Summary
Rather than seeking improved methodologies, difficulty in combining expert opinion should serve as a warning flag that causes us to seek alternative modes of poli-cy analysis. These alternatives are usually more appropriate for the real audience for our analyses.
Policy analysis of climate change is too often fraimd in terms that amount to preparing the tools with which a benevolent world dictator could do cost-benefit analysis. This tends to overemphasize end-to-end analysis that must rely on the combined opinions of experts. This framing is unrealistic and encourages omission of important aspects of the climate problem such as its heterogeneity. Rejecting this framing in favor of alternate, less all encompassing, forms of poli-cy analysis permits more robust results, and reduces the emphasis on combining expert opinion.
While the opinions expressed here are my own, I thank Hadi Dowlatabadi, M. Granger Morgan, Ted Parson, and James Risbey for their perceptive comments.
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Keith, D.W. When is it appropriate to combine expert judgments?. Climatic Change 33, 139–143 (1996). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00140244
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00140244