EPA FACT SHEET

SOCIAL COST OF CARBON

Background

EPA and other federal agencies use the social cost of carbon (SC-C02) to estimate the climate benefits of
rulemakings. The SC-C02 is an estimate of the economic damages associated with a small increase in
carbon dioxide (C02) emissions, conventionally one metric ton, in a given year. This dollar figure also
represents the value of damages avoided for a small emission reduction (i.e. the benefit of a C02
reduction).

The SC-C02 is meant to be a comprehensive estimate of climate change damages and includes, among
other things, changes in net agricultural productivity, human health, property damages from increased
flood risk and changes in energy system costs, such as reduced costs for heating and increased costs for
air conditioning. However, it does not currently include all important damages. The IPCC Fifth
Assessment report observed that SC-C02 estimates omit various impacts that would likely increase
damages. The models used to develop SC-C02 estimates do not currently include all of the important
physical, ecological, and economic impacts of climate change recognized in the climate change literature
because of a lack of precise information on the nature of damages and because the science incorporated
into these models naturally lags behind the most recent research. Nonetheless, the SC-C02 is a useful
measure to assess the benefits of C02 reductions.

The timing of the emission release (or reduction) is key to estimation of the SC-C02, which is based on a
present value calculation. The integrated assessment models first estimate damages occurring after the
emission release and into the future, often as far out as the year 2300. The models then discount the
value of those damages over the entire time span back to present value to arrive at the SC-C02. For
example, the SC-C02 for the year 2020 represents the present value of climate change damages that
occur between the years 2020 and 2300 (assuming 2300 is the final year of the model run); these
damages are associated with the release of one ton of carbon dioxide in the year 2020. The SC-C02 will
vary based on the year of emissions for multiple reasons. In model runs where the last year is fixed (e.g.,
2300), the time span covered in the present value calculation will be smaller for later emission years—
the SC-C02 in 2050 will include 40 fewer years of damages than the 2010 SC-C02 estimates. This
modeling choice—selection of a fixed end year—will place downward pressure on the SC-C02 estimates
for later emission years. Alternatively, the SC-C02 should increase over time because future emissions
are expected to produce larger incremental damages as physical and economic systems become more
stressed in response to greater levels of climatic change.

One of the most important factors influencing SC-C02 estimates is the discount rate. A large portion of
climate change damages are expected to occur many decades into the future and the present value of
those damages (the value at present of damages that occur in the future) is highly dependent on the
discount rate. To understand the effect that the discount rate has on present value calculations,
consider the following example. Let's say that you have been promised that in 50 years you will receive
$1 billion. In "present value" terms, that sum of money is worth $291 million today with a 2.5 percent
discount rate. In other words, if you invested $291 million today at 2.5 percent and let it compound, it

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would be worth $1 billion in 50 years. A higher discount rate of 3 percent would decrease the value
today to $228 million, and the value would be even lower—$87 million- with a 5 percent rate. This
effect is even more pronounced when looking at the present value of damages further out in time. The
value of $1 billion in 100 years is $85 million, $52 million, and $8 million, for discount rates of 2.5
percent, 3 percent, and 5 percent, respectively. Similarly, the selection of a 2.5 percent discount rate
would result in higher SC-C02 estimates than would the selection of 3 and 5 percent rates, all else equal.

Process Used to Develop the Social Cost of Carbon

An interagency working group was convened by the Council of Economic Advisers and the Office of
Management and Budget in 2009-2010 to design an SC-C02 modeling exercise and develop estimates
for use in rulemakings. The interagency group was comprised of scientific and economic experts from
the White House and federal agencies, including: Council on Environmental Quality, National Economic
Council, Office of Energy and Climate Change, and Office of Science and Technology Policy, EPA, and the
Departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Energy, Transportation, and Treasury. The interagency group
identified a variety of assumptions, which EPA then used to estimate the SC-C02 using three integrated
assessment models, which each combine climate processes, economic growth, and interactions
between the two in a single modeling framework.

Social Cost of Carbon Values

The 2009-2010 interagency group recommended a set of four SC-C02 estimates for use in regulatory
analyses. The first three values are based on the average SC-C02 from three integrated assessment
models, at discount rates of 5, 3, and 2.5 percent. SC-C02 estimates based on several discount rates are
included because the literature shows that the SC-C02 is highly sensitive to the discount rate and
because no consensus exists on the appropriate rate to use for analyses spanning multiple generations.
The fourth value is the 95th percentile of the SC-C02 from all three models at a 3 percent discount rate,
and is intended to represent the potential for higher-than-average damages. See the 2010 SC-C02
Technical Support Document (PDF, 51pp, 854K) for a complete discussion about the methodology and
resulting estimates.

