Framing climate uncertainty: socio-economic and climate scenarios in vulnerability and adaptation assessments

被引:0
作者
Frans Berkhout
Bart van den Hurk
Janette Bessembinder
Joop de Boer
Bram Bregman
Michiel van Drunen
机构
[1] King’s College London,Department of Geography
[2] Royal Dutch Meteorological Institute (KNMI),Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Research Utrecht (IMAU)
[3] Utrecht University,Institute for Environmental Studies (IVM)
[4] VU University,Amsterdam Global Change Institute
[5] VU University,Faculty of Science
[6] Radboud University Nijmegen,undefined
[7] Amsterdam University College (AUC),undefined
来源
Regional Environmental Change | 2014年 / 14卷
关键词
Climate change; Climate scenarios; Socio-economic scenarios; Framing; Uncertainty; Vulnerability; Adaptation;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Scenarios have become a powerful tool in integrated assessment and policy analysis for climate change. Socio-economic and climate scenarios are often combined to assess climate change impacts and vulnerabilities across different sectors and to inform risk management strategies. Such combinations of scenarios can also play an important role in enabling the interaction between experts and other stakeholders, framing issues and providing a means for making explicit and dealing with uncertainties. Drawing on experience with the application of scenarios to climate change assessments in recent Dutch research, the paper argues that scenario approaches need to be matched to the frames of stakeholders who are situated in specific decision contexts. Differentiated approaches (top-down, bottom-up and interactive) are needed to address the different frames and decision-making contexts of stakeholders. A framework is proposed to map scenarios and decision contexts onto two dimensions: the spatial scale of the context and the starting point of approach used in scenario development (top-down, bottom-up or incident-driven). Future climate and socio-economic scenario development will be shaped by the need to become better aligned with multiple interacting uncertainties salient to stakeholders.
引用
收藏
页码:879 / 893
页数:14
相关论文
共 137 条
  • [1] Arnell NW(1998)Climatic change and water resources in Britain Clim Chang 39 83-110
  • [2] Bakker A(2012)Estimation of persistence and trends in geostrophic wind speed for the assessment of wind energy yields in Northwest Europe Clim Dyn 39 767-782
  • [3] van den Hurk BJJM(2011)Standard years for large-scale hydrological scenario simulations Environ Model Softw 26 797-803
  • [4] Bakker AMR(2005)Frames revisited—the coherence-inducing function of frames J Pragmat 37 685-705
  • [5] Van den Hurk BJJM(2002)Socio-economic futures in climate change impact assessment: using scenarios as ‘learning machines’ Glob Environ Chang 12 83-95
  • [6] Bessembinder JJE(2006)The story of Katrina: New Orleans and the political economy of catastrophe Public Choice 127 5-30
  • [7] Kroon T(2010)Frame-based guide to situated decision-making on climate change Glob Environ Chang 20 502-510
  • [8] Bednarek MA(2007)An intercomparison of regional climate simulations for Europe: assessing uncertainties in model projections Clim Change 81 53-70
  • [9] Berkhout F(2009)Application of the UKCIP02 climate change scenarios: reflections and lessons learnt Glob Environ Chang 19 113-121
  • [10] Hertin J(2009)The evolution of the IPCC’s emissions scenarios Environ Sci Policy 12 103-118