Avsnitt
-
Join host Tom Green for a wide-ranging interview with the incredible Amanda Ravenhill. Amanda discusses numerous aspects of climate change including her remarkable career, exciting projects in climate change, why we shouldn't be referring to Carbon Dioxide Removal.
Learn about the potential of Blue Carbon, how humans made the Amazon rainforest (and how we can save it too), and the important work being done by the Buckminster Fuller Institute.
www.bfi.org
https://spaceshipearth.live/blue-carbon-home
-
Saknas det avsnitt?
-
In this episode, host Tom Green was joined by Shaun Meehan from Charm Industrial. Charm is working on a process to turn agricultural waste into bio-oil, which can be injected deep into the Earth's crust. In addition, they have a process for making carbon negative hydrogen from the same farm waste.
Shaun discusses Charm's approach, as well as his background spending winters in Antarctica.
Learn more at www.charmindustrial.com -
On this episode, host Tom Green is joined by Ross Kenyon of Nori to discuss the intersection between political philosophy and climate change. How do conservatives think about climate change in this age? What are the roots of that thinking? What does this have to do with Nori, a marketplace for carbon removal?
Listen in and experience a conversation ranging from the esoteric to the in depth.
Learn more about Nori at www.nori.com -
This episode, with host Tom Green and guest Eric Matzner, co-founder of Project Vesta, explores the science of climate change, the impacts on carbon emissions of the COVID-19 pandemic, and the need for Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR) as part of the solution to the problems of climate change.
https://pubs.geoscienceworld.org/gsa/geology/article/doi/10.1130/G47681.1/586769/A-23-m-y-record-of-low-atmospheric-CO2
https://www.ecowatch.com/atmospheric-carbon-dioxide-levels-historic-2646152010.html
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/global-co2-emissions-saw-record-drop-during-pandemic-lockdown/
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41558-020-0797-x
https://ourworldindata.org/contributed-most-global-co2