The interagency group updated these estimates, using new versions of each integrated assessment
model and published them in May 2013. The 2013 interagency process did not revisit the 2009-2010
interagency modeling decisions (e.g., with regard to the discount rate, reference case socioeconomic
and emission scenarios or equilibrium climate sensitivity). Rather, improvements in the way damages
are modeled are confined to those that have been incorporated into the latest versions of the models by
the developers themselves and as used in the peer-reviewed literature. The 2010 SC-CO? Technical
Support Document (PDF, 51pp, 854K) provides a complete discussion of the methods used to develop
these estimates and the current SC-C02 TSD presents and discusses the 2013 update (including minor
technical corrections to the estimates published in July 2015).1

1 Both the 2010 SC-C02 TSD and the current TSD are available at: https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/oira/social-
cost-of-carbon.

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The four SC-C02 estimates are: $14, $46, $68, and $138 per metric ton of C02 emissions in the year
2025 (2007 dollars).2

The table below summarizes the four SC-C02 estimates in certain years.

Social Cost of C02, 2015-2050a (in 2007 Dollars per metric ton C02)

Source: Technical Support Document: Technical Update of the Social Cost of Carbon for Regulatory
Impact Analysis Under Executive Order 12866 (May 2013, Revised July 2015)

Discount Rate and Statistic

Year

5% Average

3% Average

2.5% Average

3% 95th percentile

2015

$11

$36

$56

$105

2020

$12

$42

$62

$123

2025

$14

$46

$68

$138

2030

$16

$50

$73

$152

2035

$18

$55

$78

$168

2040

$21

$60

$84

$183

2045

$23

$64

$89

$197

2050

$26

$69

$95

$212

a The SC-C02 values are dollar-year and emissions-year specific.

Examples of Applications to Rulemakings

EPA has used the SC-C02 to analyze the carbon dioxide impacts of various rulemakings since the
interagency group first published estimates in 2010. Examples of these rulemakings include:

•	The Joint EPA/Department of Transportation Rulemaking to establish Light-Duty Vehicle
Greenhouse Gas Emission Standards and Corporate Average Fuel Economy Standards (2012-
2016)

•	Amendments to the National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants and New Source
Performance Standards (NSPS) for the Portland Cement Manufacturing Industry

•	Regulatory Impact Results for the Reconsideration Proposal for National Emission Standards for
Hazardous Air Pollutants for Industrial, Commercial, and Institutional Boilers and Process
Heaters at Major Source

2 The current version of the SCC TSD is available at:

https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/inforeg/scc-tsd-final-july-2015.pdf. The TSDs present SC-C02
in $2007.

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•	Proposed National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants (NESHAP) for Mercury
Emissions from Mercury Cell Chlor Alkali Plants

•	Standards of Performance for New Stationary Sources and Emission Guidelines for Existing
Sources: Commercial and Industrial Solid Waste Incineration Units Standards

•	Final Mercury and Air Toxics Standards

•	Joint EPA/Department of Transportation Rulemaking to establish Medium- and Heavy -Duty
Vehicle Greenhouse Gas Emission Standards and Corporate Average Fuel Economy Standards

•	Proposed Carbon Pollution Standard for Future Power Plants

•	Joint EPA/Department of Transportation Rulemaking to establish 2017 and Later Model Year
Light-Duty Vehicle Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Corporate Average Fuel Economy Standards

Limitations

The interagency group noted a number of limitations to the SC-C02 analysis, including the incomplete
way in which the integrated assessment models capture catastrophic and non-catastrophic impacts,
their incomplete treatment of adaptation and technological change, uncertainty in the extrapolation of
damages to high temperatures, and assumptions regarding risk aversion. Additional details are
discussed in the Technical Support Documents.3

Next Steps

In addition, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has issued a response to the public comments
received through its solicitation for comments on the SC-C02 estimates. In this response, OMB
announced plans to obtain expert, independent advice from the National Academies of Sciences,
Engineering, and Medicine on how to approach future updates to the SC-C02 estimates. To help
synthesize the technical information and input reflected in the comments, and to add additional rigor to
the next update of the SC-C02, the interagency working group plans to seek independent expert advice
on technical opportunities to improve the SC-C02 estimates from the Academies. The Academies'
review will help to ensure that the SC-C02 estimates used by the federal government continue to reflect
the best available science and methodologies.

After careful evaluation of the full range of comments, the interagency working group continues to
recommend the use of the current SC-C02 estimates in regulatory impact analysis until further updates
can be incorporated into the estimates.

3 Both the 2010 SC-C02 TSD and the current TSD are available at: https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/oira/social-
cost-of-carbon.

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