In This Climate

  • Author: Vários
  • Narrator: Vários
  • Publisher: Podcast
  • Duration: 96:01:29
  • More information

Informações:

Synopsis

We’re a podcast from Indiana University’s Environmental Resilience Institute and The Media School. We’re here to bring you the scientists working toward solutions, the legislation to watch and the ways you can remain resilient.

Episodes

  • Air Check: the US energy mix and Valentine roses

    11/02/2021 Duration: 16min

    It's almost Valentine's Day, a time for love and examining yet another lifecycle analysis of environmental effects. We also dig into the United States's energy mix and projections. US energy stats: https://www.eia.gov/ Vox on roses: https://www.vox.com/the-goods/2019/2/12/18220984/valentines-day-flowers-roses-environmental-effects Wilding Flowers CSA: https://www.wilding-flowers.com/flower-csa

  • Air Check: Biden on climate in 8 minutes

    03/02/2021 Duration: 14min

    We bring you eight points about the Biden Administration's early work on climate in approximately eight minutes. We also talk about where Janet is and make some recommendations. Atmos Magazine's Biden climate guide: https://atmos.earth/joe-biden-climate-policy-laws-list/  The Phoenix: https://thephoenix.substack.com/  Imagine 2200: https://grist.submittable.com/submit?utm_source=internalgrist&utm_medium=sitepost&utm_campaign=clifi 

  • SAILCARGO and the potential of sustainable shipping

    02/02/2021 Duration: 18min

    Danielle Doggett, founder & CEO of SAILCARGO INC., tells us about the zero-emission ocean cargo ship Ceiba. From mitigating underwater noise pollution to sourcing food for shipbuilders, their sustainability considerations move far beyond what fuel propels the ship.  The SAILCARGO site: https://www.sailcargo.org/

  • Natural Gas: oral history of a fracking boom town

    26/01/2021 Duration: 25min

    What does a fossil fuel boom town feel like for those living in it? And what's possible once the coal's burned and the wells are dry? In this episode, Rock Springs-raised J.J. Anselmi shares what he's seen and heard in collecting oral histories of the Wyoming boom town. J.J.'s piece in The New Republic: https://newrepublic.com/article/160689/rise-fall-fracking-boom-town-oral-history

  • Natural Gas: Live

    19/01/2021 Duration: 01h04min

    Our big question for the series is, why do we extract and burn natural gas? To answer this question, we’re addressing smaller questions around the physical science of hydraulic fracturing/emissions/health effects, ownership of and responsibility for assets, and conflicts (hyperlocal and international) around natural gas. In this live episode: Keith Hall teaches us about environmental and property law surrounding fracking, Anne Spice explains the context of the Unist'ot'en Village oil and gas resistance, and Sammy Roth runs through some of the biggest natural gas stories in the Western U.S. Watch the episode on Facebook: https://fb.watch/370C4IJu-S/

  • Air Check: looking forward

    13/01/2021 Duration: 05min

    Just checking in and looking forward to 2021. RSVP for our next live show: https://fb.me/e/1UuQB0dwk Learn more about Grist's cli-fi writing contest: https://grist.submittable.com/submit/ 

  • Air Check: intro to the health effects of fracking

    08/01/2021 Duration: 33min

    Kristina Marusic, who covers environmental health and justice issues in Pittsburgh and Western Pennsylvania for Environmental Health News, helps us understand how fracking and natural gas affect community health and how one community has responded. Find Kristina's work here: https://www.ehn.org/u/kristinamarusic1

  • Spiritual Ecology: Rabbi Sandy Sasso

    18/12/2020 Duration: 31min

    "You're not all that is." In this episode of our spiritual ecology series, Rabbi Sandy Eisenberg Sasso shares stories and wisdom connecting our spiritual existence with our physical environment. More about Rabbi Sasso: https://jwa.org/rabbis/narrators/sasso-sandy 

  • Air Check: lowering energy burdens and the NC Senate

    17/12/2020 Duration: 18min

    In this Air Check, Senator-Elect DeAndrea Newman Salvador joins us to talk about North Carolina's 39th District, which she flipped in the most recent election. As the founder of Renewable Energy Transition Initiative (RETI), she also helps us understand high energy burdens and offers insight into lowering them. Resources: https://salvadorfornc.com/meet-deandrea/ http://www.energyhero.org/ 

  • Spiritual Ecology: Deborah McGregor

    11/12/2020 Duration: 35min

    In this series, we ask, how can spiritual connection with our environment help us enter into right and restorative relationship with the earth, including human and nonhuman inhabitants? Deborah McGregor, who is Anishinaabe from Whitefish River First Nation and a scholar of law and the environment at York University, helps us understand how spirituality and ecology intertwine. For further learning: https://iejproject.info.yorku.ca/

  • Air Check: midnight rules and air quality

    09/12/2020 Duration: 08min

    In this week's Air Check, Janet explains how and why the EPA is hurrying to finalize rules before a shift in administration.

