Green Fix

The Green Fix Podcast

Welcome to the Green Fix, the climate & sustainability podcast for Australian corporations and their ESG practitioners. We explore the top challenges and opportunities in the industry, how they are impacting your business and your work, so that you can keep your sanity.  

  1. 4 天前

    Funding the Transition, with Duncan Paterson and Susheela Peres da Costa

    Welcome to Episode 4 of the Positive Tipping Points Special! A 7-episode special series on the road to COP30 in Belem, with guest host Liz Courtney. Markets don’t just reflect change—they can create it. We sit down with two leaders in responsible investment to unpack how stewardship, smarter regulation, and clear definitions are accelerating corporate decarbonisation and funding solutions at scale. From boardrooms to supply chains, they reveal where investor pressure truly lands, when escalation matters, and why Scope 3 conversations are reshaping strategy across sectors. We dig into Australia’s new sustainability reporting regime and what comparability unlocks for capital markets. But good data is only a start; the real edge comes from analysis that weighs abatement costs, feasibility, and long-term risk. Our guests break down the crucial difference between risk, relative sustainability performance, and impact, and how sloppy language feeds greenwashing while precise terms protect ambition. Fiduciary duty isn’t a brake on climate action—it’s a mandate to manage systemic risk over decades, which turns pensions and sovereign capital into engines for transition. Divestment gets a sober assessment: selling shares usually changes owners, not outcomes. The bigger lever is enabling clean solutions with new capital while engaging incumbents with clear milestones and consequences. We explore why renewables now outcompete fossil fuels in many markets, where technology can design out waste across value chains, and how circular thinking creates durable advantages. The stakes for laggards are rising—physical damage, stranded assets, reduced access to finance, reputational hits, and shrinking export pathways as trading partners tighten standards. Australia has a chance to lead by investing in IP, basic science, education, and advanced manufacturing, turning ideas into industry. You’ll also hear personal journeys into climate finance, practical advice for students and career-changers, and two bold system fixes: cut mis/disinformation at the source and price externalities so value tracks harm and benefit. Ready to see how capital can push us past the next positive tipping point? Follow the show, share this episode with a friend who cares about climate and markets, and leave a review with the one lever you’d pull first. Your Hosts: Dan Leverington Loreto Gutierrez Liked this episode? Subscribe to our podcast to get the latest Sustainability insights every two weeks. And follow us on Linkedin and Instagram. Email us your ideas, feedback and interviewee suggestions at info@greenfixpodcast.com

    45 分鐘
  2. 10月22日

    Regenerative Cities in a Heating World, with Emma Bacon and Caroline Pidcock

    Welcome to Episode 3 of the Positive Tipping Points Special! A 7-episode special series on the road to COP30 in Belem, with guest host Liz Courtney. Heat shouldn’t make home feel unsafe. In this episode, we meet architect and regenerative design leader Caroline Pidcock and advocate Emma Bacon, CEO of Sweltering Cities, to map a practical pathway to cooler, fairer, low‑carbon urban life—one retrofit, street tree, and planning rule at a time. The core idea is refreshingly direct: build less and design better. That means using the buildings and streets we already have and upgrading them with smarter materials, shade, ventilation, and green cover rather than pouring more carbon into new construction. We dig into the standards gap that leaves wealthier suburbs cooler while hotter, poorer areas get unsafe new builds. Emma explains why building codes must use future climate data, not historical averages, and how minimum requirements—light-coloured roofs, cross‑ventilation, deeper eaves, and shade—lift the floor for everyone. Caroline shows how good design and clear regulation spark creativity, from pocket parks and bikeways to vertical gardens and external skeletal frames that retrofit towers without displacing communities. Health is front and centre: heat waves are predictable disasters, so cities should treat nature as essential infrastructure, with “social green space” where people actually move and gather. We also zoom out to systems. Faster, more frequent trains can relieve pressure on overheated cores, connect regional towns, and stitch biodiversity corridors along rights of way. Accounting for true social and environmental costs flips the economics toward efficient, cool, and equitable design. Throughout, our guests share hopeful signals: scaled social housing upgrades, community-led projects, and movements shifting mindsets inside the professions. If you care about urban planning, climate resilience, social housing, or just sleeping better on hot nights, this conversation delivers clear steps and real optimism. Subscribe, share with a friend who sweats through summer, and leave a review with the one heat-fighting change you want your council to adopt next. Your Hosts: Dan Leverington Loreto Gutierrez Liked this episode? Subscribe to our podcast to get the latest Sustainability insights every two weeks. And follow us on Linkedin and Instagram. Email us your ideas, feedback and interviewee suggestions at info@greenfixpodcast.com

