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We know a lot about the crisis. We know that it is time to progress from understanding the problems to solving them. However, we also know that there is no perfect solution. It is a matter of shifting understanding and knowledge from science to society, from data to stories, from facts to solutions. This episode is where Earth sciences meet journalism to address overarching solutions that already exist, ones that need global and local consensus, and those that are built ground up by local communities. With Kate Marvel (Project Drawdown), Fara Warner (Solution Journalism Network), and investigative journalist Jelena Prtorić.Foresight - Deep into the Future Planet, a podcast produced by the CMCC and FACTA.The concept, interviews and texts are by Elisabetta Tola and Giulia Bonelli.The audio editing is by Lisa Lazzarato. The original music is by Massimo Bassan.The executive producer at CMCC is Mauro Buonocore. Foresight - Deep into the Future Planet is an initiative of climateforesight.eu
Di come attrezzarci a capire la qualità, e la validità delle informazioni scientifiche e di come ragionare, insieme, per trovare soluzioni alla circolazione caotica di informazioni sbagliate, nocive, pericolose, abbiamo parlato, durante il Festival del Giornalismo di Perugia, con Massimo Polidoro, giornalista, saggista, divulgatore molto attivo anche sulle piattaforme social, co-fondatore assieme a Piero Angela del CICAP, il comitato italiano per il controllo delle affermazioni pseudoscientifiche, e autore di più di 60 libri, l'ultimo dei quali è “La scienza dell'incredibile”, appena uscito per Feltrinelli editore.
Money moves the attention of people, investors, and capital owners. Money is part of many solutions to the climate deadlock. But numbers are not enough to calculate the economic value of the climate issue. Numbers are only the final step on a road that passes through many crossroads: climate change has huge economic, social and cultural costs. Assessing these costs is challenging yet vital for our planet's future. And when it comes to climate policies, responding to different climate emergencies requires different lenses. In this episode, we dive into the world of climate finance through the voices of two experts working in two different fields of economics in two different parts of the globe. Johannes Emmerling is a German economist based in Italy and a senior scientist at the European Institute on Economics and the Environment and at the Euro-Mediterranean Centre on Climate Change. His research focuses on climate change and energy economics, risk and uncertainty, welfare economics and development. Marc Watum is a development expert from South Africa with a management consulting and project finance background. He is the chairman of Vision 2030 Fund, an African social innovation fund for agriculture, food, and water startups. With them, we explore the cost of climate change and the possible solutions.Foresight - Deep into the Future Planet, a podcast produced by the CMCC and FACTA.The concept, interviews and texts are by Elisabetta Tola and Giulia Bonelli.The audio editing is by Lisa Lazzarato. The original music is by Massimo Bassan.The executive producer at CMCC is Mauro Buonocore. Foresight - Deep into the Future Planet is an initiative of climateforesight.eu
The Urgenda case was the game changer. It opened up a new dialogue between human rights law and climate science, while it marked a watershed moment for climate justice: from then on, we saw new measures to protect people from the harms posed by climate change. We start from there with the voices of those who experienced the Urgenda case on the front line. We tell the story of climate litigation and why it is a crucial aspect of the future planet.We explore how scientific information can inform climate justice through the voices of a scientist and a lawyer: Delta Merner, Lead Scientist of the Science Hub for Climate Litigation at the Union of Concerned Scientists, and Lucy Maxwell, human rights and climate change lawyer and co-director of the Climate Litigation Network within the Urgenda Foundation. Each from their specific perspective, they share the common goal of making climate justice a reality worldwide. And they believe that, in the future, climate litigation will be successful when we don't need it anymore.You have listened to Foresight – Deep into the Future Planet,a podcast produced by the CMCC Euro-Mediterranean Centre on Climate Change and FACTA.The concept, interviews and texts are by Elisabetta Tola and Giulia Bonelli.The audio editing is by Lisa Lazzarato.The original music is by Massimo Bassan.The executive producer at CMCC is Mauro Buonocore.Foresight – Deep into the Future Planet, is available on climateforesight.eu and wherever you listen to your podcasts.
