20 episodes

The Blue Economy Primer is an education and research-focused podcast hosted by nonprofit Deep Blue Academy. We offer interviews with globally recognized experts to inform listeners about concepts and technology related to the Blue Economy, emerging Blue Technologies, Regenerative Marine Infrastructure, and resilient coastal community initiatives. This New Orleans-based podcast allows you to learn from the experts and apply the practical tools and solution sets that will empower at-risk coastal communities to adapt and thrive in an age of climate crisis and economic discontinuity.

Visit Blue Economy Primer [https://www.deepblue.institute/podcast] podcast web page to access valuable links, references, and background material related to each podcast. Please contact us [https://www.deepblue.institute/contact] with recommendation on topics or speakers for the podcast, or other initiatives.

Hosted by: Greg Delaune, Executive Director; Deep Blue Academy
website: www.deepblue.academy
Contact: info@deeplblue.academy
Supported by: The Dan Lucas Memorial Foundation, The Pontchartrain Conservancy

Blue Economy Primer Deep Blue Academy with Greg Delaune

    • Technology

The Blue Economy Primer is an education and research-focused podcast hosted by nonprofit Deep Blue Academy. We offer interviews with globally recognized experts to inform listeners about concepts and technology related to the Blue Economy, emerging Blue Technologies, Regenerative Marine Infrastructure, and resilient coastal community initiatives. This New Orleans-based podcast allows you to learn from the experts and apply the practical tools and solution sets that will empower at-risk coastal communities to adapt and thrive in an age of climate crisis and economic discontinuity.

Visit Blue Economy Primer [https://www.deepblue.institute/podcast] podcast web page to access valuable links, references, and background material related to each podcast. Please contact us [https://www.deepblue.institute/contact] with recommendation on topics or speakers for the podcast, or other initiatives.

Hosted by: Greg Delaune, Executive Director; Deep Blue Academy
website: www.deepblue.academy
Contact: info@deeplblue.academy
Supported by: The Dan Lucas Memorial Foundation, The Pontchartrain Conservancy

    #17: Footprint Project; Operationalizing Sustainability for Humanitarian Response

    #17: Footprint Project; Operationalizing Sustainability for Humanitarian Response

    In this episode, we speak with an awe-inspiring clean energy pioneer and leader in the extremely carbon-intensive disaster response sector. Will Heegaard shares with us the inspiring history and ongoing work of Footprint Project [https://www.footprintproject.org/], a small but mighty New Orleans-based non-profit that has gained national recognition for its grassroots work helping communities to not only restore critical power supplies with renewable energy generator sets, but providing the training and know-how to transform normally marginalized groups and communities into resilient, well-prepared, clean energy pioneers. Will teaches us about Footprint Project's important post hurricane relief efforts and mission to provide clean energy to communities in crisis.

    Footprint Project believes that we should not just be reacting to the next storm - we should be ready for it! They are working to break the negative feedback loop of responding to climate emergencies with fossil fuels, reimagining the traditional, response-centered cycle of disaster relief.

    GUEST BIO:
    Will Heegaard
    Footprint Project.org
    Operations Director

    Will Heegaard sees every disaster as an opportunity to build back greener. Before launching Footprint Project, Will worked as an EMT / Paramedic in Minneapolis, and deployed with International Medical Corps (IMC) to the Philippines after Typhoon Haiyan (2013) and Liberia during the Ebola outbreak (2015). In 2016, Will managed an epidemic disease surveillance program for IMC in Guinea, West Africa, where he piloted the installation of solar refrigeration at five remote laboratories to safely collect, store, and refer blood samples for Ebola recovery. Domestically, Will has volunteered with Team Rubicon after disasters in Louisiana, Minnesota, and Puerto Rico.

    Will founded Footprint Project in 2018 to accelerate the humanitarian response industry's transition off of fossil fuels, and has steadily grown the organization from inception into a nationally-recognized leader in community-led, climate-conscious disaster response, recovery and resilience. Footprint Project's model has received accolades from Time Magazine (2022 Best Inventions), and Building Green (2023 Top 10 Industry Transforming Products), and in 2022 Will was named "Person of the Year" by Microgrid Knowledge. Will received his B.A. in Peace and Conflict Studies from University of California, Berkeley, where he wrote his honors thesis on the socio-political history of existential risk.

