

Climate One
Climate One from The Commonwealth Club
We’re living through a climate emergency; addressing this crisis begins by talking about it. Co-Hosts Greg Dalton, Ariana Brocious and Kousha Navidar bring you empowering conversations that connect all aspects of the challenge — the scary and the exciting, the individual and the systemic. Join us.Subscribe to Climate One on Patreon for access to ad-free episodes.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Aug 25, 2018 • 51min
Permanently Temporary: Living with Rising Seas
The reality of permanent change along the shoreline is starting to slowly sink in. Recent studies indicate that vulnerability to changing tides is starting to be reflected in property markets around the country. And now cities are grappling with how to build roads, airports and other infrastructure for a very uncertain future. How fast and how high will the tides rise? No one knows for sure but every new forecast tends to be faster and higher than scientists predicted just a few years ago.
Elaine Forbes
Executive Director, Port of San Francisco
Nahal Ghoghaie
Bay Area Program Lead, The Environmental Justice Coalition for Water
Larry Goldzband
Executive Director, Bay Conservation and Development Commission Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Aug 17, 2018 • 52min
National Security and Climate Change
What’s the connection between climate change and national security? “Military commanders don't operate on the basis of fiction,” says Leon Panetta, who served as Secretary of Defense and Director of the CIA under President Obama. “Understanding climate change and what was happening had to be part and parcel of our effort to protect our security.” The military has long seen climate as critical to readiness, as Rear Admiral David Titley (Ret) explains. “If you’re directly connecting renewable energy to increasing our combat effectiveness,” explains Titley, “the military is all in.”
Leon Panetta,
Former Secretary of Defense
Rear Admiral David W. Titley, USN (Ret)
Director, Center for Solutions to Weather and Climate Risk, Penn State University
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Aug 10, 2018 • 51min
California Greenin': Shaping America’s Environment
California. Land of sunshine and seashore. In an effort to protect the state’s magnificent landscape, California has led the country in environmental action. It established strong automobile emission standards. It preserved fragile lands from development. But as climate change fuels megafires across the state and sea level rise threatens the coast, is California doing enough, fast enough?
Huey Johnson
Chair, Resource Renewal Institute
Jason Mark
Editor, Sierra Magazine
David Vogel
Author, California Greenin’: How the Golden State Became an Environmental Leader Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Aug 3, 2018 • 52min
The New Surf and Turf
Production of animal protein is producing vast amounts of climate-eating gases. But a new generation of companies are creating innovative food products that mimic meat and have much smaller environmental impacts. Some of this mock meat is derived from plants with ingredients designed to replicate the taste and pleasure of chomping into a beef hamburger. Others are growing meat cells that come from a laboratory and not a cow. Will those options wean enough people from burgers and chicken wings to go mainstream?
Guests
Patrick O. Brown
CEO and Founder, Impossible Foods
Carolyn Jung
Journalist/Blogger, FoodGal.com
Mike Selden
CEO and Co-founder, Finless Foods Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Jul 27, 2018 • 52min
We're Doomed. Now What?
Can changing our consciousness hold off the climate apocalypse? When we think about the enormity of climate change and what it’s doing to our planet, it’s easy to get overwhelmed, even shut down, by despair. But is despair such a bad place to be? Or could it be the one thing that finally spurs us to action? A conversation about climate change, spirituality and the human condition in unsettling times.Guests: Roy Scranton, Author, "We're Doomed. Now What?" (Soho Press, 2018)Matthew Fox, Co-Author, "Order of the Sacred Earth" (with Skylar Wilson, Monkfish, 2018) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Jul 20, 2018 • 53min
Climate Storytellers
Strategic Adviser for National Geographic, Andrew Revkin, has been writing about climate change since the 1980s, including 21 years for The New York Times. So what are some things he’s learned in those three decades? How has he learned to best tell the story? As New Yorker writer Elizabeth Kolbert knows all too well, covering climate change is journey that can be a challenge. “On some level it’s the worst story ever. It’s sort of everything and nothing and so finding the narrative is very, very difficult,” says Kolbert. This is a conversation with those telling the story of our climate.
