• China's Five Year Energy Plan
    May 11 2026

    In this episode, we speak with David Fishman, Principal at The Lantau Group, about the energy sections of China’s draft 15th Five-Year Plan.


    The conversation explores China’s evolving energy system, including the shift from energy intensity to emissions intensity, the continued role of coal as a strategic backup fuel, the growth of renewables, electrification, power market reform, green finance, grid expansion, and China’s increasingly assertive role in global climate governance.


    Key Takeaways

    1) China’s Five-Year Plan is less a rulebook than a signal system.

    2) It identifies priorities, shapes incentives, and gives officials permission to experiment.

    3) Energy security is now central to China’s clean energy strategy.

    4) Renewables, electrification, grid expansion, and domestic production are all framed around resilience.

    5) China is shifting from energy intensity to emissions intensity, and while coal is not disappearing its role is changing.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    1 hr
  • China is the OPEC of Renewable Energies
    May 7 2026

    In this video, I speak through how China moved from a country struggling with smog to become the “OPEC of renewable energy.”


    It is a presentation that I believe highlights that progress was not the result of one subsidy, one policy, or one technology breakthrough, but the outcome of a long-term national strategy shaped by urgent, tangible problems: severe air pollution, energy security risks, industrial upgrading, and the need to build future-facing jobs and intellectual property.


    Key Takeaways

    1) China’s renewable energy dominance came from solving real problems, not just chasing carbon goals.

    2) Smog created the urgency for policy alignment, industrial reform, and clean energy investment.

    3) Solar success was built through integrated supply chains, rapid innovation, and massive domestic demand.

    4) China’s renewable energy strategy also strengthened energy security, jobs, IP, and export potential.

    5) Other countries can learn from China’s roadmap, but must adapt it to their own governance, resources, and local challenges.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    41 mins
  • How Climate Change Exacerbates Living Conditions in African Slums
    May 7 2026

    In this episode, we explore how climate change exacerbates living conditions in African slums, turning already fragile environments into increasingly difficult places to live. What was once seen as a distant issue—melting ice caps and rising sea levels—is now a daily reality for millions of people facing heat, flooding, food insecurity, and worsening infrastructure.


    Joe Muturi, President of the Slum Dwellers International network, shares his personal journey into community organizing and offers a ground-level perspective on the realities of informal settlements. He explains how these communities are shaped by systemic failures in urban planning, political neglect, and economic exclusion—and why solutions must begin with the people who live there.


    Throughout the conversation, Joe highlights the importance of community-led development, the role of data and organization in driving change, and the need for long-term coordination across governments, civil society, and local stakeholders. He also challenges common assumptions about funding, arguing that the real barriers are not financial, but structural and political.


    This episode is a powerful look at the intersection of climate, poverty, and urban development—and a call to rethink how we approach one of the fastest-growing challenges in cities around the world.


    Key Takeaways:

    1. Climate change is amplifying existing vulnerabilities

    2. Informal settlements are the result of systemic failure, not choice

    3. The biggest barrier is not money—it’s coordination and political will

    4. Community-led development is essential to real solutions

    5. Progress is slow, but driven by small, meaningful wins

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    37 mins
  • Understanding The Human Impact of Climate Change
    Apr 10 2026
    Joanna de Berry, World Bank

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    44 mins
  • Sustainability with Indigenous Knowledge and Leadership
    Mar 27 2026

    In this episode of the Sustainable Ambassador Podcast, we speak with Prabindra Shakya about Rethinking Sustainable Development with Indigenous Leadership — and why climate progress, energy transitions, and the Sustainable Development Goals must move beyond top-down technical models. Prabindra, a human rights and Indigenous rights defender with nearly two decades of experience, argues that sustainable development will only succeed when Indigenous leadership and traditional knowledge are placed at the center of decision-making.


    Drawing from his work in Nepal and across Asia, Prabindra explains how many modern development projects — from hydropower and mining to carbon markets — continue patterns of dispossession under the banner of progress. While the impacts are often local, the drivers are global: international finance, supply chains, and legal systems that fail to recognize Indigenous peoples as rights-holders.


    We explore what real balance looks like in the energy transition, why “green” solutions can still cause harm if communities are excluded, and how Indigenous-led energy and development models offer practical alternatives. The conversation also dives into the realities of advocacy — pushing multilateral banks, leveraging international standards, and securing small but meaningful wins for communities.


    If we are serious about climate action and equitable development, we must rethink sustainable development — and ensure Indigenous leadership shapes the path forward.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    42 mins
  • Indigenous Rights Must Be Core to Climate Solutions
    Mar 20 2026

    In this episode of the Sustainable Ambassador Podcast, we speak with Eriel Deranger of Indigenous Climate Action about why protecting Indigenous rights and lands must be central to any real climate solution.


    Through this discussion we unpack the tension between urgency and intention in climate action, why “inclusion” often becomes assimilation, and what it takes to build climate solutions that are equitable, durable, and grounded in real community power.


    This conversation is a call to look back in order to move forward—so we don’t rebuild the future using the same systems that created today’s crises.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    44 mins
  • Climate Change, Heat and Brain Health
    Mar 13 2026
    Burcin Ikiz, Neuro Climate Working Group

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    43 mins
  • How Climate Change and Pollution Impact the Heart
    Mar 6 2026

    In this episode of the Sustainable Ambassador Podcast, I sit down with Professor Mark Miller of the University of Edinburgh to explore how climate change and pollution impact the heart — and what really happens inside the body when we’re exposed to environmental stress.


    From air pollution to rising temperatures, we unpack how a warming world is placing measurable strain on the cardiovascular system.


    For decades, we’ve known polluted air damages the lungs. But Mark’s research shows something deeper and more systemic: even short-term exposure to diesel exhaust can stiffen blood vessels, elevate blood pressure, and disrupt heart rhythms — effects that resemble years of accumulated cardiovascular stress.


    As climate change increases heatwaves and alters pollution patterns, these stressors don’t act alone.


    They interact.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    45 mins