Why the IPCC should evolve in response to the UNFCCC bottom-up strategy adopted in Paris? An opinion from the French Association for Disaster Risk Reduction

•This is a reflection with a multi-actor perspective on climate expertise.•The UNFCCC adopted a bottom-up strategy with the Paris agreement.•It requires actors to be mobilised at all scales and in all sectors.•The question is raised of how the IPCC could evolve to accompany this dynamic.•Recommendat...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental science & policy 2017-12, Vol.78, p.142-148
Hauptverfasser: Devès, Maud H., Lang, Michel, Bourrelier, Paul-Henri, Valérian, François
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container_end_page 148
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container_start_page 142
container_title Environmental science & policy
container_volume 78
creator Devès, Maud H.
Lang, Michel
Bourrelier, Paul-Henri
Valérian, François
description •This is a reflection with a multi-actor perspective on climate expertise.•The UNFCCC adopted a bottom-up strategy with the Paris agreement.•It requires actors to be mobilised at all scales and in all sectors.•The question is raised of how the IPCC could evolve to accompany this dynamic.•Recommendations are made. The levels of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere keep increasing every year, and despite the adoption of the Paris agreement, one cannot expect any significant dip in the trend in the near future. We may therefore legitimately question the efficiency of the current governance system, notably concerning the interplay between science and policy. The strategy adopted by the UNFCCC in Paris contrasts with the strategy adopted in Kyoto, as it endorses a dynamic that is more bottom-up. Its success will depend greatly on the ability of the actors to mobilise on climate issues and to find ways to work together. Scientific expertise has a key role to play to this respect. This paper is a reflection led by the French Association for Disaster Risk Reduction on how the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change could evolve in order to usefully accompany that strategy. Introducing more reflexivity in the assessment process and widening aspects of the expertise to a more diverse and transdisciplinary range of actors could improve the treatment of uncertainties, multi-scale interactions and the appropriation of expertise, as well as the integration of adaptation and mitigation policies. In practical terms, this could involve more working groups, which could become more focused, drawing up shorter but more frequent reports, and taking account of the “grey” expert literature. The implementation of such an approach merits further investigation, because these improvements could help address the governance challenges in climate change.
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subjects Climate change
Climate governance
Environmental Sciences
Expertise
IPCC
Science and policy
title Why the IPCC should evolve in response to the UNFCCC bottom-up strategy adopted in Paris? An opinion from the French Association for Disaster Risk Reduction
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