Guests:
Andrew Revkin
Strategic Adviser for Environmental and Science Journalism, National Geographic Society
Elizabeth Kolbert
Journalist, The New Yorker
David Roberts
Staff Writer, Vox Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Jul 12, 2018 • 52min
New Wheels in Town
Electric scooters, skateboards and bicycles are popping up all over in cities all over the country. Ride-hailing companies are also moving to two wheels. Uber bought the bike sharing company Jump, and Lyft followed suit by scooping up Motivate, which operates bike sharing services in San Francisco, Boston, Chicago, New York and other cities. Is an electric skateboard company next? As companies jockey to offer a suite of transportation options what is the future of urban mobility? Are these new urban toys really solving the notorious first-mile and last-mile problem?
Guests:
Stuart Cohen, Executive Director, TransForm
Sanjay Dastoor, Co-Founder, Boosted Boards and CEO, Skip Scooters
Megan Rose Dickey, Senior Reporter, TechCrunch
This program was recorded live at The Commonwealth Club in San Francisco on June 20, 2018. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Jul 10, 2018 • 52min
Making the Grade: Corporations and the Paris Climate Accord
When you think of climate activism, Wall Street doesn’t immediately come to mind. But as investors are coming to realize, they do have a voice – and a vote – when it comes to corporate environmental action. Responsible investing is a concept that’s been around for many years, but it’s only recently that companies have begun to take notice. And who’s driving that change? Shareholders. Greg Dalton talks with three experts about the ways that market forces can turn the ship, inspiring awareness, transparency and in some cases, even change, in seemingly immovable corporations.
Guests:
Betty Cremmins, Director, Carbon Disclosure Project West
Danielle Fugere, President & Chief Counsel, As You Sow
John Streur, President & CEO, Calvert Research and Management
Portions of this program were recorded at The Commonwealth Club in San Francisco. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Jun 29, 2018 • 53min
Summer Films on Corn, Coal, Lights and Flights
It’s a summer movie special as Climate One talks to the directors/producers of four recent documentaries that bring human drama to the climate story: Hillbilly, which explores the myths and realities of life in the Appalachian coalfields; My Country No More, the story of one rural community divided by the North Dakota oil boom; Saving the Dark, which focuses on the battle of dark-sky enthusiasts to fight light pollution; and Point of No Return, in which two pilots risk their lives flying around the world in a solar-powered plane that is as delicate as a t-shirt.
Guests:
Rita Baghdadi, Co-Director, My Country No More
Noel Dockstader, Co-Director, Point of No Return
Jeremiah Hammerling, Co-Directo, My Country No More
Quinn Kanaly, Co-Director, Point of No Return
Sriram Murali, Director/Producer, Saving the Dark
Sally Rubin, Co-Director, Hillbilly
Portions of this program were recorded at The Commonwealth Club in San Francisco.
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Jun 22, 2018 • 52min
Rounding Up the Facts on GMOs
Are GMOs the answer to our planet’s food shortage? Or do they jeopardize our health, crops and climate by creating a destructive cycle of Roundup resistance? Like many issues these days, it depends on who you believe. Supporters of genetically modified organisms say that altering the DNA of corn and other crops is just another tool in the farmers’ toolbox - an innovation that will help feed a world whose food production has been disrupted by climate change. Opponents maintain that modified crops are dangerous to our health and are resistant to pesticides such as Monsanto’s Roundup, which has been linked to cancer. Join us for a lively conversation about the science and facts behind growing and eating GMOs.
Guests:
Marcia Ishii-Eiteman, Senior Scientist, Director Grassroots Science Program, Pesticide Action Network
Scott Kennedy, Filmmaker, Food Evolution
John Purcell, VP and Global R&D Lead, Monsanto Company
Austin Wilson, Environmental Health Program Manager, As You Sow
This program was recorded live at The Commonwealth Club in San Francisco on May 25, 2017.
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