Afleveringen

  • This episode is exciting for me personally because it introduces two concepts that are, in my opinion, the largest solutions to climate change. The first is cellular production, bioreactors, and farm-free meat. The second reason I’m excited is because our guest today, Dr. Falconer, discovered a shortcut to solving climate change... with cat food. That's right. And we’re counting on it sounding ridiculous and flying under the radar. It turns out the simple act of producing farm-free cat food in a bioreactor might solve all of the world's meat and agriculture problems at once. Listen and see how soon you can spot what makes it possible.

    Imagine a future where we grow our meat and vegetables at a cellular level inside compact facilities powered by renewable energy. The meat is clean and healthy with no herbicides, pesticides, PFAS or antibiotics. It is tailored to maximize the amount of nutrition our biology and evolution requires.

    Because this food is no longer grown on-farm, it is produced in cities and towns next to the people it feeds where almost anyone, anywhere can make it, meaning no one goes hungry.
    But the best part of this future is outside. Half of the earth’s land surface returns to nature, rewilded, where ecosystems recover. Forests grow from abandoned pastures, pulling carbon out of the atmosphere to build themselves. The animals and birds return to the forests. And humans, well fed and healthy, play with their cats, laughing as they remember that this was all thanks to cat food.

    You can read more by visiting:
    Biocraft
    Captain Furface and the Giant Broink by James. M. Ellis

    Thanks for listening! If you liked this episode, please tell your friends. Hit the like button wherever you heard this so you'll know when the next one comes out. And if you missed any of the episodes, they're waiting for you. Stay optimistic about climate change. Together, we will do this.

    Questions? Comments? Suggestions? Drop us a line on [email protected]

    Music in this episode provided by Artlist.io

    Theme Song - "The Best Thing" by Paper Planes
    00:28 - "A Winter Migration" by Ardie Son
    12:24 and 13:15 - "Forged in Combat" by Idan Kupferberg
    18:07 and 19:48 - "Mouse Trap" by Elad Perez
    24:10 - "The Motions Reprise" by Diffie Bozman

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  • The journal Nature receives 10,000 scientific papers every year, but in 2023 they picked just five as the technologies most likely to make an impact on society. Jupiter Ionics was one of them. Specializing in making ammonia from electrolysis instead of fossil fuels, it is poised to revolutionize not only agriculture but our energy and transportation sectors as well. It is our pleasure to have Douglas MacFarlane, founder of Jupiter Ionics, as our guest.

    Hopefully you've just listened to Episode 9 so you've you got a pretty good picture of how we arrived at the predicament we're in, how we've been supplementing agriculture with artificial nutrients for over 200 years and how ammonia is essential to feeding eight billion people. All of that hinges on the continued production of large global quantities of ammonia. So now you're ready for solutions, and Jupiter Ionics is one of them.

    You can read more by visiting:
    Jupiter Ionics
    A Roadmap to the Ammonia Economy

    Thanks for listening! If you liked this episode, please tell your friends. Hit the like button wherever you heard this so you'll know when the next one comes out. And if you missed any of the episodes, they're waiting for you. Stay optimistic about climate change. Together, we will do this.

    Music in this episode provided by Artlist.io

    Theme Song - "The Best Thing" by Paper Planes
    00:00 and 00:54 - "Milk Steak" by DoGBeaT
    07:13 - "The Long Ride Home" by Kashido
    13:05 - "Mangrove" by Low Light
    08:17 - "Lost Are We" by Alon Peretz
    15:32 - "Ocean Sunrise" by Kevin P. Holt
    19:14 - "Ten Lost Years" by Yehezkel Raz
    20:56 - "Shimmer" by Adrien de la Salle

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    Klik hier om de feed te vernieuwen.

  • You might be surprised to hear it phrased this way, but you are a fossil fuel product.

    Half of the nitrogen atoms in your body are artificially synthesized. They are a product of the Haber-Bosch process, a process that requires fossil fuels. The world's population relies on fossil fuels powering the Haber-Bosch production of ammonia, used in fertilizer, to grow the food that keeps us alive. You are what you eat.

