I watched #DontLookUp with my family over the vacations... and quickly heard "hey, Mom, this is just the same as for climate change!"

I'd like to share some thoughts, in light of some experiences at the science/society interface...
This (dark) satire plays with well known techniques (transposition, exaggeration) to denounce a social masquerade marked by denial, vanity, and greed, the loss of a sense of general interest.
Kate Dibiasky's character touched me with her doubts, her questioning about how to express herself rigorously, clearly and sincerely.
With her despair of not having succeeded in doing better, this impression of living a Greek tragedy announced without the awakening or the leaderships necessary to change the course of the things. The fact of questioning oneself.
The film shows the discrepancy between the way scientists work and the way the media and political power work. I clearly felt it on several occasions.
It raises the question of the training of scientists to help them express themselves in the media (media training), and the difficulty of journalists (talk show hosts) or political decision makers (and their advisors) to integrate scientific knowledge.
How should scientists communicate? Should they remain cold, distant, rational? Are they more or less credible when they let their emotions show, which makes them more human? Too human? Too sensitive?
The issue is particularly delicate for women (scientists), who, when they let their emotions show, can quickly be attacked (hysterical, etc).
I had a bad experience, in 2011, of being called a climate "pasionaria" (passionate), for example. A term that has no equivalent for a man - I think we would call him a "committed scientist", in this case.
The film shows the discrepancy between the codes and the way scientists work, and the short exchanges with political decision-makers - who sometimes rely more on individual opinion than on a solid basis of collective knowledge...
I have had, for example, 3 minutes (3 questions) to present the key points of an IPCC report to a head of state or government, a minister, an elected official. This is a short time.
Alas, the vast majority of decision-makers have not read the "summaries for policy makers" of the IPCC reports. I hope that some of their advisors do read them, but I wonder what they get from them.
The film also shows the cynicism and the denial of responsibility, the lack of risk analysis capacity for an unprecedented situation (ability to project oneself, risks associated with action options and their possible failure), the cruel absence of leadership.
It also illustrates how, in spite of themselves, scientists can find themselves instrumentalized in a political storytelling, for a specific interest, and not the general interest.
At some point, I wish I could have also said bluntly, "are you fucking kidding me?", but that would have required overcoming the politeness and respect for others that built me.
The character of Peter Isherwell is a particularly calamitous, but underlines a recurrent discourse on so-called technological solutions whose feasibility is not demonstrated and whose side effects are not evaluated.
I have repeatedly observed this type of attitude, a mixture of cynicism, greed and lack of empathy during discussions preceding or following very polite roundtables related to finance, technology, innovation and big business.
The film also illustrates the society of spectacle and consumption, the way certain media operate, the misinformation that unfortunately spreads faster than solidly established knowledge.
I have also suffered from this dissonance during media interventions, with the question of how to address serious climate change issues in a media world that seeks distraction, simplistic aspects, quarrel,
sometimes with navel-gazing personalities, all this between two advertisements promoting overconsumption and what leads most to emit more greenhouse gases.
For example, this summer's recent IPCC report on climate change was released on August 9, the day of the announcement of the expected arrival of Lionel Messi in the Paris PSG team...
So yes, I found in this film many elements that echo my feelings and my analysis of the relationship between science, political decisions, the role of the media, and society as a whole, concerning the issues related to climate change.
The prediction of the arrival of a comet, a cog in the film's tragicomic to give make people laugh of the social masquerade, is a scenic device of the film, suggesting that we are all facing the same danger, with a binary response (we can either all win or lose).
With respect to climate change, the reality is much more complex, with major issues concerning unequal responsibilities, vulnerabilities, impacts, and capacities to act.
This will be the subject of the assessment of the IPCC's Group 2 (vulnerabilities, impacts, risks, options for action/adaptation) and Group 3 (greenhouse gas emissions, options for mitigation) reports, which are due on 28 February and 4 April 2022 respectively.
In this context, #DontLookUp focuses on individuals and power (represented via the top of the state, the media, tech billionaires), to the detriment of everything that makes society, collective organizations, solidarity mechanisms.
This also raises the question of where to get out of denial (denial of reality, denial of severity, denial of the need for profound transformations and agency)?
For example, while public opinion surveys show that climate change issues are a major concern in society, why is this not a serious question asked to candidates for any election?
What are the proposals to prepare us to face the inevitable consequences of a changing climate, what are the proposals that will allow us to make our contribution to the indispensable and rapid reduction of greenhouse gas emissions?
What future do we want to build, rather than navel gazing?
I will end by pointing out that reality is sometimes worse than fiction. The film only partially shows the cynicism of those who have everything to gain from the status quo, the role of the merchants of doubt who knowingly spread disinformation, greenwashing & sow confusion.
For example, at COP21 (2015) and as part of the Paris climate agreement, all countries had asked the IPCC to issue a special report on global warming of 1.5°C.
This assessment of the state of knowledge required a colossal amount of work in a short time, was finalized, in 2018, approved by all countries (it was a bit rock'n roll, enb.iisd.org/events/48th-se…)
I summarize it by saying that every half degree counts, every year counts, and every choice counts; the 2021 report adds that every region is affected, and every ton of CO2 counts...
It's all here, ipcc.ch (and in my threads)
In short, when this special report was presented at COP24 in 2018, 4 countries (including, at the time, the USA, Russia and Saudi Arabia) did everything to ensure that its conclusions were not integrated into the decisions of the UN convention...
enb.iisd.org/climate/cop24/…
It also illustrates the challenges posed by the relationship between the state of scientific knowledge and the way in which it can be instrumentalized or, if it is inconvenient, ignored.
Things have improved a bit since then, as the COP26 decision (last November) starts with "science and urgency" and underlines the urgency to accelerate climate action...
unfccc.int/process-and-me…
So, #LookUp or #DontLookUp, now?

