2015
DOI: 10.1038/nclimate2836
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The rise of demand-driven climate services

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Cited by 123 publications
(74 citation statements)
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“…However, they also raise the potential emergence of a conflicted decision-making policy and practice arena, now pressed to adapt in line with the more moderate levels of future climate change agreed in Paris, whilst facing the non-negligible prospects of HECC scenarios. A particularly interesting area for future debate is the presence or absence of enablers to the uptake of HECC information and its influence on climate services and other support mechanisms to practical climate action (Burch 2010;Lemos et al 2012;Capela Lourenço et al 2016;Jones et al 2016).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, they also raise the potential emergence of a conflicted decision-making policy and practice arena, now pressed to adapt in line with the more moderate levels of future climate change agreed in Paris, whilst facing the non-negligible prospects of HECC scenarios. A particularly interesting area for future debate is the presence or absence of enablers to the uptake of HECC information and its influence on climate services and other support mechanisms to practical climate action (Burch 2010;Lemos et al 2012;Capela Lourenço et al 2016;Jones et al 2016).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Scientists and users could co-develop tools and processes for fostering the joint development of S2S predictions, with stakeholder-based modelling (Voinov and Bousquet, 2010) or co-exploration/co-production processes (Lemos and Morehouse, 2005;Meadow et al, 2015;Steynor et al, 2015) involving the user community not only as consumers but as co-producers of climate information. Climate services need to move towards a demand-driven and science-informed approach and boundary organizations will need to focus on use-inspired research (Lourenço et al, 2015). Bringing partner boundary organizations into the process for co-production, co-exploration and communication of information, including translation of scientific products into usable formats, balances the trade-offs between salience, credibility and legitimacy and increases the potential overall uptake of climate information (McNie, 2007).…”
Section: Putting the User Firstmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The evolution of the climate services movement has been propelled by climate service providers who generate supply-driven climate information services (Lourenço et al, 2015), whereas the connections between producers and societal users often remain weak or nonexistent (Lemos et al, 2012). Furthermore, the climate data and information provided by climate services are typically not contextualized or provided in a usable format and therefore are not taken into account in decision-making (Dilling & Lemos, 2011;Meinke et al, 2006).…”
Section: The Science-practice Gapmentioning
confidence: 99%