Inside the IPCC

Social scientists propose a study to document the interactions among members of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change during their closed-door deliberations.

Written byBob Grant
| 2 min read

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Rajendra Pachauri, IPCC chairman, at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, in 2008WIKIMEDIA, WORLD ECONOMIC FORUMNot everyone in the scientific and environmental communities agrees with every single point and recommendation laid out by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) when it releases its sprawling assessments of the state of our warming globe every six years or so. Such was the case last month when the IPCC released the first installment of its fifth assessment on climate change. But IPCC watchers tend to agree on a couple of points: 1) The panel, with hundreds of authors poring over thousands of peer-reviewed documents and millions of gigabytes of data, is the most robust and independent framework for truly characterizing the state of the climate, and 2) Exactly how that assessment takes shape is pretty mysterious.

Because the IPCC’s plenary sessions are conducted behind closed doors with deliberations kept confidential to preserve participants’ ability to speak freely, the meetings have never been recorded. But now a team of social scientists, with backing from the National Science Foundation (NSF), are proposing to do just that at the panel’s latest plenary session in Batumi, Georgia, this week. According to Nature, the IPCC will decide soon whether it will allow the NSF-supported study to take place.

Sociologists have studied the IPCC in the past, but two recent papers on how interactions among panel members shaped the group’s assessments have relied upon the written reports themselves, plus after-the-fact interviews with participants. The planned study would involve recording interactions in meetings and interviewing panel members on ...

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Meet the Author

  • From 2017 to 2022, Bob Grant was Editor in Chief of The Scientist, where he started in 2007 as a Staff Writer. Before joining the team, he worked as a reporter at Audubon and earned a master’s degree in science journalism from New York University. In his previous life, he pursued a career in science, getting a bachelor’s degree in wildlife biology from Montana State University and a master’s degree in marine biology from the College of Charleston in South Carolina. Bob edited Reading Frames and other sections of the magazine.

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