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E-raamat: Climate Change and Policy: The Calculability of Climate Change and the Challenge of Uncertainty

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  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Mar-2011
  • Kirjastus: Springer-Verlag Berlin and Heidelberg GmbH & Co. K
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783642177002
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Mar-2011
  • Kirjastus: Springer-Verlag Berlin and Heidelberg GmbH & Co. K
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783642177002

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Climate Change and Policy provides first hand insight into climatologists' strategies in dealing with uncertainty via simulation models. The text also explores the social, political and economical requirements in future prognoses on climate change.

The debate on how mankind should respond to climate change is diverse, as the appropriate strategy depends on global as well as local circumstances.As scientists are denied the possibility of conducting experiments with the real climate, only climate models can give insights into man-induced climate change, by experimenting with digital climates under varying conditions and by extrapolating past and future states into the future.But the 'nature' of models is a purely representational one. A model is good if it is believed to represent the relevant processes of a natural system well. However, a model and its results, in particular in the case of climate models which interconnect countless hypotheses, is only to some extent testable, although an advanced infrastructure of evaluation strategies has been developed involving strategies of model intercomparison, ensemble prognoses, uncertainty metrics on the system and component levels. The complexity of climate models goes hand in hand with uncertainties, but uncertainty is in conflict with socio-political expectations. However, certain predictions belong to the realm of desires and ideals rather than to applied science. Today's attempt to define and classify uncertainty in terms of likelihood and confidence reflect this awareness of uncertainty as an integral part of human knowledge, in particular on knowledge about possible future developments. The contributions in this book give a first hand insight into scientific strategies in dealing with uncertainty by using simulation models and into social, political and economical requirements in future projections on climate change. Do these strategies and requirements meet each other or fail The debate on how mankind should respond to climate change is diverse, as the appropriate strategy depends on global as well as local circumstances. As scientists are denied the possibility of conducting experiments with the real climate, only climate models can give insights into man-induced climate change, by experimenting with digital climates under varying conditions and by extrapolating past and future states into the future. But the 'nature' of models is a purely representational one. A model is good if it is believed to represent the relevant processes of a natural system well. However, a model and its results, in particular in the case of climate models which interconnect countless hypotheses, is only to some extent testable, although an advanced infrastructure of evaluation strategies has been developed involving strategies of model intercomparison, ensemble prognoses, uncertainty metrics on the system and component levels. The complexity of climate models goes hand in hand with uncertainties, but uncertainty is in conflict with socio-political expectations. However, certain predictions belong to the realm of desires and ideals rather than to applied science. Today's attempt to define and classify uncertainty in terms of likelihood and confidence reflect this awareness of uncertainty as an integral part of human knowledge, in particular on knowledge about possible future developments. The contributions in this book give a first hand insight into scientific strategies in dealing with uncertainty by using simulation models and into social, political and economical requirements in future projections on climate change. Do these strategies and requirements meet each other or fail Gabriele Gramelsberger is Principal Investigator of the Collaborative Research Projectis Principal Investigator of the Collaborative Research Project
1 Introduction to the Volume
1(8)
Johann Feichter
Gabriele Gramelsberger
2 Modelling the Climate System: An Overview
9(82)
Gabriele Gramelsberger
Johann Feichter
3 Climate Simulation, Uncertainty, and Policy Advice - The Case of the IPCC
91(22)
Arthur C. Petersen
4 Dealing with Uncertainty - From Climate Research to Integrated Assessment of Policy Options
113(14)
Hermann Held
5 Uncertainty in Climate Policy - Impacts on Market Mechanisms
127(18)
Alex Vasa
Axel Michaelowa
6 Insuring Climate Change - Managing Political and Economic Uncertainties in Flood Management
145(14)
Michael Huber
7 Climate Science, Weather and Climate Engineering, and Scientific Objectivity
159(12)
William R. Cotton
8 Utilizing Participatory Scenario-Based Approaches to Design Proactive Responses to Climate Change in the Face of Uncertainties
171(20)
Livia Bizikova
Sarah Burch
John Robinson
Alison Shaw
Stephen Sheppard
9 Image Politics: Picturing Uncertainty. The Role of Images in Climatology and Climate Policy
191(20)
Birgit Schneider
About the Authors 211(6)
Abbreviations and Glossary 217(20)
Index 237
Gabriele Gramelsberger investigates as a science philosopher at the FU Berlin the influence of computer based simulations as new scientific tools for knowledge production, in particular in climate research. Since 2002 she is a member of the BBAW initiative Science Policy Studies. 2007 she received the Blankesee-Colloquium Award from the presidents of the Berlin universities and academies.

 

            Johann Feichter is head of the group Aerosols, Clouds and Climate at the Max Planck Institute for Meteorology Hamburg. He worked on the development of the German climate model and contributed to the 3rd and 4th IPCC assessment reports.