    In fact, without fossil fuels you probably wouldn’t exist on earth today. When we talk about our carbon footprint, the only real question is which foot – the right or the left.

    That might be a lot to swallow, so we’re going to approach this in two episodes. Because to understand the magnitude of the technology Douglas MacFarlane developed with his team at Monash University, to see how radically it will change the world, you’ll first need to understand how we got here. And this story is so huge, so all-encompassing, and (despite being something we’re all living through) almost completely unknown to you, that we’ll have to lay the groundwork in this episode for you to appreciate the next.

    So, get ready for birds, bones, and guns as we explore ammonia.

    Our guest today is Douglas MacFarlane of Jupiter Ionics. He and his team developed a new method to produce ammonia without fossil fuels. Green ammonia might play a very big role in solving climate change and bring ammonia redemption.

    Thanks for listening! If you liked this episode, please tell your friends. Hit the like button wherever you heard this so you'll know when the next one comes out. And if you missed any of the episodes, they're waiting for you. Stay optimistic about climate change. Together, we will do this.

    Sound FX by Pixabay Sound Effects
    Music in this episode provided by Artlist.io

    Theme Song - "The Best Thing" by Paper Planes
    00:00 - "It Dont Rain" by Ben Strawn
    04:05 - "Sentiment" by Runar Blesvik
    08:00 - "Finale" by David Morton
    08:17 - "Lost Are We" by Alon Peretz
    11:42 - "Auf Wiedersehn" by Victor Dance Orchestra
    14:20 - "Battle of the Nations" by Conways Band
    15:01 - "Ebb and Flow" by Kadir Demir
    20:00 - "Heavens" by Itai Argaman

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  • Today we're looking at trees.


    This was not the episode I wanted to do next. I had a few others planned, but everywhere I looked for replacements to fossil fuels, people thought trees were the answer. Architects specifying timber to replace concrete in low-embodied-carbon buildings, companies buying carbon credits from forests to reach net-zero, biomass replacing coal in coal fired power plants. Every solution I heard felt... weird.


    Trees don't strike me as a 21st century high-tech solution to climate change. Maybe I'm crazy. You tell me. Listen to these voices and tell me if you sense the weirdness.

    There are approximately three trillion trees on earth today. That sounds like a lot, but there used to be more. Before human agriculture, there were twice as many, about six trillion trees. Humans removed 46% of all the planet’s trees since the dawn of agriculture, and half of that happened since 1900. So pervasive has human intervention been that only about 34% of the world's forests are primary forests, you know, the kind we think of when we hear the word “forest”. That's 34% AFTER the 50% we've already removed. That means 85% of the world's original forests are currently serving human use.

    Half of them serve us by no longer existing at all.

    The truth is, whatever we use timber for, timber is not renewable. It is a finite resource, one that competes with all of our other resources, and one we've already half depleted.

    When you see it like this, you realize so many of our attempts to use trees are absurd. The ideas that we’re pushing to make more, to use more, to burn more, to bury more are such consumerist concepts. They’re anathema to all environmental beliefs and scientific understanding, but it’s environmentalists and scientists proposing it.

    That's weird.

    How unnatural are we willing to make nature in order to clean up our mess? More correctly, how much MORE unnatural than the 85% we already have.

    This obsession of ours for the regenerative beauty of trees, this timberpunk view of returning to a yesteryear we've long since depleted, this puerile faith in nature to clean up our adult-sized mess, our love of forests may yet be the end of them.

    This podcast is called Replace, Remove, Recover, and as you can see from trees, we get so motivated by Replace Remove that we often forget about Recover. We need to stop looking at nature as a renewable resource and see it for the finite and closed system it is. The next time you’re looking for a low carbon alternative, don’t look at trees. Don’t ask nature to solve this for you. Recover means we need a plan for the next million years.

    If you want to make a difference, contact the Rainforest Action Network to see how you can protect a forest, not for carbon credits, but for survival. Talk to your local Climate Change Commission to treat biomass the same way we treat coal. Tell your local Emissions Trading Scheme to divorce forests from carbon, forcing funds to be spent on anthropogenic solutions to anthropogenic emissions.

