The IPCC and the challenge of ex post policy evaluation
Richard S. J. Tol

TL;DR
The paper critiques the IPCC's focus on potential future climate policies, arguing it struggles to evaluate actual past policies and suggesting a shift to ex post evaluation for better climate policy assessment.
Contribution
It highlights the IPCC's limitations in transitioning from ex ante to ex post policy evaluation and proposes transferring control to national research authorities.
Findings
IPCC scenarios are overly optimistic and stylized.
IPCC has avoided discussing literature on suboptimal emission targets.
Recent IPCC reports omit critical ex post policy evaluation literature.
Abstract
The IPCC started at a time when climate policy was an aspiration for the future. The research assessed in the early IPCC reports was necessarily about potential climate policies, always stylized and often optimized. The IPCC has continued on this path, even though there is now a considerable literature studying actual climate policy, in all its infuriating detail, warts and all. Four case studies suggest that the IPCC, in its current form, will not be able to successfully switch from ex ante to ex post policy evaluation. This transition is key as AR7 will most likely have to confront the failure to meet the 1.5K target. The four cases are as follows. (1) The scenarios first build and later endorsed by the IPCC all project a peaceful future with steady if not rapid economic growth everywhere, more closely resembling political manifestos than facts on the ground. (2) Successive IPCC…
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Taxonomy
TopicsClimate Change Policy and Economics
