Abstract

Scenarios have been recognised as a useful tool for planning, which have resulted in a strong increase in the number of (multi-scale) scenarios in climate change research. This paper addresses the need for methodological progress and testing of conceptual considerations, by extending the global shared socio-economic pathways (SSPs). We present a set of four European SSPs until 2100 and a novel method to develop qualitative stories for Europe equivalent to the global SSPs starting from an existing set of European scenarios. Similar to the global SSPs, the set includes a sustainable future with global cooperation and less intensive lifestyles (We are the World; Eur-SSP1); a future in which countries struggle to maintain living standards in a high-carbon intensive Europe (Icarus; Eur-SSP3); a world in which power becomes concentrated in a small elite and where Europe becomes an important player (Riders on the Storm; Eur-SSP4); and one where a lack of environmental concern leads to the over-exploitation of fossil fuel resources addressed by technological solutions (Fossil-fuelled Development; Eur-SSP5). We conclude that the global SSPs are a good starting point for developing equivalent continental scale scenarios that, in turn, can serve multiple purposes. There are, however, methodological challenges related to the choice for equivalence and the exact methods by which scenarios are constructed that need to be tested further.

Highlights

  • Scenarios have been recognised as a useful tool for planning in the face of irreducible complexity and uncertainty

  • We limit ourselves to a presentation of a summary of the stories with accompanying trends for key elements (Section ‘The basic European-shared socio-economic pathways—stories and trends’) and an analysis thereof

  • The resulting set of Eur-shared socio-economic pathways (SSPs) can be considered equivalent with the higher-level global SSPs, whilst three out of four were consistent with the CLIMSAVE scenarios that were used as a second starting point

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Summary

Introduction

Scenarios have been recognised as a useful tool for planning in the face of irreducible complexity and uncertainty. Overseeing the breadth of the environmental scenario development community, a number of observations stand out relevant to this paper: Firstly, recent scenario reviews have illustrated just how many sets of scenarios have been developed, globally, nationally, and locally (Priess and Hauck 2014; Amer et al 2013; Rounsevell and Metzger 2010; Rothman 2008). They differ in theme, focus, and content, there are similarities.

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