    We need solutions that don't involve trees.

    Rainforest Action Network: https://www.ran.org/

    If you enjoyed this episode, please share it with someone you know who needs to hear it. If it made you feel, made you angry, made you cry, let someone else feel the same.

    Music in this episode provided by Artlist.io

    Theme Song - "The Best Thing" by Paper Planes
    01:10 - "Sero" by Crest
    03:30 - "Many Persons in His Head" by Max H.
    06:10 - "What We Have Lost" by David James Terry
    10:06 - "Many Persons in His Head" by Max H.
    11:59 - "Four on Five" by Yehezkel Raz
    13:05 - "Vacuum" by Buddha Kid
    15:00 - "Sleeper Valley" by Ardie Son
    19:18 - "Erased from My Mind" by Kevin Graham
    24:31 - "Less Than Tomorrow" by Raphael Angelini
    25:39 - "Four on Five" by Yehezkel Raz
    27:58 - "Less Than Tomorrow" by Raphael Angelini

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  • Today, we're looking at one of the world's largest sources of emissions - cement. How do we make cement, and why are emissions so intense? Hint: this time it's not fossil fuels. To find out, we'll look at how the world's second largest cement manufacturer, Holcim, is reducing the embodied emissions of their product. But then we'll go further. We'll talk to Zarina Bazoeva and Matt Kennedy-Good, the founders of Neocrete, a company poised to replace cement and eliminate emissions altogether.

    But first, we have a party to attend. Let's go!

    For more on Holcim, visit https://www.holcim.co.nz/ecoplanet
    For more on Neocrete, visit https://www.neocrete.co.nz/

    Music in this episode provided by Artlist.io

    Theme Song - "The Best Thing" by Paper Planes
    00:36 - "Embrace the Ocean" by Evgeny Bardyuzha
    03:41 - "Satin and Kashmir" by FrozenjaZz
    07:50 - "Tijuana" by Randy Sharp
    09:19 - "A Forest Dark" by Alon Peretz
    10:17 - "Lost Are We" by Alon Peretz
    15:07 - "Origin" by Theatre of Delays
    27:34 - "Exceptional" by TURPAK
    29:22 - "The Morning Lights" by Francesco D'Andrea

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  • In this episode, we'll focus on wave energy. We're speaking with Heikki Paakkinen, CEO of Finland's Holvi Energy.

    Three billion humans get their energy from coal. To replace coal and other fossil fuels, we'll need to find an alternative. What if we could solve this by harnessing an energy source that never stops, a technology that rivals wind, enjoys 30 years of little to no maintenance, with no environmental impact?

    We can. It already exists. It's floating off the coasts of Taiwan, Spain, Barbados, and Scotland. Holvi Energy developed a device that produces power from wave action alone. Like an unstable boat, it uses off-the-shelf parts to turn wave power into electrical power. Listen to Heikki Paakkinen explain how, and learn how three billion people will get their energy from the sea.

    For more, visit Holvi Energy

    Music in this episode provided by Artlist.io

    Theme Song - The Best thing - Paper Planes
    00:46 - Young Rich Pixies - Monster from the Deep
    03:11 - Yehezkel Raz - Shallow Water
    05:46 - C.K. Martin - Arise a Legend
    11:21 and 16:36 - Yehezkel Raz - Deep Blue Sea
    12:51 - Ardie Son - Spoil the Mystery
    19:35 - Noam Zaguri - Driving Home
    22:15 - Life in colour - Waking Up

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  • In this episode, we'll focus on induction cooking. We're speaking with Glen Rockhouse, Chef of 30 years and a kitchen designer at Reward Hospitality.

    Imagine you're out for a nice dinner at that restaurant everyone's been ravign about. As you enjoy a meal with your friends, somewhere, deep in the bowels of the kitchen, a gas burner flares, cooking your food. When you look at how much gas that equates to, in every kitchen around the world, it's staggering.

