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Opinion: Climate change - the IPCC has served its purpose, so do we still need it?

20 May 2022

Writing in The Conversation, Professor Ilan Kelman (果冻影院 Risk & Disaster Reduction) argues that the UN's International Panel on Climate Change needs to engage more with science policy and policy makers to remain relevant.

Dr Ilan Kelman

In 1990, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) issued its first assessment report on the state of climate change science. The synthesis of the sixth assessment report will be released later this year. But we can guess its messages: we are changing the climate with adverse consequences and we must urgently cut emissions. So after all this time, is the IPCC still useful?

To tackle this question, I recently organised a webinar featuring two long-standing IPCC authors, Lisa Schipper and Mark Pelling, who were joined by Silke Beck who has researched the IPCC since 1994 without, like me, ever directly contributing to it. My 果冻影院 colleague, prominent climate change researcher Sonja Ayeb-Karlsson chaired.

The IPCC was created by the United Nations. It synthesises and assesses the science of natural and human-caused climate change, the impacts and risks, and our options for and consequences of action. Member states appoint IPCC scientists and the governments must approve all reports. They are not shy about trying to remove material.

The IPCC publishes many different reports, the most notable of which are the full assessment reports every five to seven years. The latest one, the sixth, has been published over the past year following a COVID-19-related delay. The full technical report across three working groups comprises thousands of pages. It is meant to be policy neutral and policy relevant, but not policy prescriptive.

A headline-grabbing 鈥淪ummary for Policy Makers鈥 from each working group usually spans dozens of pages. It must be politically acceptable and so tends to diverge from the carefully nuanced science. One analysis called it 鈥渢he potentially least robust aspect of the Assessment Report process鈥.

Over the years, the baseline message hasn鈥檛 really altered, especially in terms of public perception that, in summary; humans are changing the climate rapidly and substantively. Consider the BBC鈥檚 online news reporting, for instance. The first sentence in its coverage of the 2007 IPCC fourth assessment termed human causation of climate change 鈥渧ery likely鈥.

Its report on the 2013 IPCC fifth assessment began 鈥渟cientists are 95% certain that humans are the "dominant cause鈥 of global warming since the 1950s". Last year鈥檚 story about the IPCC sixth assessment, written by the same reporter, started 鈥淗uman activity is changing the climate in unprecedented and sometimes irreversible ways鈥. From highly confident to entirely confident in 14 years.

Though we are certain about the basics, much climate science remains unknown or uncertain. Challenges range from the role of clouds to the application of economic models. These gaps should not impede action based on what we do know about the science.

These days the IPCC contributes little to climate change science. The three webinar speakers all agreed that the IPCC had fulfilled its original purpose. But they raised fundamental concerns regarding who is involved, whose voices are heard, and the effort required to attempt to fulfil the IPCC鈥檚 mandate (and not quite get there). The IPCC has made some important strides towards widening representation, although it still has long way to go to fully include, among others, indigenous peoples.

Speakers also suggested the IPCC鈥檚 reports are too technocratic and placed too much faith in technology. Also, a conflict of interest sometimes arises when IPCC authors synthesise and assessing their own published science.

Limitations in the IPCC鈥檚 process were flagged too. Reaching real consensus and consistency is hard within the mandate. While the IPCC strives for balanced, diverse, and representative authorship, it does not necessarily succeed, even in regional representation. The work is effectively unpaid which favours authors willing to give their time and who work for amenable institutions.

Authors gain networks and perceived prestige, yet the impact on careers might not always be positive. Schipper lamented: 鈥淚t has taken a huge amount of our time. And, for instance, my contract is expiring in Oxford because I haven鈥檛 had time to find research funding because I鈥檝e been so engaged with the IPCC process.鈥 It can be even worse for authors based in unsupportive countries or where the IPCC鈥檚 messages do not sit well with their governments.

Those not well-versed in climate change science tend to venerate the IPCC as a beacon of fact and authenticity. Without knowing the mandate, process, power relations, knowledge biases and inconsistencies, many hold up the IPCC as an untouchable icon. They do not see the bureaucracy and strong personalities shaping the reports as much as the science.

The speakers were not willing to abandon the IPCC at this stage, instead they wanted to see constructive reform. They were particularly hoping to enhance science-policy interactions. This means that policy makers must want to engage with science which, everyone agreed, is not always the case.

And while countries edit out mentions that portray themselves negatively, more targeted and specific reports, including at the country level, could be an important direction. Shorter, more focused reports were deemed to be most useful.

These would not only narrow the time gap between reports, but would also help to circumvent the impossibility of reviewing the masses of science being published. Searching a single academic publisher for peer-reviewed papers relevant to climate change in 2022 revealed over 33 published each day.

Rather than adopting their advice, the webinar鈥檚 speakers noted how the IPCC continues to move toward longer reports, more complicated rules, and increasingly futile attempts to embrace all the published science. In tandem, substantive action addressing human-caused climate change must succeed before the seventh IPCC assessment report is expected to be completed.

Rather than having galvanised the needed responses, the IPCC might then merely provide confirmation that we could have acted, but now it is too late.

This article originally appeared in on 20th May 2022.

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