• Climate change: Behind the numbers

  • By: PARIS21
  • Podcast
Climate change: Behind the numbers  By  cover art

Climate change: Behind the numbers

By: PARIS21
  • Summary

  • Climate change is the most important issue of our time. We’ve all heard that it poses an existential threat to our species and that it is already changing our planet in unprecedented ways, but with so many numbers – from parts-per-million of atmospheric CO2 to the now-famous ‘1.5°C red line’ of the Paris Agreement – we know that it can be confusing. Our new podcast “Climate Change: Behind the Numbers” helps listeners make sense of the complex topic of climate change. Each episode, we will talk to various experts to try to demystify one climate change number and help you understand how it may affect you, your family and your community. Along the way we will share some surprising, fun and always interesting stories that span history, science, politics and the economy. Tune in with us each month on your favourite listening platform for a journey behind the numbers on climate change. We’ll be announcing subsequent episodes on Twitter @ContactPARIS21, so make sure that you follow us.
    Copyright 2023 PARIS21
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Episodes
  • Climate change and sustainable food systems | Sébastien Treyer
    May 9 2023

    The impacts of climate change are threatening the global food system, particularly rural farming communities who depend on agriculture to support their local economies. Droughts, heat waves, and altered precipitation patterns are affecting agricultural yields and increasing the risk of food insecurity. Unsustainable farming practices can exacerbate these climate impacts and decrease the productivity of agricultural land. On the contrary, nature-based solutions and adaptive agricultural practices can support food production and those whose lives depend on it.  

     Sébastien Treyer, Head of IDDRI and president of the Scientific and Technical Committee of the French Faculty for Global Environment (FFEM), and Lead Faculty Member of the Earth System Governance Network will explore:

    • How can data help us understand the threats of climate change to the global food system? 
    • How can smallholder farmers promote ecological resilience (financial opportunities, agricultural practices, etc.)?  
    • How to unpack the costs of inaction and what do these mean in practice? How will costs affect individual daily lives?  

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    22 mins
  • Small island states at the frontlines - combating climate change with statistics | Miosotis Rivas Peña (Episode in Spanish)
    Dec 14 2022

    Miosotis Rivas Peña, Director General of the Oficina Nacional de Estadística of the Dominican Republic talks to PARIS21's Sandra Camacho about how the country, a small island state on the frontlines of climate change, is prioritising climate change and environmental statistics within the NSO.

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    13 mins
  • The hidden linkages between gender data, women’s land rights and climate change resilience | Lorena Aguilar
    Aug 12 2022

    Less than 20% of the world's landholders are women, according to FAO data. Unequal access to land rights mostly for women means a lack of decision power over their home and property. With climate change bringing more droughts, rising sea levels, and extreme storms, access to and control over resources is key, and so is sex-disaggregated data. It is of essence if we want to bring to the fore these disparities in land rights and climate change resilience and to monitor the progress towards gender equality in agriculture.

    In this third episode of PARIS21’s podcast “Climate change: Behind the numbers”, Lorena Aguilar, Former Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs and Worship of Costa Rica, joins hosts Johannes Jütting and Sasha Ramirez-Hughes for a conversation on the differentiated impact of climate change on women and men, and the underlying causes.

    As a gender and environment expert, she also highlights examples of how cultural practices and customs could be addressed and how persistent gender data gaps hinder our understanding of how climate change escalates social, political, and economic tensions.

    However, “in many parts of the world, there is a lack of willingness to collect disaggregated data because it is considered expensive and cumbersome. Many countries also simply lack the capacity to collect this kind of information. On the other side, sadly there are cemeteries of data that are not being used for policy making.”

    Browse all episodes at️ https://bit.ly/Climate-PARIS21

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    13 mins

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