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About Climate Repair

E&E senior reporter Darren Samuelsohn explores "The Stabilization Wedges" -- a way of thinking about global warming crafted by a pair of Princeton professors. The concept has been adopted by a growing number of politicians, teachers, lawyers, industry lobbyists and environmentalists who are using it to articulate their own climate strategies.

Last updated October 26, 2007

'Wedges' -- the game

Coming soon to a classroom near you

The "wedges" game wasn't designed to juice up a Saturday night.

It's a role-play diversion aimed at teaching players about the complexities of global warming. And people who've played wedges in meeting rooms and classrooms say it does just that.

"It made them think outside of who they were, and what their special interests were," said Susan Capalbo, an economics professor at Montana State University, who led a game with her undergraduate students last fall.

Players from Greenpeace and the Nuclear Regulatory Institute sifted through their differences at a Washington, D.C., wedges game in the summer of 2005. Organizers can count more than a dozen wedge games played over the last three years.

In a typical game, players form teams of four or five. Each team chooses seven wedges (each representing an energy technology or policy ) out of a portfolio of 15 (To see the complete list, click here).

Judges weigh each team's choices and declare a winner. Most games last about 90 minutes to two hours.

Sarah Wade, a Washington-based consultant who has organized about a half dozen wedge events, said the games help people understand that climate change can't be solved by focusing on one technology. It also forces participants to think outside of their comfort zone, selecting nuclear power, for example, over wind energy.

"Inevitably, someone has an option they put forward, but they don't really like it," Wade said. "That's one of the messages about climate change. This isn't going to be an easy thing to fix. We're not going to like all the things we have to do. But what are the best ones given what you want to achieve?"

The wedges' creators, Princeton University professors Stephen Pacala and Robert Socolow, wrote about the concept in an academic paper. They turned their idea into a game to serve as an icebreaker at a conference. They have since teamed up with BP and Ford Motor Co., with the intention of developing educational materials for high schools.

About 500 teachers will get a lesson in how to use the wedges during the annual American Association for the Advancement of Science conference next month in San Francisco.

"I think," Socolow said, "there are ways of making this fun."

Click here for a copy of the Wedges Game.

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