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The Climate Minute examines current news on global warming, climate change, renewable energy and the prospects for progress on international negotiations, carbon taxes and clean energy policy.
The Climate Minute examines current news on global warming, climate change, renewable energy and the prospects for progress on international negotiations, carbon taxes and clean energy policy.
Episodes

Tuesday Oct 29, 2019
Air travel in a warming world: The Climate Minute Podcast
Tuesday Oct 29, 2019
Tuesday Oct 29, 2019
Everybody loves to fly, but aviation has a big and increasing climate impact. What are the prospects for greening flight? Plus questions: do we value air travel over the planet? Would the global economy decline if it took a week to get to China? Listen in.

Friday Oct 25, 2019
Twenty: The Climate Minute Podcast
Friday Oct 25, 2019
Friday Oct 25, 2019
We unpack the news that twenty companies are responsible for one third of carbon pollution, and see how this relates to carbon budgets and ongoing liability lawsuits.

Tuesday Oct 22, 2019
From Walden to Weymouth: The Climate Minute Podcast
Tuesday Oct 22, 2019
Tuesday Oct 22, 2019
Thoreau’s cabin is only a few miles from Weymouth, but his ideas are becoming important to the discussion. The unwanted Weymouth Compressor Station is close to obtaining it’s last permits. Deadlines loom in early November. If you want to do something about it, call Commissioner Suuberg and urge him to deny the permits. It’s 617-292-5500, ext 7882.

Friday Oct 18, 2019
PG&E kills the power: The Climate Minute Podcast
Friday Oct 18, 2019
Friday Oct 18, 2019
Pacific Gas & Electric invented a new kind of climate problem this week.

Tuesday Oct 08, 2019
From Wellhead to Burner Tip: The Climate Minute Podcast
Tuesday Oct 08, 2019
Tuesday Oct 08, 2019
The burner tip on your gas stove is the endpoint of a complex system of gas delivery that starts at a wellhead out in a gas field out West and runs under the streets of your town to your home. Unfortunately, the system has some inherent problems that range from climate effects to health problems and explosion risks. Listen to an expert discuss some of the problems with our gas infrastructure.

Friday Sep 27, 2019
A Fairy Tale of Eternal Growth: The Climate Minute Podcast
Friday Sep 27, 2019
Friday Sep 27, 2019
Greta Thunberg’s speech at the UN contained the line “We are in the beginning of a mass extinction, and all you can talk about is money and fairy tales of eternal economic growth. How dare you!” In a warming world, can we continue to pursue higher and higher GDP? The “Doughnut Economy” gives us a new way to think.

Tuesday Sep 24, 2019
How the big banks could stop global warming: The Climate Minute Podcast
Tuesday Sep 24, 2019
Tuesday Sep 24, 2019
The fossil fuel industry needs the finance industry- banks, asset managers and insurance companies- the way humans need air to breath. That is why Bill McKibben says ‘money is the oxygen that fires global warming.’ He makes a cogent argument that the oil industry would be crippled if banks decided not to provide loans. If crippling the oil-extraction industry sounds good to you, listen in.

Sunday Sep 22, 2019
Voices from the Climate Strike: The Climate Minute Podcast
Sunday Sep 22, 2019
Sunday Sep 22, 2019
We chat with some of the thousands who attended the Climate Strike in Boston on 9/20/19.

Thursday Sep 19, 2019
Schoolstrike 4 Climate: The Climate Minute Podcast
Thursday Sep 19, 2019
Thursday Sep 19, 2019
The School Strike for Climate will happen on Friday 9/20. Greta Thunberg is the spark, but young people around the world are driving a massive global movement. Listen in for some insight and perspective.

Monday Sep 16, 2019
The view from the 38th floor: The Climate Minute Podcast
Monday Sep 16, 2019
Monday Sep 16, 2019
The New Yorker is a cultural bellwether and Jonathan Franzen is a famous author. The magazine has published pieces by climate hero Bill McKibben. Unfortunately, this prestige did not prevent them from publishing a technically inaccurate and morally vacuous 'think piece' about climate. Franzen's complacency is that of an aging well-to-do white dude who looks out the office window on the 38th floor of One World Trade Center and sees not too much to worry about. Eustace Tilley examining butterflies pretty much sums it up.
We should be listening to the voices of the dispossessed and marginalized, those indigenous tribes losing a way of life, those Bahamians suffering from environmental injustice, and those youth who will live their lives in whatever world we are choosing now. Franzen and the New Yorker demonstrated their disconnect from the real world. Let's hope they work to find the connection.
