Who is Using Our Tools?
Climate Interactive is here to provide tools and resources to climate analysts and communicators. Here are some examples:
- A simplified version of the C-Learn simulation has been incorporated into Bonwood Foundation's Converge program. The Converge program's message is to help Americans see "Where the Good Life Meets the Green Life." This embeddable simulator helps users to explore researched climate mitigation scenarios and helps spread the "we can do it" message. Experiment with the simulator above, or view a larger version here.
- MIT's Center for Collective Intelligence created the Climate Collaboratorium, a service that calls upon C-Learn to allow users create, explore, and vote on climate solutions. Details are given for each climate plan, including human actions,
predicted impacts, and user debates about the plan’s advantages and
disadvantages. This forum will help engage citizens, policy makers, and
scientists to develop better plans
and policies addressing climate change.
- Schlumberger's science education program, SEED, created an animated simulation using our international simulation, C-ROADS.
- Morgan Stanley's Office of Sustainability created a video for its employee education program on climate change issues
- Bill Moomaw of Tufts University used a slide deck created from the C-ROADS simulator in a presentation to an IPCC committee
- Per Andersson of Ericsson in Sweden used the Schlumberger animated simulation in dozens of presentations in his company
- The New York Times' "Dot Earth" blog by Andy Revkin covered Climate Interactive member John Sterman's simulation work
- Peter Senge and the team at the Society for Organizational Learning (SoL) ran an adapted version of the Copenhagen Climate Exercise for a training of corporate sustainability leaders
- Bob Corell of The Heinz Center, as part of the Climate Action Initiative, gave an interview on NPR's Morning Edition sharing one insight from the C-ROADS simulator
- The International Herald Tribune used our open source Climate Scoreboard data in their coverage of the Copenhagen Accord
- 350.org also used our Scoreboard data as part of a poster to influence delegates at COP15 in Copenhagen
- A consortium of science museum exhibit designers convened by TacTable and Brown University launched a climate change exhibit that allows users to touch a screen, change global emissions, and (via C-Learn, embedded in the software), see the effect on global climate change.
- Climate Interactive partner and MIT professor, Dr. John Sterman’s “Carbon bathtub” was featured as a graphic illustration, rich with detailed information on the climate system, in National Geographic magazine.
- NOAA’s Dr. Ned Gardiner used C-ROADS results to produce 3-D models of the earth, indicating the intensity of climate change impacts in different areas.
- In addition to facilitators holding their own stand-alone exercises with resources from our website, there are eight World Climate exercise leaders running the simulation for groups that range from European Environmental Officials to local activists to corporate climate officers in locations that range from Hartland, Vermont to Copenhagen, Denmark to Croatia.




