research showing that the economic health of a <br />country suffers during periods of high temperatures. Heat can harm agricultural and industrial <br />output, while increasing political instability. In that way, the Stanford analysis subscribes to <br />emerging calls among experts to incorporate new observations into the trio of models that date <br />back to the 1990s. <br />"The social cost of carbon is almost certainly larger of what's being used so far," said co- author <br />Frances Moore, a doctoral candidate at Stanford's School of Earth Sciences. <br />In a key departure from the government's analysis, the pARer uses the previous empirical research <br />to assert that climate impacts could damage a nation's economic growth rate over time, rather than <br />just harassing its year -to -year economic output. <br />That could mean that nations face permanent malfunctions, like economic declines in labor, capital <br />and technology from severe weather and other "temperature shocks." The authors say these bigger <br />impacts have a "compounding effect" that is more damaging to the economy than temporary strains <br />from heat on agricultural output and more expensive air conditioning costs. <br />"So the economy is kind of permanently lower," Moore said. "If you have repeated shocks, in that <br />