Climate scenarios, says Tavoni, are translated by professionals in visualizations and through tools that simplify the use of scenarios for policymakers and society at large. An example of this type of application of climate scenarios is a recent set of infographics that shows the expected climate for Italy in the coming decades, as described by CMCC researchers at the city level for two alternative scenarios.
This example shows one way that science can reach decisionmakers and actors at different scales, and therefore be understood, applied, and useful for everyday life.
“We are depicting bad futures so that people understand the consequences of the climate crisis if we do not work on it,” adds Tavoni as he talks about scientists in the context of a long tradition of science fiction that often makes its point by describing alternative extreme narratives: either dystopian or utopian futures.
“We also need something in between,” Tavoni says. “What we should also work toward—and this is more challenging from a science communication perspective—is to make people think about a good future. Hopefully, the earth is going to be clean 20 or 30 years from now. If you think about a future like this, and you try to think about yourself in that future, you will not want to go back. Maybe this message is not going to sell a lot of books, but it would help policymakers enact ambitious policies, as we would show them that the road to a climate-safe society is going to be bumpy, but it is going to lead us to a much better future.”
Watch the conversation between EIEE Director Massimo Tavoni and science journalist Elisabetta Tola: