Climate change: making decisions in the face of deep uncertainty

Publication date

2020-04

Authors

Lawrence, Judy
Haasnoot, MarjolijnISNI 0000000393556544
Lempert, Robert

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

In our view, Zeke Hausfather and Glen Peters’s recommendation to assign a single set of best-estimate probabilities to all future emissions scenarios as a means to assess climate-change risks (Nature 577, 618–620; 2020) could give decision-makers a false sense of certainty, leading to costly adjustments if the world evolves in unanticipated ways. The Society for Decision Making Under Deep Uncertainty (www.deepuncertainty.org), to which we belong, offers a better strategy. It relies on methods that focus on the implications of alternative scenarios and the extent to which response tactics are shared across a wide range of scenarios. This helps to manage uncertainties — for example, in sea-level rise after 2050 — by identifying long-term options and short-term, flexible actions that can prepare for a range of future emissions. Bypassing the need to assign probabilities enables decision-makers to better understand the combination of uncertainties that most affect their choices, thereby reducing locked-in choices and decision delays that can arise when using a single scenario.

Keywords

Taverne, SDG 13 - Climate Action

Citation

Lawrence, J, Haasnoot, M & Lempert, R 2020, 'Climate change: making decisions in the face of deep uncertainty', Nature, vol. 580, no. 7804, pp. 456-456. https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-020-01147-5