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Gaming carbon dioxide removal with young climate leaders

October 15, 2019 By Bindu Bhandari

Blog post by Bindu Bhandari, Climate Interactive, and Viktor Jósa, CliMates

Original post found here

What does it really take to stay well below 2°C global temperature rise as agreed in the Paris Agreement? Could technological innovation help remove historical carbon emissions from the atmosphere? How much will afforestation help? What role could a carbon price play?

These are some of the toughest questions in climate policy. But what if you could test them and see for yourself the impacts of policy and technology on our climate system?

While heads of state and government gathered at the UN Headquarters in New York City, participants in the UN Youth Climate Action Summit took off their activist hats, and role-played 6 sectors that will be key to our climate future: World Governments, Clean Tech, Industry and Commerce, Climate Justice Hawks, Conventional Energy and Land, Agriculture and Forests.

Young climate leaders roleplay world governments presenting their policy proposals

They were convened by a fictitious UN Secretary General, Andrew Jones of Climate Interactive, who (with C2G’s help) was running the new game Climate Vision: a model UN roleplaying game on reducing and removing carbon.

The scenario uses En-ROADS, a global climate simulator which allows players to explore how temperature rise is affected by a range of near future scenarios.

Great drama ensued: it turned out that getting to well below 2°C was tough – not helped by groups sometimes fighting over competing agendas!

Alongside traditional mitigation efforts, large-scale afforestation, agricultural soil carbon sequestration, and direct air capture were all proposed as ways to remove CO2 from the air.

In each case, one thing became clear: there was no silver bullet. In some cases, major interventions, like large-scale afforestation, moved the dial far less than expected. And yet, every bit mattered in reaching the final goal.

Andrew Jones of Climate Interactive role-plays the UN Secretary General addressing world leaders

At the end, participants described their feelings: enlightened, threatened, hopeful, frustrated, scared, thrilled.

Mihai Toader-Pasti, Cofounder of EFdeN.org, described En-ROADS as “one of the best tools I have encountered during my nine years as a climate activist. It’s educational not just about CO2 emissions and temperature rise, but also about the social and economic implications.”

Others welcomed an interactive event where they could clearly visualize the gaps in climate action. Some were intrigued by the potential role – alongside other actions – of carbon dioxide removal.

“The full potential of carbon removal technologies to keep global temperatures below 1.5°C have yet to be realized,” said Anna Johnson, Editor, Business Fights Poverty. “So, where did this leave me following the UN Youth Summit event in NYC? Empowered to recognise that we are not without options to turn things around!”

Radostina Slavkova, Energy and Climate Coordinator with Young Friends of the Earth Europe, said: “it was valuable to experience that even some of the most promising and climate friendly measures combined weren’t bringing enough positive change to reach 1.5°C. It became clear that we need all sectors aboard showing at least middle to high ambition.”

Timothy Damon, founder and President, Global Youth Development Institute, said the game offered hope “by concretely illustrating the choices we could make to protect our future against climate catastrophe, while also revealing the scale and complexity of this challenge.”

Players celebrate finding a mix of policies to limit warming to 1.5°C

Negotiations underway in the end stages of the SimPlanet simulation. Image credit: MIT Environmental Solutions Initiative

C2G, Climate Interactive and other partners are keen to keep this conversation going, by exploring ways to educate and amplify the voices of young people in the governance of climate-altering technologies. If you would like to learn more, please get in touch http://en-roads.org !


ClimateVision roleplaying game was hosted by C2G on September 22, 2019, facilitated by Andrew Jones of Climate Interactive with co-facilitators Bindu Bhandari and Viktor Josa.

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