The Carbon Watchdog Podcast carbonwatchdog
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- News
The climate crisis is dogged by worry and denial - Carbon Watchdog focuses on the basic facts behind the panic and bluster.
My name is Adam Hardy and I produce informative and entertaining material for people everywhere in the world who have seen this whole thing brewing and are looking for the best ways to tackle it.
Society is adapting to climate change at breakneck speed - and God knows, we have to - but the information tsunami is only going to get bigger - so what do all the headlines and cool infographics about Arctic sea ice and hydrogen power actually mean?
Carbon Watchdog has put together a complete package of not-so-inconvenient truths about living with climate change - regardless of your politics (or lack of) and moral and ethical viewpoint. We should all do our bit of course - but what is "our bit" and who says? The US president? Greta Thunberg? God?
Listen here for a range of interesting, inspiring, helpful, effective and trustworthy climate-related discussions!
Get more Carbon Watchdog content at https://carbonwatchdog.o
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Crowd-funded Green Investing with Abundance Investments MD Bruce Davis
Abundance Investments is a crowd-funding platform that lets people finance green infrastructure. Bruce Davis is joint managing director. He has great experience and deep knowledge about money, finance and the Energy Transition, as the next 30 years will sees the economy shift from fossil fuels to renewable energy.
If you have a little money and you want to make it do good and earn something back, then listen on! We talk about:
- crowd-funding and making people aware of risk- solar, wind and the complexities of wind turbines- the unfulfilled potential of tidal power- EV charging- the nuts and bolts of the green infrastructure- capitalism, socialism and money (and even Sharia Law) -
UK Schools need Low Carbon Buildings
I talk to Robin Nicholson, who is an architect at Cullinan Studios, an architecture co-operative which has been designing innovative low carbon buildings for 65 years, some of which are now listed, using design strategies such as passive solar as early as 1970. He was a key force in the creation of the Edge Debate, a round table that encourages the Professional Institutions to work together to greater effect on public policy, setting standards like the Cross-Institutional Climate Action Plan for the construction industry and the Collaboration for Change report. We talk about:
zero carbon schools and retrofitting
are there enough tradesmen and engineers who can do the job? Er... no.
whole life carbon calculations
some of the techniques, technologies and materials for low carbon or low energy buildings
how to smash energy efficiency targets in schools by putting an electricity display meter in the entrance and paying the kids to keep it down
the UK government's success or lack of it with low carbon building policy
regulations are good - so the industry can break them 😬
the biggest challenge - making buildings that can be taken apart again and re-used
Masdar, Teach The Future, user interaction design for machinery... -
The Cumbria Coal Mine Debacle, UK Climate Policy & Other Snafus - with Chris Friedler of Decarbonise Now
Chris Friedler is a UK environmental campaigner at Decarbonise Now with an extensive working knowledge of the UK climate policy - if that's what it can be called nowadays. We talk about climate policy ranging from the new Cumbria coal mine (Britain's first in decades) to energy policy, housing, transport, electric cars and everything in between.
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What is Climate Justice?
Kelo Uchendu is a Nigerian student at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka and an active member of a broad coalition of student climate movements across the world that held the MOCK-COP. This was the youth climate movement's answer to the vacuum left by the UN's delayed COP26. Kelo is a member of Grey 2 Green Movement in Nsukka and Students Organising for Sustainability. Being in a youth climate movement in the Global South, Kelo knows about climate justice and explains in the podcast how the lack of climate justice in the world today plays out in Africa. While westerners in the Industrial North think of the threats to their pensions and property from climate change, most are unaware of the impacts that are already playing out in other parts of the world, affecting people who played practically no part in creating the issue. And that, by every reasonable definition, is a dire injustice.
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Days of Coal in Calgary, Canada
Hugh Archibald White was born and brought up in Calgary, Canada in the 1940s and 50s. He gave me a run-down on their almost universal dependence on coal, illustrated with some great anecdotes about his grandfather, a coal and gas merchant, including:
- the vastness of Canada’s natural resources- the railways and development- low prices and infinite availability of fossil fuels- Canadian winters, minus 20°C for half the year- why you didn’t insulate your house
Sorry for my sound quality – I used the wrong mic – doh! But Hugh’s quality is good. -
How Green Is My Tesla?
This week I persuaded my old friend from Germany, Dirk Carstens, to give me the run-down on the pros and cons of owning a Tesla. He’s a trained physicist so there’s not much about the EV technology that phases him.
Some of the stuff we discussed:
the low bills
the all-important battery, how to treat it, how long it lasts, how much it’s worth
the amount of data Tesla accumulates on you, your car, your driving…
when autonomous driving goes wrong
hydrogen fuel (not for the Tesla…)