The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) assessments provide policy-relevant insights about climate impacts, vulnerabilities, and adaptation through a process of peer-reviewed literature assessments underpinned by expert judgement. An iconic output from these assessments is the “burning embers” diagram. Burning embers were first used in the Third Assessment Report to visualize reasons for concern, which aggregate risks from various systems and sectors. In these diagrams, colour transitions show changes in the assessed level of risk to humans and ecosystems as a function of climate change indicated by increasing levels of global mean temperature. Here we review the approach to the construction of burning embers, its evolution across the various IPCC reports, and recent methodological advances in the elicitation process to reduce subjectivity in the expert judgement and improve the transparency of the assessment. We recommend the use of a standardized, transparent process of expert elicitation in the production of burning embers diagrams to enhance their quality, comparability, and credibility.
Revised: November 5, 2020 |
Published: October 1, 2020
Citation
Zommers Z., P. Marbaix, A. Fischlin, Z. Ibrahim, S. Grant, A. Magnan, and H. Portner, et al. 2020.Burning Embers: Towards more transparent and robust climate change risk assessments.Nature Reviews Earth and Environment 1.PNNL-SA-151279.doi:10.1038/s43017-020-0088-0