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001        FI15052598_00001
005        20171020113000.0
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245 00 |a Scenario Planning and the IPCC |h [electronic resource] |b Climate Change and the Florida Keys-Fact Sheet 1.
260        |c 2010.
506        |a Please contact the owning institution for licensing and permissions. It is the user's responsibility to ensure use does not violate any third party rights.
520 2    |a In the 1950s and 1960s there was an optimistic belief in the more advanced economies that they would continue to grow steadily, leaving the devastations of two world wars and the Great Depression firmly behind. The expectation of enduring growth persists, along with mounting resentment over domestic and international inequities, conflicts, and oil crises. There is a growing recognition, however, that social, political and economic change is becoming impossible to predict, even before we consider the impact of a changing climate. Scenario planning had its origin in military war games in the 1940s and moved into the civil domain through the RAND Corporation and the Hudson Institute. But it took until the late 1960s before any major business began to realize that the global outlook had become inherently uncertain, and that it was no longer sensible to rely on conventional business forecasting methods assuming that the future would be much like today, only richer. Shell was among the first large corporations to develop scenario planning. Years before the first oil crisis in 1973 the company explored a range of possible future business conditions in the oil industry, including a “crisis scenario” where the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) used its cartel power to break the upward trend in global supply, triggering a large increase in the price of crude oil. The oil majors routinely planned for 6% annual compound growth in supply to match the escalating global demand. As a direct result of its new insights from scenario planning, Shell abandoned this policy, which gave it an advantage over its competitors who took years to even begin reducing their planned refinery capacity.
533        |a Electronic reproduction. |c Florida International University, |d 2015. |f (dpSobek) |n Mode of access: World Wide Web. |n System requirements: Internet connectivity; Web browser software.
600        |a. |z Florida Keys (Fla.)
650        |a climate change.
650        |a marine ecosystems.
650        |a economics.
700        |a Hans-Hoegh Guldberg.
710 2    |a Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary.
710 2    |a NOAA Socioeconomic Research and Monitoring Program.
830    0 |a dpSobek.
830    0 |a Sea Level Rise.
852        |a dpSobek |c Sea Level Rise
856 40 |u http://dpanther.fiu.edu/dpService/dpPurlService/purl/FI15052598/00001 |y Click here for full text
992 04 |a http://dpanther.fiu.edu/sobek/content/FI/15/05/25/98/00001/Hoegh-Guldberg_2010_Climate Change and the Florida Keys9thm.jpg
997        |a Sea Level Rise


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