Afleveringen
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As the climate crisis is more and more escalating without appropriate reactions from governments, climate activists have started new forms of protest, including civil disobedience. Many of those cases have landed at courts and some public prosecutors have recently started action against climate groups which aim at criminalising whole organisations. Consequently, even the United Nations warned against one-sided, undemocratic action against climate groups.
Janine O’Keeffe is not only co-host of this podcast empower4climate, but also one of the founders of the new climate movement, starting in Sweden in 2018 and spreading across the globe. She has been involved in civil disobedience protest, by stopping traffic on a freeway in May 2022, and she will soon face her case to be processed at a Swedish court.
Stefan talks with Janine about why she sees the need to use such forms of protest, how she will justify her activities and how she expects the courts to decide. Which ways of action and protest promise to bring the necessary results, the effective mitigation of the climate crisis?
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Already in the 1970s and 1980s, triggered by the oil crises, growing environmental concerns and nuclear accidents with devastating consequences, there was a growing movement of people who saw renewable energy - wind power, solar energy, bioenergy, geothermal energy and hydropower - as the perfect answer.
The movement started from the bottom up in many countries, and Denmark in particular played an important role. One of the most important organisations was the Nordic Folkecenter for Renewable Energy, which was founded 40 years ago. The centre disseminated information about how renewable energy worked in practice, using the technologies on the ground and educating and training hundreds and thousands of people from Denmark, all over Europe and the world.
We talk to Jane Kruse, co-founder and director of the Folkecenter, about the historical developments, but also about the importance of such bottom-up movements today. Jane has not only led the work of the Folkecenter together with her late husband Preben Maegaard, but has also been involved in various renewable energy cooperatives that have become a mainstream model in Denmark and spread throughout Europe. How can our societies be mobilised for the great energy transformation and what role does the climate movement play in this process?
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Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
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The 6th Assessment Report AR6 published recently by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change IPCC has conveyed a very clear message: The climate crisis is already a reality, many of the predictions climate scientists made in the past are coming decades before predicted. And AR6 has become even more precise as it focuses for the first time not only on global, but also on regional changes, thus giving an even more precise outlook to what the world expects if mankind doesnt act fast enough.
One reason why there is now a stronger focus on regional aspects is that the IPCC has become more inclusive, with more and more experts contributing also the perspective of the so-called developing world. A very prominent example is our guest Muhammad Irfan Tariq who joined the Government of Pakistan in 1991 and has been involved in the climate negotiations since the Rio Summit in 1992. Subsequently, he served in important positions, including as Director General at the Ministry for Climate Change. In that role, he was also the National Focal Point for United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and Vice Chair of the IPCC Working Group-II.
Stefan and Janine will discuss the AR6 report with Muhammaed Tariq aiming at getting a better understanding of the IPCC’s work and how it has evolved in the light of the escalating climate crisis. What does AR6 tell us with regard to how different parts of the earth are affected in very different ways and what does this mean for the need not only to combat climate change effectively but also to show international solidarity with the most vulnerable countries?
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In light of the climate crisis, legal action has become an important pathway to act, next to political action, practical action and civil disobedience. Courts in several countries have already taken groundbreaking decisions and forced governments to take more effective action.
However, legal experts have realised that the current legal definitions of public goods, goals and of criminal offences are not sufficient to act against the climate crisis. Therefore there is a growing movement which aims at defining ecocide as a separate criminal offence, which means the destruction of the ecological basis of life on earth.
We talk with the Swedish lawyer Pia Björstrand who is a founder of #lawyersforfuture and holds positions in several environmental and climate groups. Pia has been instrumental in bringing the discussion about ecocide to the public and to provide the legal basis for the definition. Which steps are necessary to define ecocide, will it be implemented on the national or international level and what would be the concrete impact on the fight against climate change?
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Energy is a key sector for effective climate change mitigation, and 100% renewable energy globally is a mandatory pre-condition in order to stop and reverse the climate crisis.
Wind power, together with solar energy, has seen a tremendous boom over the last 25 years, becoming a pillar of the energy supply in many countries across the globe.
In spite of the climate crisis and the energy crisis induced by the Russian war against Ukraine, new installations in wind power dropped in the year 2022, compared with 2021.
Janine and Stefan discuss the role of wind power, its success stories, special challenges and also the causes for the most recent slowdown in most of the leading wind power nations. Eventually they talk about how wind energy can be an essential part of a climate friendly, decentralised and more democratic energy supply and what the main barriers are to realise this vision.
