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Outrage + Optimism

Outrage + Optimism

Global Optimism

Face the climate crisis head on, but understand that we have the power to solve this. From former UN Chief Christiana Figueres and the team who brought you the Paris Agreement, this podcast about issues and politics will inform you, inspire you and help you realize that this is the most exciting time in history to be alive.

301 - 244. Movies, Mosses, and Stories to Change The World
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  • 301 - 244. Movies, Mosses, and Stories to Change The World

    This week, Tom and Christiana are in Seattle recording in the Amazon studio where they are joined by special guest Kara Hurst, Chief Sustainability Officer at Amazon. Together they bring you an eclectic mix of topics of outrage and optimism ranging from the introduction of the Bechdel test for climate change, storytelling with the national geographic and mosses!

    The nature sounds that close the podcast come from One Square Inch located in the Hoh Rain Forest at Olympic National Park. Thanks goes to Quiet Parks International for allowing us to use the audio of this oasis of calm and quiet. We hope you enjoy it as much as we do! 

     

    NOTES AND RESOURCES

     

    GUEST

    Kara Hurst, Chief Sustainability Officer at Amazon

    LinkedIn | Twitter (X) 

     

    MUSIC / SOUND

    Gordon Hempton, Bioacoustician and Co-Founder of Quiet Parks International

    Instagram | Twitter (X) | Facebook

     

    Check out the full recording and more at One Square Inch.

     

    Learn more about the Paris Agreement.

     

    It’s official, we’re a TED Audio Collective Podcast - Proof!

    Check out more podcasts from The TED Audio Collective

     

    Please follow us on social media!

    Twitter | Instagram | LinkedIn

    Sat, 04 May 2024 - 50min
  • 300 - Presenting: 'The Anti-Dread Climate Podcast - Does What We Do Really Matter?'

    Can one vegan with no car really help the planet?

    Today, a special presentation of a podcast we think O+O listeners will love from The Anti-Dread Climate Podcast.

    The climate crisis gets more terrifying every year. The impact is undeniable and can feel totally overwhelming. Hope won’t solve it, but neither will hopelessness. A surefire way to manage anxiety and stress over the existential problem threatening our planet is to participate in solutions. So our team is prepared to answer your questions about how you can meaningfully make a difference.

    In this episode titled, ‘Does What We Do Really Matter?’, hosts Caleigh Wells and Candice Dickens-Russell tackle a hard question; Why bother taking any individual actions to help the planet if industry and other nations pollute so much that they cancel you out? Caleigh and Candice discuss and invite guest Jiaying Zhao, psychology professor at University of British Columbia, to answer how your daily choices to affect climate change can have an impact but maybe not the way you think.

     

     

    The Anti-Dread Climate Podcast

    Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Website

     

    Caleigh Wells

    Host, TADCP, and KCRW Climate Reporter

    Website | Twitter (X)

     

    Candice Dickens-Russell

    Environmental Educator, and CEO of Friends of the Los Angeles River

    LinkedIn

     

    KCRW

    Instagram | Facebook | YouTube | Website

     

    Wed, 01 May 2024 - 10min
  • 299 - 243. Microplastics, Transition Plans and The Beginning of The End of The Climate Crisis?

    This week, our hosts each arrive with one specific issue they feel freshly outraged or optimistic about. Tom talks about how Earth Day 2024 will come to be known as the beginning of the end of the climate crisis. Christiana is outraged (and a tiny bit optimistic) about the plastics pandemic. And Paul gets fired up about investor and corporate transition plans - can he convince his co-hosts to ‘light the blue touch paper’ and ignite their own optimism?

    Music comes from Cosmo Sheldrake with his song, “Soil”. Cosmo is a UK-based multi-instrumentalist, producer, composer, live improviser, and field recordist. As part of the Museum for the United Nations – UN Live’s new initiative Sounds Right, Cosmo has shared this new track “Soil (feat. NATURE)”, a homage to the powerful transformative and generative capacities of subterranean ecosystems.  Money raised will go towards conservation projects around the world.

     

    NOTES AND RESOURCES

    The Babies vs Plastics Report

    23 - 29 April 2024 in Canada - The Fourth Session of the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee on Plastic Pollution

    More on Earth Day 2024

    The IEA’s World Energy Outlook 2023 on how it expects CO2 emissions to peak “in the mid-2020s”

    First Colour Photograph of the Earth from space

    The danger of the very serious person By Pilita Clark in the Financial Times 

     

    PAUL’S BOOK TIPS

    The Corporation that Changed the World by Nick Robins

     

    MUSICAL GUEST

    Cosmo Sheldrake

    Website | Facebook | Instagram | Twitter (X) | Spotify | YouTube

     

    NATURE

    Spotify | Apple Music

     

    Check out the feat. NATURE playlist on Spotify

     

    Sounds Right

    Website | Facebook | Instagram | LinkedIn | YouTube

    Listen to Greg Cochrane speak with Brian Eno about EarthPercent + Sounds Right on Midnight Chats

     

    Learn more about the Paris Agreement.

     

    It’s official, we’re a TED Audio Collective Podcast - Proof!

    Check out more podcasts from The TED Audio Collective

     

    Please follow us on social media!

    Twitter | Instagram | LinkedIn

    Thu, 25 Apr 2024 - 59min
  • 298 - 242. Xiye Bastida: Her Story of Nature (Earth Day Special)

    To mark Earth Day, Christiana shares her conversation with the incredible young climate justice activist, indigenous rights advocate and author Xiye Bastida.

