No Title

Michael Dunn - Sustainability Entrepreneur & Podcaster
Podcast de No Title

Each week, you get to be a fly on the wall as I chat with interesting people, doing interesting things in the world of sustainability. "Sustainacast" is a platform to allow entrepreneurs, managers, creators, leaders, students and other folks tap into ideas and approaches to sustainability from local, regional and international thought leaders. Tune in to expand, reinforce or challenge your ideas on many facets of sustainability. The show seeks to explore and expand on the topic of sustainability, covering areas such as energy, food, social enterprise, entrepreneurship, climate change, lifestyle, wellness, transportation, local food, recycling, waste & much more. Sustainacast aims to help you simply and conveniently explore what it means to make sustainable decisions, and how to make it the foundation of what we do. Learn more at www.sustainacast.com

  1. 22/04/2017

    Our Pre-Conceived Ideas Around Sustainability, with Clay Mitchell, Ph.D

    What better day to release a brand spanking new episode of Sustainacast, than on EARTH DAY 2017! After an epic gap between episodes, I'm really pleased to bring you this discussion with my good friend Clay Mitchell. I can't thank Clay enough for helping me get this project kick started again, and for such an interesting discussion. You can learn more about him and find him HERE. It's been a very big gap between recordings, so thanks for sticking with me! Clay Mitchell, Ph.D is a lecturer at University of New Hampshire and has a depth of experience in business, community & public service which paved the way to his role in education at UNH currently. In this wide-ranging discussion, we touch on issues related to why words like "green" and "sustainability" have come to carry so much baggage. And how he goes about introducing the topic of sustainability to a room full of passionate university students who may have pre-conceived ideas about what it means. ABOUT CLAY:  I first met Clay at a school facility management meeting in 2010 when I was invited to brainstorm with him and some facility and finance management folks on how to creatively finance some innovative energy projects. Those first discussions turned into numerous executed projects with local towns and government organizations, working through ways to provide power purchase agreements, leasing and energy finance solutions to small scale projects. Clay has worked with local governments in New Hampshire in the land use planning and energy fields for the last 20 years. He has served as a land use planner and attorney throughout the state of New Hampshire and his work includes the development of innovative zoning approaches to energy efficient design, community re-development of brownfields, and a wide range of innovative zoning techniques to protect open space and natural resources. When I met him in 2010, he had just co-founded a NH-based company called Revolution Energy LLC, who developed the first 3rd party-financed (through a power purchase agreement) solar array in NH, the first similarly financed combined heat and power (CHP) project and the only 3rd party financed solar hot air project in the country (which he and I worked on together!)

  2. 22/10/2015

    #17 The Power to Save The World: The Truth About Nuclear Energy

    In follow up to my previous episode with Robert Bryce (@pwrhungry), I'm really excited to bring you this deep dive into Nuclear Energy with author Gwyneth Cravens. It was clear to me from feedback on the previous episode, that there was a need for me to look into Nuclear Energy to help explore answers to some really troubling questions that came my way. Questions like What do you do with radioactive waste that could last 10,000 years or more? Health issues of nuclear energy, and living near plants Nuclear fallout/catastrophic accidents. Isn't it obvious this is a really bad idea? What you are about to listen to, is my own journey being what I would call "half-way" into the nuclear exploration. Meaning, that just a couple weeks ago I was grossly un-educated on this energy source. I really had no idea about it, and had no opinions about it, and had no reasons to have any opinions about it. But recently my company did a project on a Naval Shipyard base with nuclear submarines, and it got me thinking - what's the difference between those and a nuclear power plant in terms of public risks? It turns out that my guest today Gwyneth Cravens was asking the same questions and hundreds more in her journey talking with people all around the globe about the truth behind nuclear energy. As a result of that journey and extensive body of work, she authored "The Power to Save the Word - The Truth About Nuclear Energy". You can check out Gwyneth's book here, and audio book here. Consider these facts which I've borrowed from Robert Stone, Director of Pandora's Promise which Gwyneth was heavily featured in. France now produces 80% of its electricity from nuclear energy. It has the cheapest electrical rates in Europe, the cleanest air in the industrialized world, and per-capita CO2 emissions that are half that of neighboring Germany despite that country’s long-standing commitment to develop a robust green energy sector If you took all of the nuclear waste created by all the commercial nuclear power plants in the United States and gathered it together in one spot, it would fill one football field from end to end to a height of about 8 feet. The long-lived waste, the stuff that remains radioactive for many thousands of years and that everyone fears and deplores, would only fill the one-yard line. More importantly, all of the waste from today’s Light Water Reactors can be used as fuel for the next generation of reactors that will hopefully be coming on line in a few decades. In fact, that football field’s worth of waste described above, if used in next generation fast reactors, could power everything in the United States (including the entire transportation sector) for a thousand years! I hope you grab as much from this conversation as I did talking with Gwyneth, getting much needed clarification on what can only be described as a touchy subject.