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The energy sector is the main source of greenhouse gases, particularly in the form of CO2 produced by the burning of coal, oil and gas – the most recent IPCC report has once again underlined the urgency to act here. Accordingly, personal energy footprints are related to certain consumption patterns and wealth.
This raises questions of liability, but also whether and how the unequal distribution of wealth is in itself a major cause of climate catastrophe. On the one hand, the concept of the "ecological footprint" is suitable to show individual responsibility and personal contribution to climate change. At the same time, it carries the risk of shifting the focus from the main polluters to the average or even low-income sections of society, by blaming individuals.
We talk to our guest Dr Marta Baltruszewicz about the the link between energy consumption patterns and well-being. Marta Baltruszewicz has conducted research at the University of Leeds focusing on these areas. What are the links between consumption, shopping, travel, food, housing, heating and climate change on the one hand and the distribution of wealth on the other? We will also discuss with her whether people with more money would be able to invest in climate-friendly technologies such as renewable energies - why is this not happening faster? Do we need new paradigms like sufficiency for climate justice?
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The climate crisis is already a reality, easy to see in the daily news. The most affected people and areas are in particular hit more than other people and areas. These areas are found in particular in the global “South”, they often belong to the less developed countries and some of them have been living with these effects for decades. Not only have these climate crises been predicted by scientists but they are occurring more quickly than predicted.
With the ongoing and accelerating climate crisis, the question arises what people in those areas can do to encounter these developments and how to become more resilient. Internationally often discussed under the themes of “adaptation to climate change” and the right to “loss and damage”, it implies existential threats for billions of people around the globe.
Which kind of support do the most affected people and areas need, and do the most affected people and area governments react accordingly? Are the most responsible countries willing to step by and provide substantial support? The most responsible countries, not only often situated in the global north, are also normally the least affected people and areas. How can the vicious circle be broken that vulnerable countries are pushed to extract even more oil, gas, coal and uranium?
We will speak with our guests David Jesero (Uganda), an activist with Scientist Rebellion, about how they experience climate change today and how it affects the daily life of people. What are the future expectations, in the short and in the longer term, and can there be effective protection against such disasters? How can a lifestyle which stops climate breakdown also make communities and citizens in those areas more resilient, e.g. by using domestic and accessible renewable energy?
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Guests: Dr. Irfan Mirza (Pakistan), Sohanur Rahman (Bangladesh), Maire Joy Barron (New Zealand and Australia)
The climate crisis is already a reality, many of the predictions climate scientists made in the past have already happened. As concrete examples, unprecedented floods killed thousands of people and have destroyed the lives of millions of people in several parts of the world, including in Australia, Bangladesh, Germany, New Zealand and Pakistan.
We speak with our guests from those countries about how the climate disasters have hit their areas and how those countries have been able to re-build what has been destroyed. What are the future expectations, can there be effective protection against such disasters?
How can a lifestyle which stops climate change also make communities and citizens in those areas more resilient, e.g. by using domestic and accessible renewable energy?
Our guest Irfan reports about Pakistan, Sohanur speaks about Bangladesh, and Maire about Lismore, Australia and New Zealand, and Janine tells us about Flemington, Australia, Gävle, Sweden and Stefan about the Ahr valley, Germany.
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One year has passed since Putin’s Russia has attacked Ukraine and occupied major parts of the Ukrainian territory, killing meanwhile tens of thousands of soldiers as well as civilians. An important part of the background is in the one-sided dependency on Russian fossil and nuclear resources which provided the financial resources for Russia’s military and kept energy customers in dependence.
In particular Ukraine has suffered tremendously from this situation and after one year of permanent bombs and shelling, large part of the country’s infrastructure has been destroyed by targeted Russian attacks. The world has been in particular alarmed by military activities around various nuclear power stations. Many millions of Ukrainians had to flee from their homes, to safer places inside and outside the country.
We speak with Ruslana Lyzhichko, first Ukrainian ESC winner, democratic activist and ambassador for 100% renewable energy about her country one year after the war started. Already before the war, she had strongly promoted a renewable energy future for Ukraine, and on 24 February 2022 she called the world community to provide renewable energy equipment to the country. As consequence, the initiative #Renewables4Ukraine has collected more than 150 thousand Euros and has sent more than 1000 smaller and medium sized solar sets to Ukraine, to emergency services as well as to hospitals.
What are the prospects of a renewable energy future for Ukraine today, a country blessed with all types of renewables, and can Ukraine one day, after the war, even become an example for other countries to follow?
