GreenBiz 350 Joel Makower and Heather Clancy
-
- Business
-
GreenBiz 350 is a weekly podcast taking you behind the headlines in green business. Original stories and interviews cover renewable energy, clean technologies, sustainable supply chains, cities, food, climate change and more.
-
Episode 370: ESG isn't going away anytime soon
Featuring insights from State Street CEO Ron O'Hanley and Massachusetts Sen. Edward Markey.
-
Episode 369: What CSOs do, paying coal plants to shut down
The Asian Development Bank has created a fund to accelerate the transition to clean energy in Indonesia and the Philippines — by helping coal plant operators get other options onto the grid more quickly.
-
Episode 368: Mining, child labor and Indigenous wisdom
Featuring a conversation with Lucia Athens, who recently retired from her role as the city of Austin’s first chief sustainability officer.
-
Episode 367: Plastics platitudes, carbon capture critique
Jo and Joy Banner, co-founders and co-directors of The Descendants Project, explain why we should "stop giving fossil fuels a lifeline." Sifang Chen, managing science and innovation advisor at Carbon 180, unpacks ocean carbon capture.
-
Episode 366: Biodiversity letdown, Boston Metal's mission
This episode features a discussion about decarbonizing steelmaking, including highlights from an interview with Adam Rauwerdink, senior vice president of business development for startup Boston Metal.
-
Episode 365: Plastics, nature and biodiversity risk
Richard Mattison, president of S&P Global Sustainable1 and CEO of S&P Global Trucost, discusses S&P's new Biodiversity Risk Data Set.
Customer Reviews
Please edit out the uh’s
Love the subject matter, you’ve got some excellent episode material. But my god, the number of ‘um’s’ and ‘uh’s’ by both hosts Joel and Heather are like nails on a chalkboard, it’s every third word of some sentences. Can these not be edited out? Would actually listen weekly if this could be fixed.
Really informative
Really interesting podcast touching on the top trends in sustainability.
Too many personal stories
Tried two episodes and I can’t wait until the “real” content because there are too many personal stories tell.