Challenging Climate
A podcast by Jesse Reynolds and Pete Irvine
53 Episodes
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Farewell
Published: 11/24/2024 -
50. Maarten Albers on the Nitrogen Crisis in the Netherlands
Published: 8/12/2024 -
49. Gwynne Dyer on Intervention Earth: climate mitigation, CDR & SRM
Published: 7/2/2024 -
48. Jonathan Blake and Nils Gilman on planetary governance
Published: 5/28/2024 -
47. Shuchi Talati on ethics and governance of solar geoengineering
Published: 4/30/2024 -
46. Ulrike Lohmann on clouds, aerosols and solar radiation modification
Published: 4/2/2024 -
45. Benjamin Sovacool and Chad Baum on global trends in public perceptions of climate technologies
Published: 3/7/2024 -
44. George Monbiot on environmentalism and climate activism
Published: 3/5/2024 -
43. Janos Pasztor on global climate policy and geoengineering
Published: 2/6/2024 -
42. David Stainforth on climate models and uncertainty
Published: 1/9/2024 -
41. David Keith on Climate Systems Engineering
Published: 12/12/2023 -
40. Jennifer Allan on global climate governance and the COP28 agenda
Published: 11/14/2023 -
39. Greg Nemet on how solar became cheap (with Energy vs Climate)
Published: 10/17/2023 -
A brief podcast review and update
Published: 6/27/2023 -
38. Richard Tol on Climate Economics: the cost of carbon, geoengineering & IPCC
Published: 6/13/2023 -
37. Emma Marris on our rambunctious garden: wilderness and human influence on nature
Published: 5/30/2023 -
36. John Moore on the melting cryosphere and glacier geoengineering
Published: 5/16/2023 -
35. Steve Smith on net zero pledges and CDR strategies & tech
Published: 5/2/2023 -
34. Heleen de Coninck on the IPCC, climate tech & a just Net Zero transition
Published: 4/18/2023 -
33. David Fahey on the Montreal Protocol, ozone depletion and SRM
Published: 4/4/2023
Asking tough questions about the science, technology, and politics of climate change, two climate researchers challenge leading experts on one of the defining issues of our age. Every two weeks, they explore how we can fight global warming by cutting greenhouse gas emissions, carbon removal, adaptation and solar geoengineering. Dr. Jesse Reynolds and Dr. Pete Irvine consider the roles of computer models and persuasive narratives, economics and public policy, and renewable energy and national security in the climate debate, and look beyond to issues such as biotechnology and international development.Support us at Patreon.Questions or comments? Email [email protected] or tweet @ChalClimateSee more information on Jesse Reynolds and Pete Irvine.Subscribe for email updates.music by Peter Danilchuk @clambgramb (IG/Twitter).