GoodGeist

DNS

A podcast on sustainability, hosted by Damla Özlüer and Steve Connor,  brought to you by the DNS Network. Looking at sustainability issues, communications, and featuring global guests from a wide variety of sectors such as business, NGOs and government. 

  1. The Real Cost of Nuclear Energy, with Pınar Demircan

    8 АПР.

    The Real Cost of Nuclear Energy, with Pınar Demircan

    Send us Fan Mail Nuclear power: the sensible, grown-up answer to the climate crisis? Once you look past the slogan of 'carbon-free', the story becomes harder to sell and impossible to keep local. We sit down with Pinar Demircan, coordinator of nuclearfree.org, to unpack the risks and reality behind the nuclear industry's pitch that promises so much but that could cost the Earth.  We follow Pinar’s route into anti-nuclear activism, from the emotional weight of Hiroshima in Turkish poetry to the lived reality of Chernobyl’s regional impact and the shock of Fukushima. From there, we dig into why nuclear is being pushed again right now: COP messaging, plans to expand capacity, the energy hunger of AI data centres, and the financial and geopolitical currents that make big nuclear projects attractive to states and industry. Pinar also describes first hand Fukushima’s landscape of contaminated soil, constant monitoring, and deep public mistrust, then connects that reality to today’s security claims. We ask what “national energy security” can mean when reactors depend on cooling water in a warming climate, and when nuclear sites can become targets in conflict. Share with a friend who still thinks nuclear is “clean”, and leave us a review with your take: is nuclear a climate solution or a long-term liability? Follow GoodGeist for more episodes on sustainability, communications and how creativity can help make the world a better place.

    28 мин.
  2. Plastocene Talks, with Sedat Gündogdu

    1 АПР.

    Plastocene Talks, with Sedat Gündogdu

    Send us Fan Mail Plastic waste is not just something we step over on the street or on a beach. It is a material that has quietly rewritten ecosystems, economics, and even human biology and once you notice that, it becomes impossible to treat something like “marine litter” as a simple tidy-up job. We sit down with Sedat Gündogdu, a marine biologist and environmental researcher whose work focuses on plastic and microplastic pollution, plastic waste trade, and the social and political forces that keep plastic production growing. Together we unpack the idea of the Plastocene, a grounded way to understand the Anthropocene through the one material that has become a permanent global signature. We follow the thread back through industrial growth and wartime scale-up, then forward into daily life where plastic shows up in far more than bags and bottles. We talk about why plastic recycling so often functions as greenwashing, how it shifts responsibility from producers to consumers, and why that comforting story still works. Sedat also breaks down the main routes of exposure to microplastics and chemical additives through food, drinking water, air, and even medical settings and why systemic regulation matters more than perfect personal habits. Listen in, and share with someone who still trusts the recycling myth. Follow GoodGeist for more episodes on sustainability, communications and how creativity can help make the world a better place.

    30 мин.
  3. A Mediated Reality on Net Zero, with Becca Massey-Chase

    25 МАР.

    A Mediated Reality on Net Zero, with Becca Massey-Chase

    Send us Fan Mail If you're feeling a bit beaten up by the relentless negative news coverage on net zero and climate action, guess what? The data tells a more complicated and more hopeful truth. We sit down with Becca Massey-Chase, Head of Citizen Engagement at IPPR, to unpack their new research on public opinion, media narratives and the real risks to climate progress. If you care about climate action, democracy and what happens next for UK climate policy, this conversation sharpens the picture fast.  We look into the perception gap: why politicians can believe voters have soured on ambitious decarbonisation even when the public remains broadly supportive. Becca explains how right-wing populism and partisan media try to reframe net zero as ideology, and why many of those attacks do not “land” unless they tap into something deeper: distrust in institutions and low confidence that government can deliver.  We also talk about what climate communication can learn from this, including why messages around energy security and energy independence resonate.  And is if all of that wasn't enough, we the switch to transport decarbonisation, where the same dynamics show up in miniature. Low traffic neighbourhoods, ULEZ, active travel and electric vehicles get dragged into culture war narratives, even as most people just want safe, reliable ways to get around.  Follow GoodGeist for more episodes on sustainability, communications and how creativity can help make the world a better place.

    29 мин.
  4. Nature: A Critical Infrastructure, with Prof. Anusha Shah

    11 МАР.

    Nature: A Critical Infrastructure, with Prof. Anusha Shah

    Send us Fan Mail What if we treated wetlands, rivers and forests with the same seriousness as bridges, tunnels and treatment plants? We sit down with Prof Anusha Shah, the engineer, former ICE President, and founder of Plan for Earth, to explore how putting nature at the heart of decisions can transform cities, infrastructure and public health. Anusha shares the personal path from the lakes and landscapes of Kashmir to global practice, then maps for us a clear shift from “less harm” to regenerative growth. We look at the hard data on biodiversity loss and breached planetary boundaries, and then pivot to solutions: protecting remaining ecosystems, restoring damaged ones, transforming food and material systems, and reconnecting people with urban nature. Water threads through everything—too much, too little, too dirty—so we talk catchments, upstream‑downstream design, and why most climate risk is really water risk. The conversation gets practical as nature becomes critical infrastructure, managed as an asset class with registers, metrics and maintenance. We dig into funding gaps, the trillion‑scale value of ecosystem services, and how blended finance can scale what works. Then, looking to COP31, we call for a move from pledges to proof: phasing out fossil fuels, mobilising climate finance, and accelerating adaptation and restoration. If you’re an engineer, planner, investor or policymaker, this is a blueprint for action. You’ll leave with a playbook to mainstream nature‑positive design, examples you can adapt, and a renewed case for careers that combine data and storytelling to deliver healthier places. Follow GoodGeist for more episodes on sustainability, communications and how creativity can help make the world a better place.

    33 мин.
  5. Our Future Homes, Our Future Heritage, with Dr. Banu Pekol

    4 МАР.

    Our Future Homes, Our Future Heritage, with Dr. Banu Pekol

    Send us Fan Mail In this episode we sit down with the amazing urbanist and cultural heritage expert Dr Banu Pekol to rethink our notion of 'home' as a human right, as a store of memory, and as a foundation for belonging. From Istanbul’s Sulukule to Cape Town’s District Six, Banu analyses how, when housing policy ignores people, renewal becomes removal and communities become museums while lives are uprooted. She maps out for us a clear and compelling, five-part agenda for the future of our homes. First, prevent displacement, because losing your home collapses health, education, safety, and livelihood. Second, pursue fair decarbonisation: cut emissions without pushing retrofit costs onto those least able to pay. Third, prioritise maintenance, repair, and reuse—the future of housing is already built, and repair protects both carbon and community. Fourth, adopt mediation-first governance that treats conflict as normal and useful; pre-filing eviction programmes show how early dialogue prevents harm. Fifth, design with candour about power: architecture is never neutral, so participation must be a design requirement, not a tick-box. We also confront climate risk to cultural heritage, from Venice’s rising tides to Timbuktu’s desertification, and explore practical adaptation that serves living cities. Throughout, Banu returns to a simple truth: homes are not just assets. They hold routines, relationships, and identity. Repair before you replace. Protect people before postcards. Build systems where tenants, caretakers, and children are partners in care. Follow GoodGeist for more episodes on sustainability, communications and how creativity can help make the world a better place.

    30 мин.

Об этом подкасте

A podcast on sustainability, hosted by Damla Özlüer and Steve Connor,  brought to you by the DNS Network. Looking at sustainability issues, communications, and featuring global guests from a wide variety of sectors such as business, NGOs and government.