    Will's LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/will-heegaard-22212022/]

    • 49 min
    #16: How Space Technologies are Supporting Terrestrial Innovation

    #16: How Space Technologies are Supporting Terrestrial Innovation

    In this episode, we strike out into the solar system with Roberto Carlino, a NASA engineer and innovation pioneer with an eye on the space age technologies and systems that will facilitate humanities leap to a multi-planetary species.

    As part of Deep Blue Institute interest and advocacy for technologies that support maritime urbanism, or floating cities, we recognize that many of the concepts and tech innovations that support extended space flight and habitation provide the proofs of concept for the solution sets that will facilitate the realization of remote ocean-based habitats serviced by off grid energy, water, and waste systems. Robert unique background and perspective gives us a glimpse into how humanity's irrepressible drive to explore the solar system, and beyond, is fueling technology breakthroughs and innovation here on Earth.

    After a week of meetings and community events in New Orleans, Roberto reflects on what he sees happening in terms of climate tech development and entrepreneurship in the region. He also helps us to contextualize the role of New Orleans' own NASA Michoud facility in the broader context of the global space industry. There is much to celebrate.

    Please visit the episode 16 webpage [https://www.deepblue.institute/ep16robertocarlinonasa] to find additional links, references and background information.

    GUEST BIO
    Roberto Carlino
    NASA Ames Research Center
    Software/Hardware Test Engineer and Mission Ops Lead

    Roberto Carlino is an Aerospace Engineer based at NASA Ames Research Center in Silicon Valley, California, currently working on cutting-edge projects like the Astrobee free-flying robots and the Advanced Composite Solar Sail System (ACS3) cubesat. More recently, he was selected as primary crew for NASA's Astronaut Analog mission Human Exploration Research Analog (HERA) at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston, living and working as an analog astronaut for 45 days while "traveling" to the Martian moon Phobos. In 2022, Roberto was selected among the top 30 candidates for the European Space Agency (ESA) Astronaut selection out of over 22,000 applicants. Roberto began his career at NASA Ames Research Center around 9 years ago, working on small flight projects and NASA mission proposals and later working as a Software Engineer for the mission Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) – follow-on mission of the Kepler Space Telescope – searching for habitable alien planets around the solar neighborhood.

    Roberto earned his bachelor's and master's degree in aerospace engineering from the University of Naples Federico II, in Italy, and Delft University of Technology, in The Netherlands. Additionally, he holds a second master's degree in 'Space Systems and Orbital Platforms' from the University of Rome, La Sapienza.

    Outside of work, Roberto pursues several adventurous hobbies aligned with his passion for exploration. He is a licensed private pilot with over 150 hours of flight experience. Roberto also enjoys skydiving, scuba diving, High-Intensity Interval Training (HIIT), and hiking. Among his passions, he also loves cooking good Italian food, especially Neapolitan Pizza.

    Roberto's LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/roberto-carlino-3ab35343/]

    • 39 min
    #15: Grounds Krewe; Cultural Innovation for a Sustainable Mardi Gras Celebration

    #15: Grounds Krewe; Cultural Innovation for a Sustainable Mardi Gras Celebration

    Mardi Gras is one of the largest celebrations in the world, sometimes referred to as "the greatest free show on earth". A byproduct of this multi-week celebration season is an inordinate amount of waste that puts a tremendous strain on our, already fragile local and regional environment. In this episode, we speak with Brett Davis [https://www.groundskrewe.org/team], a New Orleans native grown entrepreneur and environmental activist who is the Founding Director of Grounds Krewe [https://www.groundskrewe.org/home/], a non-profit dedicated to the Sisyphisian task of making Mardi Gras sustainable, reducing waste, recycling, while transforming the culture surrounding the LITERAL tons of plastic beads and other throws that have become a defining feature of the parades. Brett shares with us his inspiring dedication to the future health and resilience of our City, and his vision for what a more sustainable New Orleans looks like.

    Please visit the episode 15 webpage [https://www.deepblue.institute/ep15-brettdavisgk] to find additional links, references and background information.

