Journey Visions - A Path towards Sustainability Journey Visions
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Journey Visions - A Path towards Sustainability is a podcast that developed out of the EIT Climate-KIC Journey summer school 2020 where we interview sustainability experts, environmentalists, climate action activists and students who are a part of this journey.
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44. Integrating climate change into school curricula
Larissa Barabasch from Vienna is a Climate-KIC Master Label student label at the University of Copenhagen. As an economics and business student, her curiosity led her to question the model of growth and use it to address soil diversity and waste management. After changing her studies from economics to climate change, together with other participants from the Madrid-Valencia Journey she is currently working on a modular school program for 10-14 year old school kids. The modular system of different courses, panel discussions, events and other diverse activities, allows for direct climate change incorporation into the school curriculum without being a huge burden for the teachers. Find out how this hybrid program will allow school kids to connect with topics of climate change and the problems from and around it.
Larissa’s favorite sustainability tools are two podcasts:
How I Built This Podcast (related to innovation, entrepreneurship and sustainability concepts): https://www.npr.org/podcasts/510313/how-i-built-this?t=1616496446696
Outrage + Optimism (related to hard facts, hope and optimism): https://outrageandoptimism.libsyn.com/ -
43. Misconceptions of individual impact and the importance of consumption
Tune in for a very interesting conversation on the relevance of personal choices and impact on the environment. Our guests, food and winter lover Raquel Sabater Cánovas fom Madrid and Aleksandra Milovanović from Serbia who loves design, sports and music, participated in the Climate KIC Journey 2020.
Raquel completed her studies in industrial and chemical engineering and is focusing on processes, in particular how to do more with less. Her project focuses on the carbon footprint awareness as people established the “I cannot do anything” mentality, which is contradictory to recent findings. Aleksandra is currently pursuing her PHD in process and product design in chemical engineering in Eindhoven. Her projects also focused on the carbon footprint related to waste management. She shares stories on how people are not aware of waste production, in particular with relation to the fashion industry.
Find out more how they want to create change, which stakeholder partnerships are relevant for their projects and why schools and children are crucial target groups. -
42. Experiencing circularity on personal and professional level
Today’s episode builds on the inspiration of Paloma Velón García-Velasco and Mara Haverkort that translates into the engagement of people, doing little things for a better planet and finding solutions to complex problems, step by step.
Tune in and enjoy the stories of “Sea-Lover” Paloma (Madrid) and “Enthusiast” Mara (The Netherlands). While Paloma shares her vivid interest for a better world, she became inspired to take local action with the support of NGOs and the local authorities by organizing a Clean-Up-Day-Campaign. Mara is working on circularity startups and innovation and her individual action plan aims to create recommendations related to interventions on how such startups can overcome barriers to access financial support. -
41. From Seed to Baltic Sea: the connection between farming and eutrophication
In Episode 41 we meet Simona Jastremskaite who participated in the 2020 Dublona Journey.
Simona's climate journey began in China. While teaching, she became sensitised to the incapacity of expanding urban areas to build resilience against rapid climate change. This has led her to her Master's studies in Environmental Studies and Sustainability Science at the University of Lund, where she is specializing in the connection between conventional farming and eutrophication.
Eutrophication is caused by an excessive use of fertilizers in conventional farming, which pollutes waterways. As a result, algae populations explode as they feast on the nutrient-rich particles in the water. This has devastating consequences for marine life.
In this episode, Simona discusses her thesis research with the Lithuanian Ministry of Environment into this topic, as well as her other projects tackling food waste in both Vilnius and Lund.
Interested in finding out more about her projects?
Get in touch through the links below!
Project Pond (in Lund): projectpond.lund@gmail.com
Green Grip: sjastremskaite@gmail.com
Food Saving Vilnius: sjastremskaite@gmail.com
Urban Gardening in Bulgaria: https://www.naturalistichno.org/naturalistichno-2/ -
40. Carbon footprint transparency in companies
Today we return to the Climate-KIC Journey as we learn about group dynamics, GEMO in project management (GE-wha? tune in to find out), and a new concept for ensuring carbon transparency.
Mikaela Pettersson (in Lund, Sweden) and Isabel Nieto Tous (in Majorca, Spain) from the Bologna-Trento-Zurich Journey had an innovative idea of a platform that they call Octopus. Octopus's aim is to highlight companies entitled to the EU Eco Label that are truly transparent about their emissions and that develop environmentally friendly products.
Mikkaela and Isabel have been inspired by the following tools:
An Inconvenient Truth: Al Gore (movie): https://www.algore.com/library/an-inconvenient-truth-dvd
Sustainababble (podcast): http://www.sustainababble.fish/
The Climate Casino (book): https://www.nytimes.com/2013/12/01/business/climate-casino-an-overview-of-global-warming.html -
39. Isabelle Bause's Journey into Sustainability
In a highly informative episode, we meet Hamburg native and Leipzig resident Isabelle Leipzig and learn how the long path towards sustainability was influenced by a layering of experiences.
From swimming in a lake above a flooded coal mine to sailing past plastic bottles on the fringes of the rainforest in Peru, Isabelle has seen the destructive reach of human development, as well as the beautiful potential of allowing Nature to recover.
She is currently studying for a Master's in Sustainable Development at the University of Leipzig, and is fascinated by how culture guides our behaviour and influences how we interact with our environment.
A highly enjoyable episode, check it out!