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The accountability imperative for quantifiying the uncertainty of emission forecasts : evidence from Mexico

Author

Listed:
  • Daniel Puig

    (United Nations Environmental Programme)

  • Oswaldo Morales Napoles

    (The Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific Research)

  • Fatemeh Bakhtiari
  • Gissela Landa

    (Observatoire français des conjonctures économiques (OFCE))

Abstract

Governmental climate change mitigation targets are typically developed with the aid of forecasts of greenhouse-gas emissions. The robustness and credibility of such forecasts depends, among other issues, on the extent to which forecasting approaches can reflect prevailing uncertainties. We apply a transparent and replicable method to quantify the uncertainty associated with projections of gross domestic product growth rates for Mexico, a key driver of greenhouse-gas emissions in the country. We use those projections to produce probabilistic forecasts of greenhouse-gas emissions for Mexico. We contrast our probabilistic forecasts with Mexico’s governmental deterministic forecasts. We show that, because they fail to reflect such key uncertainty, deterministic forecasts are ill-suited for use in target-setting processes. We argue that (i) guidelines should be agreed upon, to ensure that governmental forecasts meet certain minimum transparency and quality standards, and (ii) governments should be held accountable for the appropriateness of the forecasting approach applied to prepare governmental forecasts, especially when those forecasts are used to derive climate change mitigation targets.

Suggested Citation

  • Daniel Puig & Oswaldo Morales Napoles & Fatemeh Bakhtiari & Gissela Landa, 2017. "The accountability imperative for quantifiying the uncertainty of emission forecasts : evidence from Mexico," Sciences Po publications info:hdl:2441/5cu79nktr18, Sciences Po.
  • Handle: RePEc:spo:wpmain:info:hdl:2441/5cu79nktr182k9k26ecvt6f8p2
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    More about this item

    Keywords

    Uncertainty; Projections; Structured expert judgment; Accountability; Emission-reduction targets; Gross domestic product growth rates;
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