Paris, France | AFP | Muser NewsDesk

The economic cost of carbon emissions is far higher than previously estimated, said a new study Wednesday that links big polluters to tens of trillions of dollars in climate-related damages worldwide.

The study in the journal Nature measures how human-caused warming affects economic growth and assigns a share of global damages to specific emitters — from major economies to oil giants.

The findings land as a growing wave of lawsuits seek to hold fossil fuel producers and other carbon-heavy businesses accountable for climate “loss and damage”.

Claimants argue that large polluters are legally liable for their outsized contribution to climate change and its associated extreme weather events, particularly in poorer nations.

This study did not seek to answer the “legal and ethical” question of compensation, said Marshall Burke, a professor at Stanford University and the study’s lead author.

“Our goal was first and foremost scientific, but we hope to contribute to the broader policy discussion of how to measure loss and damage and what to do about it,” Burke told AFP.

It does offer “guidance” on the scale of potential costs and a framework “for estimating how specific emissions from specific emitters at specific points in time lead to damages” worldwide, he added.

Image: Extended Data Fig. 3: Both distributed lag models and local projections show evidence of growth effects. - Quantifying climate loss and damage consistent with a social cost of carbon (s. big polluters, climate change, climate damage)
Both distributed lag models and local projections show evidence of growth effects. a–c. Each panel shows estimated marginal effects (∂growth/∂Temp) from a global pooled regression of growth in GDP/capita on temperature, with 0, 5, or 10 lags of temperature. Light shaded regions are bootstrapped 95% confidence intervals, darker regions are 90% CI (1000 bootstraps). Dotted vertical lines show average temperatures at end of the sample (2016-2020) for select economies globally. Marginal effects are noisier but more negative with increasing numbers of lags, consistent with temperature affecting the growth rate of GDP. d Marginal effects for 5-lag model estimated separately in three 20-year periods are not statistically different from each other and have not flattened over time; point estimates are more negative in later periods. e–f Estimates from local projections model plot the impact on growth in the 15 years following a temperature shock in year j = 0, for economies with average temperatures at 5, 15, and 25 °C; point estimates shown for each economy in e and confidence intervals in f–h. Consistent with distributed lag models, a one year temperature shock has a persistent negative effect on output for economies with average temperatures above around 15 °C, although estimates are somewhat noisier at longer time lags. Credit: Burke et al. (2026) | DOI: 10.1038/s41586-026-10272-6 | Nature | CC BY-NC-ND

They assessed the impact of rising temperatures on economic factors including labour productivity and agriculture, but also some associated climate-driven weather extremes.

US emissions between 1990 and 2020 were the largest source of estimated global damages at $10.2 trillion followed by China ($8.7 trillion) and the European Union ($6.4 trillion).

Emissions linked to Saudi oil giant Saudi Aramco between 1988 and 2015 resulted in $3 trillion in cumulative global economic damages by 2020, the study also said.

Settling debts

But the authors found the largest share of climate damages lies ahead.

“We were surprised not only by the overall magnitude of estimated damages, which are in the tens of trillions of dollars, but also by how much larger future damages from past emissions are than past damages from past emissions,” Burke said.

One tonne of COâ‚‚ emitted in 1990 caused about $180 in global damages by 2020, but was expected to inflict a further $1,840 through 2100 — roughly 10 times more than the costs already incurred.

This is because COâ‚‚ has a long lifespan, lingering in the atmosphere where it contributes to warming for decades to come.

For this reason “settling debts for past damages will not settle debts for past emissions”, the authors wrote.

Even under relatively conservative assumptions, the cost per tonne of carbon emitted is far higher than many government estimates.

The research also highlights how high-emitting activities such as air travel contribute to future damage. Taking a long-haul flight each year over a decade, for example, could generate around $25,000 in losses by 2100.

As emissions rise and poorer nations bear the brunt, wealthy countries and fossil fuel businesses are facing mounting scrutiny over their disproportionate role in driving climate damage.

Last year, a separate Nature study found extreme heat linked to emissions from 111 fossil fuel companies caused $28 trillion in global economic losses between 1991 and 2020.

Companies have long argued it is impossible to attribute harm from a global problem to any single emitter, and courts have been cautious about awarding compensation.

np/st

© Agence France-Presse

Journal Reference:
Burke, M., Zahid, M., Diffenbaugh, N.S. & Hsiang, S., ‘Quantifying climate loss and damage consistent with a social cost of carbon’, Nature 651, 959–966 (2026). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-026-10272-6

Article Source:
Press Release/Material by Nick Perry | AFP
Featured image credit: Mats Havia | Unsplash

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