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Planet Earth is a complex natural system that has undergone changes throughout its geological history, but never before has the environment, and especially the atmosphere, changed as rapidly as in the last two or three decades. All ecosystems are affected by these dramatic changes, and thus human existence is not only the cause but is also at stake.
The recently deceased world-renowned scientist Will Steffen was one of the leading experts on defining, describing and understanding planetary boundaries, especially in relation to climate. Based on his work, he strongly warned the public and governments around the world against inaction.
We talk to David Spratt, Research Director at the Australian Breakthrough National Centre for Climate Restoration, about Will's scientific but also climate fact and political legacy. What do we need to do to protect humanity and planet Earth? What did Will mean by planetary boundaries and how can we respect them and still provide a good life for 8 billion people?
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Africa is the dynamic continent with fast growing population and relatively low electricity access rates. The continent is also hard hit by climate change, with some regions suffering from famines, in some parts as a consequence of unprecedented droughts.
The continent is also blessed with natural resources, after all with renewable energies, certainly enough to allow a good life for all citizens and communities. Africa has hardly contributed to climate change and has now the unique opportunity to leapfrog the fossil/nuclear ear most industrialised countries have gone through and to enter directly the solar age.
Our guest Dr. Ibrahim Togola has become one of the pioneers of renewable energy not only in his country, Mali, but in the West African region. After studying in St. Petersburg and Denmark, he initiated one of the most active NGOs in Mali, the Malifolkecenter, which implements programmes on climate, energy, agriculture and environment. Later he founded a company which is active in rural electrification.
We talk with Ibrahim about his concrete work, about the challenges he sees for the energy and food supply in Africa and about the prospects for the African continent. How far can the transformation towards modern renewable energy support Africa’s transition towards more resilience, independence and prosperity and what are the main barriers for such future.
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During the COVID pandemic since 2020, governments all over the world followed the advice of the scientific experts and took rigorous measures in order to stop the spreading of the virus which still killed millions of human beings.
There is consensus amongst climate scientists that the current climate policies are totally insufficient and that the world is on its way towards an unprecedented climate disaster - in spite of the fact that it is very well known what needs to be done to stop climate change, after all stop burning oil, gas and coal.
The disappointment by the climate movement about the inaction has been met by unprecedented fire storms, unprecedented floods, unprecedented droughts, unprecedented hunger stones, heat waves etc. UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres stated very clearly: ‘Delay means Death!’, ‘We are on our way to Climate Hell with our foot on the gas pedal!’, and ‘Collective Action or Collective Suicide!’.
Before this background, civil disobedience has become an important tool of the climate movements to create more public awareness about the climate urgency. Our three guests, Violet Coco from Australia, Git Lundström from Sweden and Niko Froitzheim from Germany, have all blocked roads, two of them have already been sentenced to fines respectively to prison. We will discuss with them why they decided to risk serious personal consequences of their protest and what they believe needs to be done to stop climate change.
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The energy sector is the main source of greenhouse gases, especially in the form of CO2 produced by the burning of coal, oil and gas. These energy sources are under the control of a few global corporations, which thereby control a large part of the world economy.
The concentration of fossil and nuclear resources in a few places leads to imbalances and dependencies and has often even led to wars. The recent Russian war against Ukraine has also made it clear to the world that Russia has a strong dominance in supplying many other countries with fossil and nuclear energy resources.
In contrast, renewable energy offers the possibility of local energy supply, where local citizens and communities use renewable energy sources. This represents a major redistribution of economic resources, financial and ultimately political power. This opens up the prospect of a more democratic, inclusive and participatory society.
Hans-Josef Fell, President of the Energy Watch Group, was a pioneer of renewable energy and initiated one of the first community solar projects in Germany. As a member of the German Bundestag between 1998 and 2013, he was one of the fathers of the groundbreaking Renewable Energy Sources Act (EEG). We discuss with him why renewable energies are essential for effective climate protection and why the fight for the climate is also a fight for energy.
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In the first episode of #emPower4Climate, Janine and Stefan discuss why there is still not much progress on mitigating the disastrous climate breakdown although all needed solutions are available.
Janine presents her experience with the founding of the Fridays for Future movement. She was one of the first who talked with Greta Thunberg after Greta had started her school strike, and together they developed the concept for what became one of the biggest social movements ever.
Stefan explains his views on how a climate friendly energy supply would be possible, why it is not yet a reality and why local approaches such as community power are so important. With more than 20 years of experience in international energy politics, he has seen great success stories but also terrifying failures.