    39 分鐘
  3. 10月16日 · 附贈內容

    Transforming Amazonia in the lead up to COP30 with Prof. Carlos Nobre, Co-Chair of the Science Panel for the Amazon, and Prof. Peter Cox, Director of the Global Systems Institute University of Exeter

    Welcome to Episode 2 of the Positive Tipping Points Special! A 7-episode special series on the road to COP30 in Belem, with guest host Liz Courtney.  In this episode we meet Professor Carlos Nobre of the University of São Paulo,  Co-Chair of the Science Panel for the Amazon, and Professor Peter Cox, CBE Director of the Global Systems Institute University of Exeter.  In this episode we discuss how Amazon’s stability depends on a dance between climate, deforestation, drought, and fire, and why some feedbacks can lock in change far faster than politics tend to move. From early land–atmosphere models to today’s field experiments under engineered drought, we unpack what science has learned about tall tree mortality, rooting depth, evapotranspiration, and the fire thresholds that can flip dense forest to open, flammable savanna. The conversation moves from ocean drivers—El Niño and a record‑hot North Atlantic—into the messy human layer: man‑made fires, land grabbing, and organised crime accelerating degradation even as official deforestation drops. We get specific on numbers that matter: 120–200 billion tonnes of carbon stored; around 20 billion tonnes of water recycled daily; record droughts in 2005, 2010, 2015–16, and 2023–24; and why crossing 2°C makes saving the basin dramatically harder. Cox presses the global need to phase out fossil fuels quickly; Nobre details the Arc of Restoration, a plan to recover vast degraded zones and build a bioeconomy of standing forests and flowing rivers grounded in indigenous knowledge and local enterprise. Hope here isn’t wishful—it’s strategic. Positive tipping points in human systems are already forming as renewables undercut fossil power and social norms shift. We talk practical climate justice: what high‑emitting nations can fund now, how to confront misinformation and political headwinds, and why indigenous stewardship is indispensable for biodiversity, carbon, and water security. If we pair rapid decarbonisation with zero deforestation, fire prevention, and large‑scale restoration, the Amazon can remain a cooling engine rather than a carbon source.  Your Hosts: Dan Leverington Loreto Gutierrez Liked this episode? Subscribe to our podcast to get the latest Sustainability insights every two weeks. And follow us on Linkedin and Instagram. Email us your ideas, feedback and interviewee suggestions at info@greenfixpodcast.com

    38 分鐘
  4. 10月6日

    How Bonobos, Vultures and Midges are Running Our Economy, with Natalie Kyriacou OAM

    What if the most honest business strategy was as simple as “keep things alive”? In this episode of Green Fix we meet award‑winning environmentalist and author Natalie Kyriacou, where we unpack how biodiversity, climate stability, and social equity quietly hold up every supply chain, balance sheet, and brand promise we care about. From a tiny midge that makes chocolate possible to vultures that prop up public health, Natalie brings research‑rich stories that make the stakes unmistakable - and the solutions tangible. She confronts the extinction crisis with equal parts humour, curiosity, and urgency, weaving together quirky stories - from hippos to financiers betting on whale poo - to illuminate our hidden dependencies on nature. Her book, lauded as “the most important environmental book of our times” and praised as “racy, raucous, and riveting,” is a bold call to action for anyone from board directors to city dwellers. You can find Natalie's book at your local bookstore or online at these outlets. Natalie's Recommendation to our listeners: Mongabay Newscast Podcast  News and inspiration from nature’s frontline, featuring inspiring guests and deeper analysis of the global environmental issues explored every day by the Mongabay.com team, from climate change to biodiversity, tropical ecology, wildlife, and more. The show airs every two weeks. Listen on Apple Podcasts Listen on Spotify Your Hosts: Dan Leverington Loreto Gutierrez Liked this episode? Subscribe to our podcast to get the latest Sustainability insights every two weeks. And follow us on Linkedin and Instagram. Email us your ideas, feedback and interviewee suggestions at info@greenfixpodcast.com

