50 min

The Future of Sustainability: Repair, repurpose, reimagine TED Radio Hour

    • Technology

Listen on Apple Podcasts
Requires subscription and macOS 11.4 or higher

"Reduce, reuse, recycle." We've heard that for decades - but does it work? This hour, TED speakers reimagine the well-known slogan and reconsider how we think about what we consume and throw away. Guests include right-to-repair advocate Gay Gordon-Byrne, materials scientist Andrew Dent, technologist Jamie Beard and animal scientist Ermias Kebreab. Original broadcast date: May 20, 2022

TED Radio Hour+ subscribers now get access to bonus episodes, with more ideas from TED speakers and a behind the scenes look with our producers. A Plus subscription also lets you listen to regular episodes (like this one!) without sponsors. Sign-up at plus.npr.org/ted.

Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoices

NPR Privacy Policy

"Reduce, reuse, recycle." We've heard that for decades - but does it work? This hour, TED speakers reimagine the well-known slogan and reconsider how we think about what we consume and throw away. Guests include right-to-repair advocate Gay Gordon-Byrne, materials scientist Andrew Dent, technologist Jamie Beard and animal scientist Ermias Kebreab. Original broadcast date: May 20, 2022

TED Radio Hour+ subscribers now get access to bonus episodes, with more ideas from TED speakers and a behind the scenes look with our producers. A Plus subscription also lets you listen to regular episodes (like this one!) without sponsors. Sign-up at plus.npr.org/ted.

Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoices

NPR Privacy Policy

50 min

Top Podcasts In Technology

Hard Fork
The New York Times
CBN Tecnologia - Techtudo
CBN
The Nikos Show
Nikos Katsikanis
Lex Fridman Podcast
Lex Fridman
Talk Python To Me
Michael Kennedy (@mkennedy)
The Stack Overflow Podcast
The Stack Overflow Podcast

More by NPR

Up First
NPR
Planet Money
NPR
1A
NPR
Fresh Air
NPR
The Indicator from Planet Money
NPR
Consider This from NPR
NPR