    To replace all that gas, we now have the technology to cook with... magnets. Induction isn't a new technology, but it's taking over. This is best thing to happen to chefs in the last 780,000 years.

    Music in this episode provided by Artlist.io

    Theme Song - The Best thing - Paper Planes

    02:50 Semo - Insomniac's Dream

    03:38 Taru - Ancient Cave

    05:26 Castle Heist - Something New

    All SFX and Foley work by RRR

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  • In this episode, we'll focus on unintended consequences - Jevons Paradox, Goodhart's Law, and the Cobra Effect (perverse incentive).

    For the last few decades there's been a push for energy efficiency, meant to be a stopgap, a way for the world to slow down climate change until replacements for fossil fuels reached parity.

    But in the context of climate change, it doesn't matter how efficient we can ever make our fossil fuel use. We're still emitting.

    So let's look at how intensive programmes to stop climate change only make it worse, and why. To understand this perplexing problem, we'll take a journey back in time...

    Music in this episode provided by Artlist.io

    Theme Song - The Best thing - Paper Planes
    01:03 Suraj Nepal - The Essence of Sound feat. Rohit Manadhar
    02:31 Kevin Graham - Cora
    04:37 and 06:36 Shahead Mostafafar - Paradox
    06:59 Ben Bostick - Strange Duck - Instrumental Version
    08:08 Francesco D'Andrea - Nice to Bit You
    10:39 FVMELESS - Trilly
    11:32 Jonathan Guerstein - Coming Soon
    12:30 Sid Acharya - Solitude
    16:49 ANBR - Premiere

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  • Climate change may be caused by carbon emissions, but it's humans who made that happen. Until we learn how to manage... us... we won't solve climate change. While science focused on the technology, the statistics, the parts per million, we should have focused on the pscyhology, the economics, the humans per billion.

    So in this episode, we'll look at how we're not as rational as we think, and how we even sabotage ourselves. We'll be looking at the economic models that explain human behaviour, models like Loss Aversion and Parkinson's Law. These starting points mightl help us avoid the paths we've been on, paths that led nowhere, so we can reach a solution on climate change. And as it turns out, one of these ideas already won a Nobel Prize...

    Music in this episode provided by Artlist.io

    Theme Song - The Best thing - Paper Planes
    00:27 Hey Judy - Joke book Duet
    00:56 Master Minded - Surrender
    01:05 Theater of Delays - Outer Limits
    02:01 ANBR - Premiere
    11:52 Ziv Grinberg - It's Fun Being a Cat
    12:13 Salt of the Sound - In Light Ascending

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  • In many ways the climate crisis mimics the death of a loved one, causing us to experience the Grief Cycle. It may even feel like the doctor has handed you the diagnosis of a terminal illness. Elisabeth Kubler-Ross wrote of the inevitable and natural way humans deal with grief, cycling through denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance. If these sound familiar, it's because we all experience this with climate change. Of course you're familiar with denial, but what about the others? Each stage has a corresponding action. It is impossible for us to solve climate change until we have reached acceptance. What stage are you in?

    Music in this episode provided by Artlist.io

    Theme Song - The Best thing - Paper Planes
    0:50 Mattiea Vlad Morleo - Stay
    2:14 Jon Gegelman - The Core is Gone
    4:05 Ace - Astral Body
    4:56 Yotam Agam - Qing Long
    9:22 ANBF - Yearning
    13:41 Jonas Kolberg - Golden Hour

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  • Why haven't we stopped climate change? This episode explores four reasons we haven't stopped climate change in the past, and some very good reasons to start. An essential primer for first-time listeners, and a powerful motivator for anyone who wants to make a difference in climate change.

    Music in this episode provided by Artlist.io

    Theme Song - The Best thing - Paper Planes
    00:28 Frank Bentley - It's a Fast Life!
    01:37 Jimmy Svensson - Bad Connection
    03:55 Setup - Oliver Michael
    05:50 Stanley Gurvich - Free Radicals
    08:39 Falling to Zero - Michael Vignola
    10:32 Home - Oliver Michael
    11:54 Fallen - Kevin Gaham

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