‘Plausible’ energy scenarios?! How users of scenarios assess uncertain futures

Explorative energy scenarios do not present the most probable developments but provide a set of plausible pathways in order to highlight the uncertainty and complexity of decision-making contexts. Although plausibility is widely assumed as effectiveness criterion for scenario work, little is known a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ricarda Schmidt-Scheele
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-11-01
Series:Energy Strategy Reviews
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211467X20301243
id doaj-13de19b2be9c4ecd94c1d5b45abb4834
record_format Article
spelling doaj-13de19b2be9c4ecd94c1d5b45abb48342020-12-13T04:18:51ZengElsevierEnergy Strategy Reviews2211-467X2020-11-0132100571‘Plausible’ energy scenarios?! How users of scenarios assess uncertain futuresRicarda Schmidt-Scheele0Stuttgart Research Center for Interdisciplinary Risk and Innovation Studies (ZIRIUS), University of Stuttgart, Seidenstrasse 36, 70174, Stuttgart, GermanyExplorative energy scenarios do not present the most probable developments but provide a set of plausible pathways in order to highlight the uncertainty and complexity of decision-making contexts. Although plausibility is widely assumed as effectiveness criterion for scenario work, little is known about how the plausibility of a set of scenarios is perceived by users. This paper discusses conceptions from philosophy of sciences, cognitive psychology, narrative theory and linguistics to identify key factors affecting the perceived plausibility of scenarios. A conceptual model is proposed that links users' perceptions to the narrative storytelling and internal structure of the scenario, the perceived credibility of scenario sources and methods and users’ worldviews and cognitive styles. The model outlines why energy scenarios are discarded or seriously considered by a wider audience that was not involved in the scenario construction process. The paper explains how perceived plausibility constitutes a necessary but not sufficient condition for scenario usage and provides practical implications for scenario producers.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211467X20301243Energy scenariosScenario methodsScenario assessmentScenario usagePlausibilityProbability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ricarda Schmidt-Scheele
spellingShingle Ricarda Schmidt-Scheele
‘Plausible’ energy scenarios?! How users of scenarios assess uncertain futures
Energy Strategy Reviews
Energy scenarios
Scenario methods
Scenario assessment
Scenario usage
Plausibility
Probability
author_facet Ricarda Schmidt-Scheele
author_sort Ricarda Schmidt-Scheele
title ‘Plausible’ energy scenarios?! How users of scenarios assess uncertain futures
title_short ‘Plausible’ energy scenarios?! How users of scenarios assess uncertain futures
title_full ‘Plausible’ energy scenarios?! How users of scenarios assess uncertain futures
title_fullStr ‘Plausible’ energy scenarios?! How users of scenarios assess uncertain futures
title_full_unstemmed ‘Plausible’ energy scenarios?! How users of scenarios assess uncertain futures
title_sort ‘plausible’ energy scenarios?! how users of scenarios assess uncertain futures
publisher Elsevier
series Energy Strategy Reviews
issn 2211-467X
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Explorative energy scenarios do not present the most probable developments but provide a set of plausible pathways in order to highlight the uncertainty and complexity of decision-making contexts. Although plausibility is widely assumed as effectiveness criterion for scenario work, little is known about how the plausibility of a set of scenarios is perceived by users. This paper discusses conceptions from philosophy of sciences, cognitive psychology, narrative theory and linguistics to identify key factors affecting the perceived plausibility of scenarios. A conceptual model is proposed that links users' perceptions to the narrative storytelling and internal structure of the scenario, the perceived credibility of scenario sources and methods and users’ worldviews and cognitive styles. The model outlines why energy scenarios are discarded or seriously considered by a wider audience that was not involved in the scenario construction process. The paper explains how perceived plausibility constitutes a necessary but not sufficient condition for scenario usage and provides practical implications for scenario producers.
topic Energy scenarios
Scenario methods
Scenario assessment
Scenario usage
Plausibility
Probability
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211467X20301243
work_keys_str_mv AT ricardaschmidtscheele plausibleenergyscenarioshowusersofscenariosassessuncertainfutures
_version_ 1724385379000254464