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More from @valmasdel

7 Jan
Cher M. Chasseray @PChasseray , vous semblez vous intéresser subitement au Groenland. Je ne peux que vous recommander chaudement le livre @CNRSEditions Image
L'Islande n'était pas uniquement une "terre de glace", et le Groenland n'était une terre "verte" que sur le littoral, le reste étant largement recouvert de l'inlandsis à l'époque viking, comme aujourd'hui - avec des activités d'élevage dans les mêmes sites. Image
Données historiques, informations issues des sédiments des lacs, caractérisation des variations de l'extension des glaciers, informations issues des carottages dans les glaces nous permettent de connaître son évolution récente, et la situer dans un contexte large.
Read 17 tweets
5 Jan
La satire 🤡 & le rire 😼 sont des leviers formidables pour susciter la réflexion et stimuler l’esprit critique, et la curiosité...
🧶
Est-ce qu'un film comme #DontLookUp permet de toucher un public plus large que des documentaires ou des efforts de communication scientifiques, ou est-ce une distraction qui fait porter le débat sur le film et pas sur les réponses aux problèmes de fond qui font l'objet du déni?
J'ai donc fait un fil concernant mon ressenti sur les relations science-société au regard de cette satire, pour faire un test 🔍 ...
Read 6 tweets
5 Jan
Si vous lisez l'anglais, ces recommandations de la société australienne de psychologie sont intéressantes : psychology.org.au/for-the-public… avec une réflexion sur le rôle des parents, les compétences et capacités qui seront utiles, le soutien qu'on peut leur apporter, ...
et la manière d'aborder avec bienveillance des "faits inconfortables".
Il doit exister des ressources similaires en français, voir huffingtonpost.fr/entry/parler-d…
Read 4 tweets
4 Jan
J'ai regardé en famille #DontLookUp pendant les vacances... et rapidement entendu "eh, maman, c'est la même chose que pour le changement climatique!"

Je voudrais partager quelques réflexions, au regard de certaines expériences à l'interface science / société...
Cette satire (sombre) joue de ressorts classiques (transposition, exagération) pour dénoncer une mascarade sociale empreinte de déni, de vanité, et de cupidité, de la perte du sens de l'intérêt général.
Le personnage de Kate Dibiasky m'a touchée avec ses doutes, son questionnement sur la manière de s'exprimer rigoureusement, clairement et sincèrement.
Read 38 tweets
28 Nov 21
❓What is the state of knowledge on abrupt climate change, irreversibility, tipping points, low-likelihood, high impact outcomes, as assessed in the @IPCC_CH #AR6 2021 #ClimateReport

🧵⬇️
(1/...)
A few definitions from the report glossary

ipcc.ch/report/ar6/wg1…

(2/...)
These notions are introduced in Chapter 1

ipcc.ch/report/ar6/wg1…

(3/...)
Read 21 tweets
12 Nov 21
Vous avez peut-être remarqué qu'il n'y a pas de chapitre dédié au paléoclimat dans le rapport @IPCC_CH #GIEC AR6 2021 #ClimateReport - alors qu'il y avait des chapitres dédiés dans les rapports précédents du groupe I pour l'AR4 (2007) et l'AR5 (2013)...

Pourquoi? ⬇️
🧵
(1/...)
Le #ClimateReport 2021 a été structuré pour intégrer l'ensemble des sources de connaissances scientifiques (approche holistique) pour mieux comprendre le système climatique - dont observations, modélisation, compréhension de processus, et apports des climats passés.

(2/...)
Ce rapport reflète de multiples avancées qui ont été possibles grâce aux progrès dans la reconstruction, la modélisation et la compréhension des variations climatiques passées.

Exemples de jalons en sciences du climat (Figure 1.6)

(3/...)
Read 63 tweets

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