  • Spiritual Ecology: live with Mitch Hescox

    03/12/2020 Duration: 44min

    In this series, we ask, how can spiritual connection with our environment help us enter into right and restorative relationship with the earth, including human and nonhuman inhabitants? By talking with folks from different faith traditions, we investigate what spiritual connection is and how it happens, the composition of the environment, and the potential for spiritual connection to meaningfully affect the destructive human systems responsible for climate change. In this episode, the Rev. Mitch Hescox discusses his work with the Evangelical Environmental Network, understandings of creation care, and so much more.

  • Air Check: holiday travel, gifts, and food

    03/12/2020 Duration: 23min

    Now deep in the holiday season, even in 2020, we have much to celebrate. But, in the U.S. especially, celebration can lead to a spike in emissions and waste from travel (despite CDC recommendations), obligatory gift-giving, temporary decorations, and feasts. In this episode, we don't tell you to sit alone in a dark room and gnaw on the stems from your windowsill herb garden. Mental and physical health are inseparable and important, so we outline ways to think and act more sustainably while still having a wonderful holiday time. Some resources!  Priya Cooks a Minimal-Waste Thanksgiving Reducing food’s environmental impacts through producers and consumers Composting Is Way Easier Than You Think

  • Air Check: activism beyond extractivism

    25/11/2020 Duration: 31min

    In this extended Air Check, political scientist Thea Riofrancos joins us to discuss the historical context of Chilean lithium mining and how it relates to the global movement for a renewable energy future. We touch on the Latin American pink tide, the rise of Indigenous environmental movements, and how supporters of a Green New Deal could effectively maintain pressure on the Biden administration. Want to let us know what you think? Email us at itcpod@indiana.edu, review us, or message us on your favorite social media platform by searching @thisclimatepod.

  • The EPA at 50

    25/11/2020 Duration: 56min

    In this bonus episode, we share just a little bit of The EPA at 50, an online event sponsored by the O’Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs and the Integrated Program in the Environment here at IU. It featured host Janet McCabe, Gina McCarthy, Jim Barnes, and Jody Freeman. The program is edited for time, but you can find the full recording on the O’Neill School Youtube channel. Also, coming up on December 2, we have a Facebook live show on the topic of spiritual ecology. This one is at 10 a.m. ET, and you can RSVP by going to our Facebook page. Do you also have questions? Do you have answers? Because we want to know! You can email us at itcpod@indiana.edu or message us on your preferred social media @thisclimatepod.

  • What's Next: Bob Perciasepe on public-private cooperation

    21/11/2020 Duration: 39min

    In the third episode of our post-election series, Bob Perciasepe explains how the Biden administration and the private sector could work together to decarbonize and build resilience. Bob is president of the nonprofit Center for Climate and Energy Solutions and former Deputy Administrator of the EPA. If you have any thoughts or questions about the show, you can tweet at us or send an email to itcpod@iu.edu.

  • Air Check: before and after the storm

    18/11/2020 Duration: 13min

    Jacob and Emily talk through the record-breaking catastrophic hurricanes Eta and Iota, which hit Central America only two weeks apart. We zero in on the why and the what now that could lead to a more resilient future. Resources: ‘The Ixil helping the Ixil’: Indigenous people in Guatemala lead their own Hurricane Eta response Storm Eta damage pushes small, indigenous farmers in Central America into hunger Humanitarian emergency in Central America

  • What's Next: Claudia Jimenez on participatory design in a just transition

    13/11/2020 Duration: 21min

    In the second episode of our post-election series, Claudia Jimenez discusses how participatory design has led to sustained community investment from Colombia to the Bay Area. As a new Richmond City Council member, she also speaks specifically to the California city's environmental challenges and potential. If you have any thoughts or questions about the show, you can tweet at us (@thisclimatepod) or send an email to itcpod@iu.edu.

  • Air Check: new SAB chair John Graham

    11/11/2020 Duration: 19min

    In this Air Check, host Janet McCabe talks with IU professor and recently-named chair of the EPA's Science Advisory Board John D. Graham about his experience in the SAB and what he foresees for the Biden Administration's environmental work, including cost-benefit analysis and the electrification of motor vehicles.

  • What's Next: Live

    06/11/2020 Duration: 59min

    In the first episode of our post-election series, we go live with Robinson Meyer of The Atlantic, Yessenia Funes of Atmos Magazine, Britt Wray of Gen Dread, Dharna Noor of Earther, and independent reporter/consultant Mythili Sampathkumar to discuss the environmental news you need to watch (and how to cope with the associated anxiety) as we move forward. If you have any thoughts or questions about the show, you can tweet at us or send an email to itcpod@iu.edu.

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