Tag: podcast

  • 6 Podcasts on Sustainability

    6 Podcasts on Sustainability

    Do you ever find yourself getting into bed and thinking about bookmarking sustainability podcast episodes on your phone real quick, and then you accidentally curate a playlist with 11+ hours of bomb-ass content?

    Whoops.

    I get it — there is just too much information out there. Who’s got the time to read all the articles and reports on the thing? When are you gonna watch that documentary or TED Talk? Who’s got the mental bandwidth anyway?

    Thankfully, you can listen to a podcast episode while doing something else in your busy lives (like commuting, cooking, or folding laundry). Bonus when the podcast is informative and engaging too.

    I tried to pack this playlist with the heavyweights in sustainability – like Paul Hawken and Naomi Klein – but I also tried to add interesting voices like the Sioux Chef Sean Sherman. Below I’ve highlighted some episodes that particularly tickled my ears. So if you’re looking for an excuse to get away from your desk and take a brisk walk, here are some sustainability and social justice podcast episodes to keep you company.


    1. How to Save a Planet

    I think many long-time listeners will agree that it was better when Ayana Elizabeth Johnson was co-hosting this podcast (no offence Alex Blumberg), but even without her bright light, the podcast is still a lighthouse of shining episodes that leave you inspired to take action.

    I learn so much from each episode, but this one lives forever in the front of my mind. Up until I heard it I had no idea how much carbon oceans sequester (a lot!) and how one badass fisherman is creating underwater vertical farms of kelp.

    Listen to Bren Smith make the case of ‘de-sushi-fying’ fishing

    2. Finding Humanity

    B Lab partnered with Finding Humanity to launch a podcast series highlighting how businesses must play a role in saving the planet. In the ‘right to repair’ episode, Nathan Proctor‘s barely concealed outrage at having to replace phones every two years honestly gives me life.

    “Why have we glued batteries into phones?”

    In ‘the urgent case for stakeholder governance’, the episode looks at how top-level company stakeholders drive business decisions toward profit and why that economic focus should be managed (just reading this sentence fills my head with the screams of pro-business lawmakers and that alone makes me feel warm and fuzzy inside).

    “Building stakeholder consideration into your legal DNA”

    3. Jane Goodall and Robin Wall Kimmerer.

    People. These are arguably the two biggest names in the sustainability movement and they’re here TOGETHER. Scientist to scientist, woman to woman, nature lover to nature lover. Bask in the hopecast.

    “In my own evolution, I have gone from scientist to storyteller because it feels like that’s what we need right now.”

    4. Planet B

    Social justice podcast looking at balancing the climate scale between the global north and south, Planet B takes on all the heavy topics. In this one, executive director of the anti-poverty charity War on Want Asad Rehman talks about the climate refugee and all of it is quotable.

    “The global green new deal has to centre the idea of reparative justice […] from the global north to the global south”

    5. Kerning Cultures

    Not specifically a podcast dedicated to sustainability, but the topics covered by Kerning Cultures falls in and around ‘social impact’. This gorgeous podcast is about ‘stories across the Middle East and the spaces in between’ and documents people and places with both journalistic integrity and captivating storytelling.

    There is one environmental-focused story for the water warriors: Dr. Azzam Alwash is an environmental engineer who gave up his comfortable life in California to work on restoring Iraq’s salt-water marshes that were destroyed by Saddam Hussein as retaliation to uprisings in that area. “The personal cost of giving up my family life for these marshes was heavy, but this is bigger than me,” says Dr. Alwash.

    The Marsh Arabs – or Ma’dan (معدان) – are a nomadic tribal group that lives in marshland areas in the south of Iraq, where the Tigris and the Euphrates deposit into the sea.

    For the social focus, this is a story about a specific form of trauma that happens to some refugee children after relocating to Sweden. It’s a tough one, but important to listen to.

    What does resignation syndrome have to do with Sweden and refugees? ⁠

    6. Damages

    I can’t describe this podcast better than the show description, which says it’s “Law & Order meets the climate crisis.” When the state of Minnesota greenlights Enbridge’s intention to build a pipeline through Anishinaabe territory and threaten the wild rice in those wetlands, the lead plaintiff that motions to stop them is Manoomin. Plot twist: Manoomin is the rice.

    The “Rights of Manoomin” tribal law recognizes wild rice as having the rights to exist, flourish, regenerate, and evolve, as well as inherent rights to restoration, recovery, and preservation. This resistance is working, on the ground and in court. But stop reading my summary and listen to it in full.

    As an Asian and big rice fan, I approve of this case.

    There are so many more I could list, but I still haven’t heard them all yet. I bookmarked Paul Hawken’s interview on How to End Climate Change in One Generation for a long weekend walk.

    Image credits:

  • Talking with David Peacock at the Tourism Management Institute (TMI)

    Talking with David Peacock at the Tourism Management Institute (TMI)

    Last September, I was talking to David Peacock about something work-related and ended up shooting the breeze about all the things I was learning at the GDS-Movement, and he said I should share my insights on a webinar he was speaking at. I was hesitant at first because I’d only been with the GDSM for three months, so I didn’t feel like I knew enough about the company to be talking about them publicly so soon. But he said that he wasn’t looking for an expert’s perspective, and I thought that’s great, I enjoy speaking unofficially as a non-expert. My CEO was all for it so I agreed.

    The poster for the talk

    The talk was titled “Sustainability: DMO‘s Must Take an Active Role or Face Irrelevance” hosted by the Tourism Management Institute (TMI) and you can watch part of the discussion here. We talked about how different DMOs approach (mis)managing their destinations by including sustainable practices and their resident’s opinions – or not, to their own detriment, now or later.

    Even if you haven’t listened to his podcast on the Future of Tourism, you can tell that David is an excellent interviewer and orator because he was able to draw out information from me and others in the session, and it turns out that I did know a few things after all (it’s always nice when your interviewer is able to extract info from you and make you look good).

    David Peacock doing his thing

    Still, the chance that I may misrepresent something from my new role lingered in the back of my mind, which resulted in a semi-permanent look of anxiety on my face throughout the webinar.

    “Even though I’m 99% sure of the things I’m saying, I hate that I can’t fact-check them while I’m speaking”

    It turned out to be a really fun and engaging experience, and Peacock moderated a Q&A discussion that got audience members from different DMOs sharing news about what they’re doing to transition to a more inclusive and sustainable future. My colleagues Rebecca and Jess were also part of the Q&A and shared their wisdom and insights too.

    Eventually, this cross-collaboration led to a highly-engaging discussion between my CEO Guy Bigwood and David Peacock. You can watch their interview below or listen to the podcast episode on Spotify.