Metadata only
Date
2009-04Type
- Journal Article
Abstract
The IPCC's emissions scenarios form the basis for the majority of long-term climate change projections, including those of the current Fourth Assessment Report. The main characteristics of the IPCC's three scenario series – published in 1990, 1992 and 2000 – have changed significantly over time: titles, classification, assumptions and methods have all changed. This article analyses the evolution of the structure, description, process development and context of the IPCC's emissions scenarios, identifying the most important changes and their scientific and political causes. These changes are evaluated against the criteria of saliency, credibility and legitimacy. Our analysis indicates, first, enhanced credibility through an improved scenario construction methodology (multiple baseline scenarios; storylines), even though these achievements are diluted by particularities of the scenario approach used. Second, a reduced saliency through absence of titles, an inappropriate classification and the relatively high number of baseline scenarios, limits and weakens their wider applicability. These latter trends were due in part to concessions made to the intergovernmental nature of the construction process (trade-offs). The article concludes by proposing for the future the employment of a more formal qualitative construction approach as well as revisions to scenario labelling and classification practices. Show more
Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Environmental Science & PolicyVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
ElsevierSubject
Climate change; IPCC; Emissions scenarios; SRES; Evaluation; Science-policy interfaceOrganisational unit
02723 - Institut für Umweltentscheidungen / Institute for Environmental Decisions
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