    GUEST BIO
    Brett DavisGrounds Krewe
    Founding Director

    Brett is a native New Orleanian and graduate of Trinity Episcopal School, Isidore Newman, the College of Charleston and the Louisiana State University Master of Landscape Architecture program. While receiving his secondary degree, he was a research assistant in the Coastal Sustainability Studio, an interdisciplinary laboratory focused on reducing the causes and effects associated with coastal land loss. In 2013 he started a design business, Land Cover, that is still in operation, to help clients revitalize buildings and vacant lots in historically significant neighborhoods around New Orleans. Eventually, his lifelong passion for nature and travel lead him to attempt to solve an environmental problem unique to his hometown, Mardi Gras waste, and in 2018 Grounds Krewe was formed. Brett lives in the building where he grew up, formerly his family's African Art Gallery, on Magazine street in uptown.

    Brett's Bio [https://www.groundskrewe.org/team]

    • 35 min
    #14 - SeaAhead; Scaling BlueTech Open-Innovation Ecosystems on the Gulf Coast

    #14 - SeaAhead; Scaling BlueTech Open-Innovation Ecosystems on the Gulf Coast

    In this episode, we learn about SeaAhead [https://www.sea-ahead.com/]'s mission to bring together entrepreneurs, investors, industry leaders, and stakeholders to grow an open-innovation ecosystems that produces scalable commercial solutions to modern-day challenges. SeaAhead's Market Lead for Gulf Coast & Federal and State Agencies, Hailey Bathurst, explains how they support early-stage startups in the blue economy with infrastructure and access to funding, two important drivers for success that entrepreneurs are often missing. The result is a proven track record of bringing together entrepreneurs, investors, industry leaders, and stakeholders to scale real world BlueTech solution sets. Hailey tells us about the fascinating life journey that led to her current work, and explains how New Orleans fits into SeaAhead's expansion plans for promoting Blue Economy expansion and startup support in New Orleans.

    Please visit the episode 14 webpage [https://www.deepblue.institute/ep14haileybseaahead] to find additional links, references and background information.

    GUEST BIO
    Hailey Bathurst
    SeaAhead; Market Lead for Gulf Coast & Federal and State Agencies

    Hailey Bathurst's awareness of environmental issues began through canvassing and field managing for Clean Water Action in Rhode Island, Connecticut and Massachusetts during summer and winter breaks at Roger Williams University. After graduating, she moved to Providence where she became the program manager of the Health and Wellness Initiative at Social Enterprise Greenhouse, building Rhode Island's first health and wellness accelerator program and expert advisory council. She moved on to serve in the Peace Corps in Namibia, focusing on local economic development with entrepreneurship as a means for economic empowerment of vulnerable populations. Upon returning to the United States, Hailey worked for a scaling healthcare startup as an operations manager while earning her graduate degree at University of Chicago in international development and policy.

    Hailey joined SeaAhead in 2022 to create and execute The Gulf Blue Navigator in partnership with University of Southern Mississippi and now leads SeaAhead's Federal and State Agency work in the Southern United States. The focus of this work is to explore how SeaAhead can support innovation within State and Federal Agencies, while exploring how startups can work with these agencies to further their own development goals.

    Hailey's LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/haileyliliana514/]

    • 36 min
    #13 - Build [Back] Better; Tech Enabled Storm Resilient Coastal Communities

    #13 - Build [Back] Better; Tech Enabled Storm Resilient Coastal Communities

    In this episode, we do a deep dive with Andy Kruger, CEO of BuildSOS [https://buildsos.com/], into the world of disaster response and how communities can better prepare for future storm events with cutting edge digital tools. BuildSOS is a key new technology networking platform that is facilitating better communication and more efficient resolution of post disaster recovery efforts. Their mission is to build and implement integrity and risk reduction systems for communities to improve disaster-related infrastructure, enhance efficiency, reduce fraud, and keep value local.. To do that, BuildSOS created a transparent, easy-to-use platform that significantly reduces the potential for fraud thus lowering the risk and amount of frustration for everyone involved in the rebuilding process. BuildSOS helps communities rebuild faster and stronger after a disaster by providing a transparent, easy-to-use process that saves homeowners, contractors, insurance companies, and local and state governments time, money, and lots of frustration by reducing fraud, finger-pointing, and risk.

