Race Against Climate Change

De: Canada's National Observer
  • Resumen

  • Canada’s National Observer is already the country’s most trusted voice in climate journalism. Now, it has a new podcast: Race Against Climate Change. With just nine years until 2030, we need to move fast to avert climate catastrophe. So what are we going to do about it? Race Against Climate Change brings you the stories and solutions you won’t hear anywhere else.

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    2021 Canada's National Observer
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Episodios
  • Special Episode: Protecting Haida Gwaii
    Aug 10 2023

    Haida Gwaii is a stretch of islands teeming with life just off the coast of British Columbia. The land, its skies, and the bodies of water around it have been protected for thousands of years by local Haida guardians. Protecting Haida Gwaii is a story about a First Nation that continues the fight for its rights, despite having inhabited the territory for thousands of years.

     

    Read more about Haida Gwaii at Canada’s National Observer.

     

    Written by Brandi Morin

    Edited by Zahra Khozema

    Cover art by Ata Ojai


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    37 m
  • Break the Silos
    Dec 22 2021

    So much climate work happens in silos. But we can’t win the race against climate change if we’re not working together. Today, we’re breaking the silos.

    Internationally acclaimed author Naomi Klein joins her brother, fellow author Seth Klein along with Linda Solomon Wood to discuss the path forward. Plus, Canada’s National Observer columnists Jesse Firempong and Julian Brave NoiseCat on the intersections of race, justice and climate action.


    GUESTS:

    • Julian Brave NoiseCat is a National Observer columnist and writer, as well as Vice President of Policy & Strategy for Data for Progress.
    • Jesse Firempong is a columnist for National Observer and has worked with Greenpeace and Oxfam as well as on human rights projects in Canada, Ghana and Botswana.
    • Naomi Klein is a filmmaker, activist and writer. Her most recent book is On Fire: The (Burning) Case for a Green New Deal. She’s currently an Associate Professor of Climate Justice at the University of British Columbia.
    • Seth Klein is a contributor to National Observer. He’s the author of A Good War: Mobilizing Canada for the Climate Emergency. He is also an adjunct professor with Simon Fraser University’s Urban Studies program, the Director of Strategy with the Climate Emergency Unit, and was the founding director of the British Columbia office of the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives.

    Correction to this episode: We wrongly introduce journalists Julian Brave NoiseCat and Jesse Firempong as being "both in their thirties."


    CREDITS:

    Final audio mix by Aftertouch Audio. Fact check by Luke Ottenhof. Artwork by Ata Ojani. Communications from Suzanne Dhaliwal. Original video sound in this episode from Brad Mueller, Guillotino Shuxley, Michael Toledano, and the Parkland Institute. Music provided by Blue Dot Sessions. Additional sfx from freed of freesound.org

     

    CLIMATE NERD RESOURCES:

    Links to studies we mention in the show:

    • To see the full video from Michael Toledano, click here
    • To see that video Polly can’t stop watching of the cows being rescued, click here
    • To see Seth and Linda talk about his latest book

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    33 m
  • Episode 5: Getting off of Oil and Gas
    Dec 8 2021

    We need to wind down fossil-fuels, and fast. It’s the single largest source of emissions in Canada. But what about the communities and people who depend on the oil and gas industry for their livelihoods? Hear from workers who have already made the switch, and those who aren’t sure if it’s going to happen. Plus, National Observer columnist Max Fawcett and Linda Solomon Wood on why Canada’s climate goals don’t have to be like oil and water when it comes to Alberta.


    GUESTS:

    • Delia Warren, offshore wind consultant and former director of Iron and Earth East
    • Dirk Toleman, heavy machinery operator and UNIFOR local president in Fort McMurray
    • Jim Standford, economist and Director of Centre for Future Work
    • Max Fawcett, Canada’s National Observer
    • Angela Carter, political science professor at the University of Waterloo
    • Truzaar Dordi, postdoctoral fellow in climate finance at the University of Waterloo


    CREDITS:

    Final audio mix by Aftertouch Audio. Fact check by Luke Ottenhof. Artwork by Ata Ojani. Communications from Suzanne Dhaliwal. Archival sound in this episode from the Legislative Library of Newfoundland and Labrador. 

    Music provided by Blue.Sessions Patrick Patrikios, and Lobo Loco. 

    Thank you to The Navigators for permission to use their song, “Pulling Oil From the Sand.” Additional sfx from __jpberger__ and __xcreenplay__ of freesound.org


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    32 m

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