Climate Curious
En podcast av TEDxLondon
52 Avsnitt
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Pride Climate Quickie: Why climate’s got a diversity problem
Publicerades: 2022-06-17 -
Pride Climate Quickie: What is queer ecology?
Publicerades: 2022-06-10 -
Climate Quickie: What is artivism?
Publicerades: 2022-05-25 -
Climate Quickie: Why Guyana is a climate hero
Publicerades: 2022-05-18 -
Climate Quickie: What it feels like to sue the government
Publicerades: 2022-04-29 -
Earth Day Climate Quickie: How to handle your eco-anxiety
Publicerades: 2022-04-22 -
Climate Quickie: Why the climate emergency is a race issue
Publicerades: 2022-04-15 -
Climate Quickie: How your gas stove is hurting you
Publicerades: 2022-04-08 -
Climate Quickie: Why climate change is a wicked problem
Publicerades: 2022-03-24 -
What really happens at a climate conference?
Publicerades: 2022-02-09 -
Best of Season 3
Publicerades: 2022-02-02 -
How the EV dream is becoming a reality
Publicerades: 2022-01-26 -
Climate Quickie: How big oil play the blame game
Publicerades: 2022-01-19 -
Why methane reduction is the ultimate climate hack
Publicerades: 2022-01-12 -
What farmers in India are doing to protect their crops from heat waves
Publicerades: 2022-01-05 -
Climate Quickie: Why guilt and shame don’t drive climate action
Publicerades: 2021-12-29 -
How climate tech got its sexy back
Publicerades: 2021-12-22 -
Why talking is the most important thing you can do to fight climate change
Publicerades: 2021-12-15 -
Why oceans are heroes, not victims
Publicerades: 2021-12-08 -
Why the climate crisis is a health crisis
Publicerades: 2021-12-01
Are you Climate Curious? If you care about the world, but find the current conversation about climate change confusing, scary or boring – then this might be the podcast for you. Join TEDxLondon and hosts Maryam Pasha and Ben Hurst as we lift the lid on the climate emergency by speaking to the world’s leading and most relatable climate pioneers. Find out why cities are key to the climate fight, why we need to tackle systemic problems (and not just plastic straws), and why we’re all a bit crap at sustainability.