C-Change Conversations Podcast

C-Change Conversations

At C-Change Conversations, we talk about climate change in a way that helps people understand the urgency of the issue without inflaming partisan passions. cchangeconversations.substack.com

  1. Solutions Series: Emily Carter

    07/01/2025

    Solutions Series: Emily Carter

    Turn harmful carbon emissions into fuels or fertilizers that don’t harm our planet? Yes. The process is part of a burgeoning industry called “carbon tech” and the focus of the newest episode of C-Change Conversations: Solutions Series – Ideas, Innovations, and Advancements in the Fight Against Climate Change.We hope you’ll watch (or even just listen as you go about your day) to our interview with scientist Emily A. Carter as she explains why, and how, we must transform the excess carbon in our atmosphere and oceans into marketable products. This internationally renowned expert is Senior Strategic Advisor for Sustainability Science at the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory and Gerhard R. Andlinger Professor in Energy and the Environment at Princeton University. She led the development of “Carbon Dioxide Utilization Markets and Infrastructure: Status and Opportunities” to help industry and government decision makers better understand how the technology can contribute to achieving our net-zero goals. In the interview, Emily explains carbon dioxide utilization – the processes of transforming CO2 emissions from burning coal, oil, and gas into useful products – like fuel, fertilizer, plastics, aggregates used in concrete, and even diamonds and vodka. Carbon tech like this can contribute not only to reaching net-zero emissions but also to reducing (but realistically, not eliminating) carbon-based products and systems. Emily believes that this potentially trillion-dollar industry could grow our economy, effectively support the transition away from fossil fuels, and prevent the worst effects of climate change. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit cchangeconversations.substack.com

    29 min
  2. Insurance in a Climate Changed World

    06/24/2025

    Insurance in a Climate Changed World

    Insurance rates are rising, coverage is disappearing, and fingers are pointing in all directions. Yes, humans are moving to areas more vulnerable to natural disasters. Yes, inflation is raising the costs of reconstruction. But the most concerning reason insurance is getting so expensive and elusive is that the industry is finally factoring in the real risks of our changing climate.Extreme rains, windstorms, hail, more powerful hurricanes, wildfires, heat, and accelerating sea level rise – disasters that insurance companies link to climate change – are more frequent and ferocious than they were in the past. Our homes, communities, and infrastructure were built for yesterday’s norms, not today’s realities or tomorrow’s projections. That leaves all of us, and our economy at large, very vulnerable.C-Change Conversations is committed to helping people understand how climate change will impact us personally, including what it means for our safety and our wallets. That’s why I was proud to co-present with Steve Fischl, regional product director and vice president at Chubb Insurance, to explore why these challenges are happening, what’s expected in the future, and what we can do to protect ourselves and increase our ability to access adequate insurance.Sponsored by CBIZ Borden Perlman in early November in Princeton, NJ, the discussion was sobering, but necessary. Key takeaways included that these super-charged disasters are happening everywhere and none of us is safe. Our insurance costs are even impacted by disasters in far-off parts of the world because those disasters drive up costs from reinsurers, which in turn ratchets up costs for US policyholders. The real solution is to stop emitting greenhouse gases and lessen climate change’s impacts everywhere. In the interim, we must invest in infrastructure and systems that will enable us to be more resilient when these disasters hit.We won’t meet the challenge if we don’t understand the enormity of our financial and personal risk. The effects of climate change on the insurance industry is a “canary in the coal mine” – a clear indicator that we are at real risk and need to take action. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit cchangeconversations.substack.com

    1h 18m
  3. Coral & Climate with James Porter

    06/17/2025

    Coral & Climate with James Porter

    You’ve got questions, and we have answers. No question is too simple or complex for our panel of science advisors who stand ready to field your questions about climate change. James W. Porter, PhD, answers a question about whether the scientific community agrees that climate change is caused by human activities. Dr. Porter is a renowned marine ecologist who has devoted 50 years to studying coral reefs and marine ecosystems. A Josiah Meigs distinguished professor, emeritus, at the University of Georgia, he is also the award-winning filmmaker of Chasing Coral. Read other Q&A here, and don’t be shy about asking your questions here. Warmly,The C-Change Conversations Team Q: It is hard to imagine that at any time in Earth’s history, the climate was “consistent.” Ice ages, land shifts, etc, were not caused by humans. How do we know this current climate shift is not just another natural course of the planet? Aren’t there many different scientific opinions – all claiming the others don’t account for all the facts? A: The scientific community is no longer divided on the fact that humans are responsible for the climate change we are experiencing. Within the last five years, in fact, the evidence has become so overwhelming that everyone in the scientific community agrees that the world is warming and that greenhouse gases – including carbon dioxide, methane, and others – are to blame. We now have the same degree of certainty that the Earth is warming as we do about the existence of gravity. While it is true that over hundreds of millions of years, the Earth’s climate does shift, the changes (warming) that we are seeing now are happening so quickly that there are no geological precedents for them – they are not natural climate cycles. Humans are, in fact, having an effect on the planet on par with a meteorite strike. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit cchangeconversations.substack.com

    54 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
3 Ratings

About

At C-Change Conversations, we talk about climate change in a way that helps people understand the urgency of the issue without inflaming partisan passions. cchangeconversations.substack.com