    48 分鐘
  5. 9月9日

    Insurance and Climate Disclosures: From Risk to Opportunity with Vicki Mullen, Finity Consulting

    Vicki Mullen, Senior Consultant at Finity Consulting, takes us deep into the world of mandatory climate disclosure as Australian corporations transform what might seem like a compliance burden into a strategic advantage. Drawing on her 30 years of experience across public policy and financial services, Vicki explains why viewing climate reporting as an exercise in "business imagination" creates unexpected opportunities. She explains how the Australian Sustainability Reporting Standards require companies to test their resilience against different climate futures through scenario analysis – examining both a rapid transition to net-zero and a "hothouse" scenario well above 2°C warming. The conversation reveals how insurance companies have functioned as early warning systems for climate impacts, with the increasing severity and frequency of natural disasters already affecting their business models. Vicki shares practical advice for companies navigating potential legal pitfalls between greenwashing and "greenhushing," emphasising the importance of backing climate commitments with robust data and meaningful plans. With renewable energy now approaching 50% of the national electricity mix and nearly half of standalone homes equipped with rooftop solar, this transformation creates enormous potential for innovative products and services, highlighting why forward-thinking companies are responding to shifts in consumer preferences. Whether you're in a large corporation preparing your first Sustainability disclosure, a smaller company trying to understand your reporting obligations, or a sustainability professional driving change within your organisation, this episode offers invaluable insights on turning climate reporting from a compliance exercise into a commercial advantage. Listen now to discover how breaking down organisational silos and fostering cross-functional collaboration can help your business not just survive but thrive in a climate-transformed economy. Vicki's recommendation for our listeners: Funny Weather: Art in an Emergency Olivia Laing Your Hosts: Dan Leverington Loreto Gutierrez Liked this episode? Subscribe to our podcast to get the latest Sustainability insights every two weeks. And follow us on Linkedin and Instagram. Email us your ideas, feedback and interviewee suggestions at info@greenfixpodcast.com

    33 分鐘
  6. 8月25日

    Double Materiality: The Missing Piece in Your Business Strategy with Sydney Straver, &Bloom

    Struggling to make sustainability strategically relevant to your business? Double materiality might be the missing piece you need. Sydney Straver, Managing Director at &Bloom, joins us to unpack this powerful framework that's transforming how businesses approach sustainability. Drawing from her extensive European experience, Sydney explains how double materiality bridges the gap between sustainability efforts and financial performance – making it easier to get buy-in from even the most skeptical executives. "Double materiality is effectively the cornerstone of a good sustainability strategy," Sydney explains. By examining both how your organisation impacts stakeholders (impact materiality) and how sustainability issues affect your enterprise value (financial materiality), companies can identify 5-6 key priorities that truly matter. The beauty of this approach? It's not about creating additional work but providing a framework to organise what you're already doing. Whether you're just starting your sustainability journey or looking to take your existing efforts to the next level, this episode provides the roadmap you need to move beyond compliance toward strategic value creation. Ready to start embedding sustainability into your business strategy? Listen now and discover how double materiality can help you surf the green wave with confidence. Your Hosts: Dan Leverington Loreto Gutierrez Liked this episode? Subscribe to our podcast to get the latest Sustainability insights every two weeks. And follow us on Linkedin and Instagram. Email us your ideas, feedback and interviewee suggestions at info@greenfixpodcast.com

    33 分鐘

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簡介

Welcome to the Green Fix, the climate & sustainability podcast for Australian corporations and their ESG practitioners. We explore the top challenges and opportunities in the industry, how they are impacting your business and your work, so that you can keep your sanity.  

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