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Public engagement and communicating uncertainty

by Judith Curry

Some interesting discussion this past week on the topic of public engagement and communicating climate uncertainty.

APPCCG

Tamsin Edwards has a post entitled Nine Lessons and Carols in Communicating Climate Uncertainty, comprising  notes form the All Parliamentary Party Climate Change Group meeting on Communicating Risk and Uncertainty Around Climate Change. The nine lessons:

This is a good article, read the whole thing.

There is one thing that I would add, and it is a counterpoint to #2:  Scientists too often confuse ignorance and uncertainty, effectively ignoring ignorance or at least being overconfident that they have a statistical understanding of the true uncertainty. This overconfidence (and apparent unawareness of ignorance) gives rise to the public interpreting uncertainty as ignorance, skepticism, and lost of trust.

Roland Jackson

In the comments, Barry Woods provides a link to a very interesting article by Roland Jackson: 12 things policy makers and scientists should know about the public. Excerpts:

I would say that 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 10 pretty much comprise the motivations for my efforts at Climate Etc.   As a scientist, I am finding  5, 6 to be very valuable.

JC comments

Now all of this sort of seems to be common sense, no?  Approach the issue of communicating climate science to the public in context of uncertainty and risk, with honesty and a dose of humility, and all will be well, no?

So why is there such a perception of a ‘communication problem’ surrounding climate science among climate scientists and scientific organizations?  It is because they expect their science to be translated into the ‘obvious’ policy prescriptions that they believe obviously follows from their science.    This unfortunate linear thinking, motivated and institutionalized by the UNFCCC/IPCC, has led climate communication efforts in the direction of propaganda, which gives rise to public skepticism and loss of trust.

p.s. Read the comments at Tamsin’s blog, superb discussion

 
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