    From the Otomi-Toltec indigenous community in Central Mexico, Xiye’s life and work demonstrate how indigenous wisdom and principles unearth solutions to the climate crisis. She is driven to create a climate movement that is more inclusive and more diverse.

     

    Since 2019, Xiye has been actively involved in organising climate strikes with Fridays For Future, including for their largest youth-led march in New York City.  In her role as Co-founder and Executive Director of Re-Earth Initiative, Xiye supports frontline youth across 27 countries, whilst also studying for an​​ Environmental Studies degree with a concentration in Policy and a Minor in Latin American Studies at the University of Pennsylvania.  Recently listed in TIME100 Next as a phenomenon (we agree!), she holds the UN Spirit Award.

    This episode is the full, unedited version of a conversation recorded for the recent mini series Our Story of Nature - From Rupture to Reconnection, co-hosted by Christiana Figueres and Isabel Cavelier. This is a wonderful and moving insight into Xiye’s story of nature, on how to slow down, and how we might keep past and future generations in our minds - and hearts. We hope you enjoy it! 

     

    Background on Earth Day:

     

    The first Earth Day was on April 22nd 1970. Across America, twenty million people took to the streets to protest against environmental destruction. Many people were motivated by the devastating impacts of a recent oil spill in California, others campaigned to reduce air pollution. The spirit, scale and power of the protests were inspired by student anti-Vietnam marches.

    Denis Hayes, who coordinated the original Earth Day, remembers how the day unified diverset groups:   "By the time it finally came around, it was in virtually every town, every village, in the United States. It took this basket of issues that we now call 'the environment' and elevated them spectacularly in the public consciousness."

    Earth Day 1970 is described as the dawn of the modern environmental movement. Events that day resulted in political changes: landmark environmental laws were later passed in the United States - the Clean Air and Water Acts - and the Environmental Protection Agency was created. Many other countries subsequently adopted similar laws. In 2016, the United Nations chose Earth Day as the day to sign the Paris Climate Agreement into force.

    Earth Day is now the biggest civic event in the world, with billions of people participating in events to highlight the urgent need to protect our planet. Its theme this year is Planet vs. Plastics - calling for widespread awareness on the health risk of plastics, for an end to single use plastics, and for a robust UN Treaty on Plastic Pollution.

     

    NOTES AND RESOURCES More on Xiye Bastida, Co-founder and Director of Re-Earth Initiative

    More on Earth Day

    Links to Our Story of Nature episodes: Our Story of Nature - From Rupture to Reconnection - Episode 1Our Story of Nature - From Rupture to Reconnection - Episode 2 Our Story of Nature - From Rupture to Reconnection - Episode 3Our Story of Nature Intro Music - Catalina by Tru GenesisOther full, unedited interviews from the mini-series can be found HERE

    Learn more about the Paris Agreement. It’s official, we’re a TED Audio Collective Podcast - Proof! Check out more podcasts from The TED Audio CollectivePlease follow us on social media! Twitter | Instagram | LinkedIn

    Mon, 22 Apr 2024 - 29min
  • 297 - 241. 40 Seconds to Save The World! with Paul Goodenough

    This week, the hosts discuss the much celebrated ruling last week at the European Court of Human Rights when over 2000 women aged 64 and up, took the Swiss Government to court for failing to protect them from the growing effects of climate change which proved detrimental to their health. The court in Strasbourg ruled in favour of the women, opening up a pathway for other similar cases to now be heard. The hosts briefly discuss the ruling as well as the backlash experienced among some MPs in the UK and Switzerland and why their accusations of infringement upon country sovereignty is false.

    We are then joined by the incredible Paul Goodenough, an award-winning, purpose-driven storyteller and entrepreneur, working in the environmental, charity, peace-building and entertainment sectors. In 2019, Paul co-founded Rewriting Earth (formerly Rewriting Extinction), a global collaboration of 300+ of the most influential storytellers creating non-political, non-judgemental content to reach mainstream audiences not typically engaged with environmental issues. It was a brilliant, fun and inspiring interview - make sure to listen to hear how Paul G describes how he hopes the stories he helps bring to life ‘throw an arm around people’ and welcome them into the climate space. The more the merrier we say!   

     

    NOTES AND RESOURCES

     

    GUEST

    Paul Goodenough, an award-winning, purpose-driven storyteller and entrepreneur, working in the environmental, charity, peace-building and entertainment sectors Website | LinkedIn | Twitter (X) | Instagram

    Rewriting Earth Website | Facebook | Twitter (X) | Instagram

     

    Rewriting Earth’s book, The Most Important Comic Book on Earth: Stories to Save the World, launched in the UK in 2021 and is available at Bookshop.org. The book is launching in Germany next week and is available at Panini Shop.

     

    To listen to our recent mini-series, Our Story of Nature: From Rupture to Reconnection visit the dedicated Website page, which includes unedited versions of interviews with our wonderful guests.

     

    Learn more about the Paris Agreement.

     

    It’s official, we’re a TED Audio Collective Podcast - Proof!

    Check out more podcasts from The TED Audio Collective

     

    Please follow us on social media!

    Twitter | Instagram | LinkedIn

    Thu, 18 Apr 2024 - 56min
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