Decision making for net zero policy design and climate action: considerations for improving translation at the research-policy interface: a UK Carbon Dioxide Removal case study

IF 3.3 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES Frontiers in Climate Pub Date : 2023-12-21 DOI:10.3389/fclim.2023.1288001
Mark Workman, Richard Heap, Erik Mackie, Irena Connon
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Abstract

The impacts of climate change on society and the natural environment are being experienced now, with extreme weather events increasing in frequency and severity across the globe. To keep the Paris Agreement's ambition of limiting warming to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels there is now also a need to establish and scale a new sector to remove CO2 at Giga-ton scale for over a century. Despite this mounting evidence and warnings, current climate policy in the UK and globally falls far short of achieving the required reductions in CO2 emissions or establishment of a new removal sector needed to stave off the risks posed by climate change. Some of the science on climate risk is well-evidenced, but the policy response is lacking in effectiveness. Other evidence to design policy, such as Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR), is fraught with deep uncertainty. Why are the plethora of scientific evidence, assessments and decision support tools available to decision and policymakers not always translating into effective climate-net zero policy action? How can emergent evidence be introduced to shape new sectors such as CDR? What are the capacity gaps? Through a combination of literature review, interviews and UK policy workshops over 17 months these are some of the questions that this contribution sought insight. We set out three recommendations for policymakers and other stakeholders, including academic researchers and third sector organizations, to address the identified gaps associated with translating climate risk and net zero decision support into effective climate policy:• Enhance collaboration between decision-makers, policymakers, analysts, researchers, and other stakeholders to co-develop and co-design operational climate risk assessments and policies, relevant to context.• Identify the research and capacity gaps around climate risk decision-making under uncertainty, and work with stakeholders across the decision value chain to ensure those gaps are addressed.• Co-create effective translation mechanisms to embed decision-support tools into policy better, employing a participatory approach to ensure inclusion of diverse values and viewpoints.It is fundamental that there is improvement in our understanding about how we can make good decisions and operationalize them, rather than simply focus on further research on the climate risk and net zero problem.
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净零政策设计和气候行动的决策:改进研究-政策界面转化的考虑因素:英国二氧化碳清除案例研究
气候变化对社会和自然环境的影响正在显现,极端天气事件在全球范围内日益频繁和严重。为了实现《巴黎协定》中将升温幅度限制在比工业化前水平高 1.5°C 的目标,现在还需要建立和扩大一个新的部门,在一个多世纪的时间里以千兆吨的规模清除二氧化碳。尽管有越来越多的证据和警告,但英国和全球目前的气候政策远不能实现所需的二氧化碳减排或建立新的清除部门,以避免气候变化带来的风险。一些关于气候风险的科学证据确凿,但应对政策却缺乏有效性。设计政策的其他证据,如二氧化碳清除(CDR),则充满了极大的不确定性。为什么提供给决策者和政策制定者的大量科学证据、评估和决策支持工具并不总能转化为有效的气候净零政策行动?如何引入新出现的证据来塑造 CDR 等新部门?有哪些能力差距?通过 17 个月的文献综述、访谈和英国政策研讨会,我们试图深入了解这些问题。我们为决策者和其他利益相关者(包括学术研究人员和第三部门组织)提出了三项建议,以解决与将气候风险和净零决策支持转化为有效气候政策相关的已查明差距:- 加强决策者、政策制定者、分析师、研究人员和其他利益相关者之间的合作,共同开发和共同设计与具体情况相关的可操作的气候风险评估和政策。- 共同创建有效的转化机制,将决策支持工具更好地纳入政策,采用参与式方法确保纳入不同的价值观和观点。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Frontiers in Climate
Frontiers in Climate Environmental Science-Environmental Science (miscellaneous)
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
233
审稿时长
15 weeks
期刊最新文献
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