Table of Contents

pathways;

electricity_network_planning

Foresight

Difference between Forecasting and Foresight [ChatGPT September 25 Version]

“Foresight” and “forecasting” are related concepts, but they differ in terms of their focus, purpose, and methodology:

1. Focus:

  1. Foresight: Foresight is a broader and more forward-looking process that aims to anticipate and understand potential future developments, trends, and scenarios. It involves a holistic exploration of various factors that may shape the future, including social, technological, economic, environmental, and political factors. Foresight often deals with long-term planning and strategic decision-making.
  1. Forecasting: Forecasting, on the other hand, is a more specific and quantitative process focused on making predictions about future events or outcomes based on historical data and statistical models. It typically involves estimating specific numerical values, such as sales figures, stock prices, or weather conditions, within a defined time frame.

2. Purpose:

  1. Foresight: Foresight is used to inform long-term strategic planning and decision-making. It helps organizations and policymakers prepare for a range of potential future scenarios, identify emerging opportunities and risks, and develop adaptive strategies. Foresight is often used to guide innovation and long-range policy development.
  1. Forecasting: Forecasting is primarily used for short to medium-term decision-making. It provides specific numerical predictions that are valuable for day-to-day operational planning, budgeting, and resource allocation. Forecasting is often employed in business, finance, weather prediction, and other areas where precise numerical predictions are essential.

3. Methodology:

  1. Foresight: Foresight employs a variety of qualitative and quantitative methods, including scenario planning, trend analysis, expert opinions, and stakeholder engagement. It emphasizes a multidisciplinary and holistic approach to understanding the driving forces behind potential future developments.
  1. Forecasting: Forecasting relies heavily on historical data, statistical models, and quantitative techniques. It aims to provide precise numerical estimates based on past patterns and trends, often using tools like time series analysis, regression analysis, and machine learning algorithms.

In summary, while both foresight and forecasting involve looking into the future, they differ in their scope, purpose, and methodology. Foresight is a more comprehensive and strategic approach that explores a wide range of potential futures and their drivers. Forecasting, on the other hand, is a more specific and numerical process focused on predicting specific outcomes within a defined time frame based on historical data and quantitative models. Both are valuable tools for planning and decision-making, but they serve different purposes and are applied in different contexts.

Classes of Futures (Voros 2017)

“7 types of alternative futures defined below (or 8 if one also includes a specific singular ‘predicted’ future, which I generally don’t do any more) are all considered to be subjective judgements about ideas about the future that are based in the present moment, so the categories for the same idea can obviously change over time as time goes on (the canonical example of which is the Apollo XI Moon landing, which has gone through most of the categories from ‘preposterous’ to ‘projected’ and thence into history as ‘the past’). In brief, these categories are:

[Source: Voros, J., 2017. The Futures Cone, use and history – The Voroscope [WWW Document]. URL https://thevoroscope.com/2017/02/24/the-futures-cone-use-and-history/ (accessed 2.14.24). Voros, J., 2003. A generic foresight process framework. foresight 5, 10–21.]

Results from Foresight exercises

Exploratory Scenarios

EEA 'Scenarios for a sustainable Europe in 2050' (EU)

Imaginary 1: Technocracy for the common good

Imaginary 2: Unity in adversity

Imaginary 3: The great decoupling

Imaginary 4: Ecotopia

https://www.eea.europa.eu/publications/scenarios-for-a-sustainable-europe-2050

Horizon Scanning

Foresight Toolbox

STEEP(V) method

Identifying elelement that impact exploratory scenarios in several dimensions, and analyse their interaction

S - Society T - Technology E - Economy E - Environment P - Policy V - Values

~~DISCUSSION|Discussion Section - PAGE OWNER: Klaus Kubeczko~~