It is rare that a single scientific paper shapes how people think about a
challenge as daunting as climate change. But one, known as “Wedges
<https://cmi.princeton.edu/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/Stabilization_Wedges_-Solving_the_Climate_Problem_for_the_Next_50_Years_with_Current_Technologies_Science.pdf>,”
published 22 years ago by researchers at Princeton University, told an
irresistible story.

It made solving climate change seem possible, even simple. It claimed that
the world didn’t have to wait for innovation because it had the tools to
start work immediately.

The trick was to do a little of everything and let the effects add up.
Renewable energy, nuclear power and conservation were certainly pieces of
the solution puzzle. But so were a slew of steps that involved using oil,
gas and coal despite the carbon dioxide emissions they would continue to
produce.

One fix that “Wedges” leaned especially hard on was carbon capture and
storage, a technology that promised to grab carbon pollution from
smokestacks and other sources and trap it forever underground. Do that
enough, and climate change could be curtailed without upending the world as
we know it.

The paper, written by scientists Robert Socolow and Stephen Pacala, became
a phenomenon. Former Vice President Al Gore highlighted it in his
Oscar-winning climate change documentary. U.S. presidents from George W.
Bush to Joe Biden incorporated ideas from it into policy. The United
Nations’ panel on climate change worked it into at least three major
reports over more than a decade. It was presented in classrooms at Harvard
and MIT and cited more than 3,000 times in scientific papers. It was even
turned into a board game.

For a generation, people learning how to address global warming were taught
the ideas in the “Wedges” paper.

What they didn’t learn was this: “Wedges” was significantly shaped by the
British oil giant BP — one of the single global entities most responsible
for causing climate change.
full article -
*https://www.propublica.org/article/wedges-climate-research-bp-fossil-fuel-princeton
<https://www.propublica.org/article/wedges-climate-research-bp-fossil-fuel-princeton>*


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