    Please visit the episode 13 webpage [https://www.deepblue.institute/ep13andykbuildsos] to find additional links, references and background information.

    GUEST BIO
    Andy Kruger
    BuildSOS CEO

    Andy Kruger is a seasoned leader of several startup ventures, has 17-year tenure as an organizational consultant underpinned by a diverse skill set. His academic background includes an MBA in Management and a Master of Science in Organizational Leadership. Additionally, Andy authored on leadership, adding depth to his professional profile.

    Andy's extensive career has been marked by his ability to drive impactful change across various industries. During his tenure at the University of California, San Francisco, from 2012 to 2022, Andy undertook the role of Director of Project Management and Organizational Consultant. Here, his strategic leadership guided numerous clinical and operational improvement projects, including the establishment of the Office of Clinical Research and over 60 projects in the School of Dentistry. Under his stewardship, these projects achieved notable improvements in clinical and administrative efficiency, patient experience, regulatory adherence, diversity and inclusion efforts, and revenue generation, even amidst the challenging backdrop of the COVID-19 pandemic.

    In his current role as CEO of BuildSOS, Andy's measured and professional leadership has been instrumental in guiding the company through a phase of restructuring and innovation. Andy's multifaceted skill set forms the bedrock of his leadership approach. These competencies coalesce to equip him with the ability to orchestrate organizational change, streamline operations, foster stakeholder alignment, and drive strategic initiatives. His proficiency in synthesizing data and his talent for executive-level communication are instrumental in guiding the company's transformation towards resounding success.

    Andy's LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/apkruger/]

    • 45 min
    #12 - The Water Institute of The Gulf; Global Leadership for Empowering Resilient Coastal Communities

    #12 - The Water Institute of The Gulf; Global Leadership for Empowering Resilient Coastal Communities

    In this episode, we sit down with Beaux Jones, a regional point of reference and visionary leader on the front lines of developing the complex mix of policy and engineering solutions that is required to realize long-term community resilience along the Louisiana Gulf Coast. As an environmental law expert and intrepid champion of cutting edge coastal engineering solution sets, he has become a key facilitator reconciling complex state and federal regulatory frameworks with the critical need for innovative marine infrastructure planning and engineering solutions that are integral to preparing our working coast for the ongoing and inevitable impacts of coastal land loss and associated marine habitat disruption. Recently selected to be part of the prestigious 'Committee of 100 for Economic Development' in Louisiana, Beaux's valued guidance and vision is helping to empower organizations, community leaders, and citizens across multiple sectors at a regional, national, and international scale. With his work (and that of his outstanding team) at The Water Institute, Beaux is laying the foundations for Louisiana's long term global leadership and positioning as a key purveyor of high value products and services for at-risk coastal communities around the world that are already facing increasing economic, engineering, and socio-cultural challenges from the ravages of runaway climate change.

    Please visit the episode 12 webpage [https://www.deepblue.institute/ep12beauxjones] to find additional links, references and background information.

    GUEST BIO
    Beaux Jones
    Acting President and CEO for The Water Institute

    Beaux Jones is the Acting President and CEO for The Water Institute. Prior to joining The Water Institute, Jones served as the environmental section chief for the Louisiana Department of Justice, where he represented the State of Louisiana and its agencies in a wide variety of matters ranging from environmental and coastal law to criminal and appellate law. He most recently worked as an environmental and coastal lawyer for the law firm Baldwin Haspel Burke & Mayer in New Orleans.

    Jones has extensive experience representing agencies, companies, and organizations inside the courtroom and internally. He has argued cases at every level of state and federal court in Louisiana and has worked on several high-profile cases related to the Gulf Coast and Louisiana. He was on the BP spill litigation team with the Louisiana Attorney General.

    Prior to becoming the Acting President and CEO, Jones was the General Counsel and Chief of Staff at The Water Institute and handled general legal matters for The Water Institute, such as contracts and immigration law. He also was a key member of the leadership team, merging the Institute's ongoing work in science, engineering and resiliency with legal policy.

    Jones earned his bachelor's from Davidson College and his law degree from the Paul M. Hebert Law Center at LSU. He is active in a variety of community and environmental causes.

    Beaux's LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/beauxjones/]

    • 58 min

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