    1 h y 15 min
  3. 30/08/2015

    #16 The Myths of Green Energy with Robert Bryce

    My introduction in this episode of Sustainacast is longer than normal, because I want to do my best to set the stage for some very thought provoking discussion on the topic of energy. Robert Bryce (www.robertbryce.com, @pwrhungry) is the author of many books on energy & the energy industry. Of these publications, his book "Power Hungry: The Myths of Green Energy & The Real Fuels of the Future" is the reason I contacted Robert to have him on the show. It's an intriguing example of showing the reader how to do the calculations, run the numbers, apply the physics and figure it out for themselves... He's an outspoken critic of wind energy and biofuels. And his book Power Hungry goes into extensive detail discussing why technologies such as wind and biofuels have some flaws that make them not only a potentially unreliable energy source, but may well be having negative effects in some instances. Perhaps the greatest challenge that clean energy faces, (particularly wind energy) is the issue of land mass per unit of energy. Check out this graph from Robert's book (Power Hungry) which shows the comparison of footprint required for various energy types in order to yield the same 2,700 MW volume of energy... staggering. In addition to the issue of land use of various energy sources, the even greater issue lies with energy reliability of various sources. It's the reason why Robert keeps driving home the fact that America/World has a POWER problem (always on), not an ENERGY problem. Also consider this graph from his book, which compares energy reliability of various energy sources during summer time. Since his book is jam packed with data, I've laid out a few helpful pieces of information to help frame the conversation, and hopefully to inspire you to check it out for yourself. It's kind of my "three take-aways" laid out at the start of the show instead of the end. I hope you find this discussion thought-provoking at the least, and I hope it gets you fired up enough to either read Robert's book or start doing some research and math to run the numbers for yourself. You can find Robert at www.robertbryce.com Twitter: @pwrhungry

    48 min
  4. 14/01/2015

    #12 When Girl Meets Oil with Christine Bader

    Have you ever thought about what really goes on behind the scenes of some of the largest and most controversial companies in the world? My guest this week is Christine Bader, author of "The Evolution of a Corporate Idealist: When Girl Meets Oil" Christine worked behind the scenes with BP for almost a decade, helping to execute some of the largest and most complex oil and natural gas extraction projects in the world. Unlike "extraction" based work however, Christine's role with BP was focused on human rights and social impacts of the work that BP did in complex and sensitive social and environmental locations. In fact, she was part of some of the earliest and most significant advances in human rights within a company that literally created it's own standards and protocols where none existed. After many years of important work at BP, she had her heart broken when she witnessed one of the largest corporate disasters in history take place on the international stage. All of a sudden, the company she had grown to love turned into an entirely different company almost overnight. In her book, Christine shares her journey at BP and the UN doing extremely important work in advancing human rights. This journey has now taken her to a position of advising companies both small and large on how they engage with communities and the environment, as well as how their PR efforts translate to their social mission and brand. In this episode of Sustainacast, we talk about why she had her heart broken by her former employer. We also discussed what Christine has witnessed working with other "corporate idealists" faced with environmental disasters, human rights issues and public relations nightmares within their organizations. I read Christine's book late in 2014, and can't recommend it highly enough. It's such an easy read, and a fascinating account of what has to happen to provide us "Consumers" with the "energy we demand". I learned so much about the realities of "Big Oil" from her book, and we touched on some of those points in our discussion this week. You can reach Christine at www.christinebader.com twitter at @christinebader Pick up a copy of her book right here - http://christinebader.com/book/

    32 min

Acerca de

Each week, you get to be a fly on the wall as I chat with interesting people, doing interesting things in the world of sustainability. "Sustainacast" is a platform to allow entrepreneurs, managers, creators, leaders, students and other folks tap into ideas and approaches to sustainability from local, regional and international thought leaders. Tune in to expand, reinforce or challenge your ideas on many facets of sustainability. The show seeks to explore and expand on the topic of sustainability, covering areas such as energy, food, social enterprise, entrepreneurship, climate change, lifestyle, wellness, transportation, local food, recycling, waste & much more. Sustainacast aims to help you simply and conveniently explore what it means to make sustainable decisions, and how to make it the foundation of what we do. Learn more at www.sustainacast.com

Para escuchar episodios explícitos, inicia sesión.

Mantente al día con este programa

Inicia sesión o regístrate para seguir programas, guardar episodios y enterarte de las últimas novedades.

Elige un país o región

Africa, Oriente Medio e India

Asia-Pacífico

Europa

Latinoamérica y el Caribe

Estados Unidos y Canadá