“…As climate change came to public understanding through scientific and quantified ways of representing futures, in particular through the utilization of modeling techniques (Aykut et al, 2019;Braunreiter et al, 2021), scholars highlighted the "cultural authority" of climate science over climate futures (Rödder et al, 2020). The reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) shape public, medial and political understandings of possible and plausible climate futures, communicating the risks of future catastrophic effects (Eriksson and Reischl, 2019;Guenther et al, 2024). The IPCCs relatively "generic, untailored and untargeted" communication (Howarth and Black 2015, p. 506) is seen as inadequate as a discursive mode for forming stronger engagement in climate politics (Bellamy, 2023).…”