Ideas for Impact

Joanna and Deborah

Ideas for Impact takes a fresh look at how we do business and spotlights what makes a company attractive to investors. Join us as we delve into conversations with trailblazers driving social and environmental change, paving the way for investments that shape a brighter tomorrow. We chat with changemakers who are part of disrupting industry with innovative ideas on what sustainability and impact can look like and mean. This podcast will showcase the disruptors who are changing the game. From cutting-edge startups to established industry leaders, we feature guests who are shaking things up and disrupting for good. Our aim is to provide you with actionable insights that will help you create positive change in your industry and the world.  www.ideasforimpactagency.com

  1. The Kids Are Alright and They’re Fixing Our Water Systems

    09/06/2025

    The Kids Are Alright and They’re Fixing Our Water Systems

    Canada holds a fifth of the world’s freshwater, yet many of its communities still face boil water advisories, phosphorus-fueled algae blooms, and shrinking aquifers. While water feels abundant here, the truth is more complicated and more urgent. In this episode of Ideas for Impact, we sit down with Kariann Aarup, Head of Program Partnerships at AquaAction, a national nonprofit helping young innovators design and deploy real-world freshwater solutions. With more than 80 water tech ventures launched through their AquaHacking Challenge and AquaEntrepreneur programs, AquaAction is proving that early-stage ideas—when rooted in local knowledge and built with intention can shift how we respond to one of Canada’s most pressing environmental challenges. From a startup turning blue-green algae into biofuel, to AI-powered infrastructure tools that predict water main failures before they happen, Kariann walks us through the powerful solutions emerging from Canada’s youth and what it takes to turn a prototype into impact. We explore: The biggest threats to freshwater in Canada right now (and why the myth of abundance is dangerous)Why youth-led innovation offers a radically different mindset around environmental entrepreneurshipHow AquaAction matches local water problems with student-driven tech innovationThe real barriers to scaling water tech regulation, public sector procurement, and slow adoption cycles and what AquaAction is doing to change thatThe role of mentorship, community, and experiential learning in building a generation of water-aware leadersWhy designing with water at the centre could change how we build everything from cities to clothingIf you’re curious about what the future of water looks like in Canada—and how entrepreneurship, sustainability, and systems change are starting to intersect in real ways—this conversation is for you. 🎧 Episode Highlights:  04:12 – Kariann’s journey: From entrepreneurship to environmental impact  07:20 – What makes youth-led water innovation different  13:35 – Top threats to freshwater across Canada  17:20 – Invasive species, phosphorus runoff, algae blooms & innovation on the ground  22:15 – How blue-green algae became biofuel: A real venture story  25:40 – Why water tech startups don’t follow the usual playbook  29:50 – Supporting first pilots and public-sector partnerships  34:15 – 80+ ventures launched—and what’s next for AquaAction  39:00 – The mindset shift: Designing with water in mind  44:10 – Staying hopeful in the face of environmental urgency  50:45 – Kariann’s message to the next generation of innovators 📍 Learn more about AquaAction: https://aquaaction.org 🌊 Want to help shape Canada’s water future? Follow the AquaHacking Challenge or explore how to support their mission.  🔗 More at ideasforimpactagency.com

    43 min
  2. The Coast Is Not Clear: Surf Riders Fight for Ocean Health

    07/09/2025

    The Coast Is Not Clear: Surf Riders Fight for Ocean Health

    Behind the postcard views of British Columbia’s coastline lies a different story—one of plastic pollution, degraded marine infrastructure, invisible water contamination, and the quiet disappearance of public beach access. In this episode, we speak with Lucas Harris, Executive Director of Surfrider Foundation Canada, about what it means to protect the ocean when the threats are complex, systemic, and often unseen. Lucas shares how Surfrider’s work in Canada—once focused largely on beach cleanups—has evolved into something much more ambitious: a strategy that blends grassroots organizing, environmental data collection, policy advocacy, and hands-on collaboration with Indigenous communities. From banning Styrofoam in marine infrastructure to driving youth-led campaigns on university campuses, Surfrider is building environmental leadership from the ground up. We also explore ReSurf Gear Circularity, a new initiative addressing the end-of-life problem with surf gear—diverting neoprene and polystyrene waste from landfills and recycling it into new, usable materials. It’s an experiment in circular design with implications well beyond the surf community. Ocean conservation in Canada isn’t just about pristine wilderness or protecting nature “over there.” It’s about what happens when people organize in their own backyards to shift policy, culture, and infrastructure—all while staying grounded in the realities of place.

