11 episodes

Climate change is happening now. Truthout reporter Mike Ludwig explores our rapidly changing planet with experts and activists from frontline communities across the world.

Climate Front Lines Truthout

    • News

Climate change is happening now. Truthout reporter Mike Ludwig explores our rapidly changing planet with experts and activists from frontline communities across the world.

    Climate Change Was Already Causing Hunger to Spike. Then Russia Invaded Ukraine.

    Climate Change Was Already Causing Hunger to Spike. Then Russia Invaded Ukraine.

    The war in Ukraine is causing shortages in the global food supply. Climate change was already creating widespread food insecurity before Russia invaded Ukraine, and the number of people facing famine or a food crisis globally is growing faster than any other time in the 21st century. Gernot Laganda, director of the Climate and Disaster Risk Reduction Service at the World Food Program, explains how it’s all connected in this episode of Climate Front Lines.

    • 24 min
    Destruction of Amazon Rainforest Accelerates as Elections Loom in Brazil

    Destruction of Amazon Rainforest Accelerates as Elections Loom in Brazil

    Jair Bolsonaro, Brazil’s far right president, is launching a reelection bid and currently trailing in the polls behind former president and liberal rival Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. Bolsonaro and conservative lawmakers have worked to slash environmental protections and promote development of the Amazon rainforest, where deforestation appears to be accelerating as Brazil prepares for elections in October. Deforestation is a major cause of climate change and a threat to Indigenous people who are organizing to resist land grabs and toxic pollution from illegal mines. To learn more, Truthout’s Mike Ludwig interviewed Romulo Batista, a Brazilian environmental activist based in Manaus, a Brazilian city nestled in the Amazon rainforest.
    Music by Dan Mason.

    • 35 min
    Thermal Videos Reveal Heavy Pollution from the Texas Oil Boom

    Thermal Videos Reveal Heavy Pollution from the Texas Oil Boom

    Sharon Wilson, an activist documenting the latest fracking boom in Texas, recently returned from the United Nations climate summit and was “devastated” when the final agreement did not mention any reduction in oil and gas drilling. Wilson uses a thermographic camera to capture pollution spewing from fossil fuel infrastructure in the Permian Basin, where oil production is projected to increase by 50 percent over the next decade. Mike Ludwig asks Wilson what the Permian “climate bomb” looks like up close and personal.
    Music by Dan Mason.

    • 44 min
    Still Recovering from Ida, Louisianans Have Big Ideas for Climate Survival

    Still Recovering from Ida, Louisianans Have Big Ideas for Climate Survival

    Recovery from Hurricane Ida is still underway in southeast Louisiana, where the climate crisis hangs a question mark over the future. People in Louisiana are already preparing for rising seas and intensifying storms, offering models for the rest of us. So, will New Orleans be under water someday? Mike Ludwig speaks to Jessica Dandridge, Executive Director of the Greater New Orleans Water Collaborative, to find out.

    Music by Dan Mason.

    • 49 min
    Forget the Politicians. Youth Climate Activists Want $10 Trillion for Infrastructure

    Forget the Politicians. Youth Climate Activists Want $10 Trillion for Infrastructure

    As President Biden haggles with Republicans on infrastructure, youth climate activists continue pushing for the bold vision of a Green New Deal. Sunrise Movement activist Lily Gardner says Biden should forget the GOP and listen to young people, who are fired up about the prospect of a Civilian Climate Corps that would create thousands of jobs combating the climate crisis and building a sustainable future.
    Music by Dan Mason.

    • 24 min
    We Are Living in a Climate Emergency. Why Doesn’t Nature Have Legal Rights?

    We Are Living in a Climate Emergency. Why Doesn’t Nature Have Legal Rights?

    Mike Ludwig speaks with journalists Melissa Troutman and Joshua Pribanic about their new documentary, Invisible Hand, which covers the Indigenous-led Rights of Nature movement on the front lines of the climate emergency.
    Music by Dan Mason.

    • 40 min

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