    44 min
  3. Revolutionizing Fisheries: Data, Innovation, and Ocean Justice

    06/08/2025

    Revolutionizing Fisheries: Data, Innovation, and Ocean Justice

    What does the future of fishing look like when transparency, sustainability, and equity lead the way? In this episode, we explore how one bold venture is shaking up the commercial fishing industry—using real-time data, tech-driven accountability, and a community-first mindset to rethink how we harvest from the ocean. At the center is Teem.fish, a company building digital tools to modernize fisheries monitoring, protect coastal livelihoods, and support smarter seafood systems. From the wharfs of Newfoundland to global waters, we unpack how innovations like electronic monitoring are not just helping enforce fishing regulations, but redefining them. You'll hear how traditional fishing practices meet cutting-edge technology, how policy and innovation collide, and why Indigenous data sovereignty must be central to ocean governance. This conversation surfaces tough questions: Who owns the data collected on our oceans? How do we balance economic growth with ocean health? And what does justice look like for small-scale fishers in an increasingly industrial system? Whether you're working in climate tech, marine conservation, or just want to know where your seafood comes from, this episode offers a raw and hopeful look at the tools—and values—reshaping the future of sustainable fisheries. We covered so much ground with Amanda including:  How data and electronic monitoring are transforming global fisheriesThe tension between quantity and quality in seafood harvestingIndigenous data sovereignty and the right to self-determined ocean stewardshipChallenges facing small-scale and community-based fishersThe role of innovation in building trust, transparency, and equity at seaTimestamps: 01:52 – From Newfoundland to fisheries innovation 04:45 – The founding story of Teem.fish 07:00 – Scaling challenges and monitoring breakthroughs 10:27 – Local stories, global stakes 33:08 – Indigenous leadership and data sovereignty 39:42 – A message to the UN

    42 min
  4. Before You Cancel, Just Ask

    05/07/2025

    Before You Cancel, Just Ask

    In this episode of Ideas for Impact: Disruption for Good, co-hosts Joanna Buczkowska-McCumber and Deborah Haust sit down with political scientist and sustainability leader Jenny Morgan to explore the nuances behind her new book, Cancel Culture in Climate. Together, they unpack what’s really happening when conversations about climate shift from constructive to combative—and why that matters for the future of innovation, sustainability, and leadership. Jenny shares stories from her career, including her time at Microsoft and her deep involvement in the B Corp movement, offering a unique vantage point on how corporate and individual actors alike are navigating increasingly polarized conversations around climate action. She reminds us that solving environmental and societal issues requires more than just good intentions—it demands thoughtful language, a willingness to stay in dialogue, and a commitment to curiosity over judgment. The episode explores: How climate cancel culture shows up in real-world systems—from tech to activism to boardrooms.Why empathy and open communication are critical tools in the sustainability space.The dangers of oversimplification and ideological rigidity in a world that requires complexity and nuance.Tangible ways businesses and individuals can stay engaged, even when the narrative gets difficult.The power of words in shaping policy, public sentiment, and pathways to climate justice.Whether you’re a founder, a policymaker, a sustainability professional, or simply someone trying to make sense of the climate conversation in 2025—this episode offers insight, grounding, and inspiration to keep asking the right questions. Tune in for a bold, honest, and deeply human conversation about what it means to lead with impact in an era of division—and how, sometimes, the most powerful move is to listen first. 00:58 – Meet Jenny Morgan: Cancel Culture in Climate 02:20 – Jenny’s Journey and Insights 11:13 – The Language of Climate and Sustainability 22:58 – Empathy and Communication in Climate Action 27:16 – Practical Steps for Climate Impact 30:36 – Looking Forward to 2025 Grab a copy of Jenny's book https://www.cancelcultureinclimate.com/book Visit us at www.ideasforimpactagency.com

    34 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
3 Ratings

About

Ideas for Impact takes a fresh look at how we do business and spotlights what makes a company attractive to investors. Join us as we delve into conversations with trailblazers driving social and environmental change, paving the way for investments that shape a brighter tomorrow. We chat with changemakers who are part of disrupting industry with innovative ideas on what sustainability and impact can look like and mean. This podcast will showcase the disruptors who are changing the game. From cutting-edge startups to established industry leaders, we feature guests who are shaking things up and disrupting for good. Our aim is to provide you with actionable insights that will help you create positive change in your industry and the world.  www.ideasforimpactagency.com