Knowledge is power. It is the backbone of an alliance that spans the farthest corners of the planet to the laboratories of the most advanced scientific research. In this episode, we explore the terrain where science meets civil society that triggers climate action. With stories of people in the Global South where natural resources "are being used as a weapon."Because the climate is not just an environmental issue, dealing with climate change also means building a future of peace and stability, especially in regions wounded by conflicts over controlling and managing natural resources. Regions that, in addition to being among the most vulnerable to climate change, are also the hardest hit by social and economic inequity and gender inequality.Iraq and Colombia are dramatically close, in the words of Salman Khairalla and Paola Arias. They tell us of people's lives crossed by the Tigris and the Euphrates, by scientific reports, by the availability of food and water, by the importance of a civil society that, starting from the best available science, gets itself informed and committed to orient political decisions. Or, in other words, to build the best possible future.Foresight - Deep into the Future Planet, a podcast produced by the CMCC and FACTA. The concept, interviews and texts are by Elisabetta Tola and Giulia Bonelli. The audio editing is by Lisa Lazzarato. The original music is by Massimo Bassan.The executive producer at CMCC is Mauro Buonocore. Foresight - Deep into the Future Planet is an initiative of climateforesight.eu
A trip among satellites, robots and bottles. One that oscillates between the heights of the atmosphere and the surface of the sea. We ride on carbon dioxide molecules to understand how relevant the word budget can be in delivering a future where climate neutrality takes shape. An attainable horizon as long as we follow a simple little rule: "Don't look at what they say. Look at what we're doing”.For Joellen Russell, the future is in our hands. This is a belief she matured on her journey that started as a child in a tiny fishing village in the Arctic Circle and led her to study the movements of the sea and atmosphere to the point of bringing the ocean into weather forecasting. Oceanographer, climate scientist, and Professor at the University of Arizona Joellen Russell's research combines models and observations to study and predict the ocean's role in the climate and carbon cycle of the past, present and future. Russell has a vision for our sustainable future: we are already building it, and we will complete the job in a few decades. How? Follow us on this carbon trip to find out.Foresight - Deep into the Future Planet, a podcast produced by the CMCC and FACTA. The concept, interviews and texts are by Elisabetta Tola and Giulia Bonelli. The audio editing is by Lisa Lazzarato. The original music is by Massimo Bassan.The executive producer at CMCC is Mauro Buonocore. Foresight - Deep into the Future Planet is an initiative of climateforesight.eu
Behind the scenes of the climate negotiations, where the whole world sits around the same table. We discover the swing of frustration and excitement underlying the process that brings to globally awaited treaties. It is a plot of interminable sessions, under the danger of a deadlock that is always around the corner, behind a comma or a single concept. Scientists, delegates and a journalist unveil how a climate agreement takes shape in the halls and the corridors of an International Climate Conference.Once a year, delegations from all over the world gather to discuss global actions against the climate crisis. It is the COP, one of the most longed-for appointments in the global effort to limit global warming as close as possible to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.But how do we get there? What happens behind doors when scientists, delegates, and politicians from all over the world meet, discuss and decide? In this episode, we enter into the complicated world of official climate reports and negotiations.Lucia Perugini, part of the Italian Delegation during the UNFCCC negotiations, Shouro Dasgupta, contributors to the Sixth IPCC report and the Lancet Countdown report, and Leo Hickman, science journalist and Director of Carbon Brief, guide us into the room of a COP negotiation, through the delicate writing of official climate reports, and then into the process of conveying these crucial and yet complex results to people all over the world.From their specific perspectives, they explain the reasons why any negotiation is important, any agreement can make a difference in fighting the climate crisis, the most important challenge we face as humanity today.Foresight – Deep into the Future Planet, a podcast produced by the CMCC Euro-Mediterranean Centre on Climate Change and FACTA.The concept, interviews and writing are by Elisabetta Tola and Giulia Bonelli.The audio editing is by Lisa Lazzarato.The Executive Producer at CMCC is Mauro Buonocore.Foresight – Deep into the Future Planet, available on climateforesight.eu and wherever you listen to your podcasts.
The blood vessel of Egypt meets China: the world's plumber-in-chief. A journey which starts with the Neolithic revolution, passes through the “hydraulic century” and carries us into the future. By following the history of water, we delve into the roots of human civilization, crossing paths with science, technology, politics, and the stories of people and places.In this episode we follow the course of water. In China, in front of the Three Gorges Dam, the largest on the planet, both the force of nature and the power of man to shape and mould landscapes are on show.In Egypt, at the meeting point between the Middle East and Africa, we venture down the Nile, a river that has accompanied man since the beginning of ancient civilizations and that still today is synonymous with life for the entire region.We continue to follow water in its journey from Venice to Alexandria, from the legacy of Ancient Rome to the American Republic and the British Empire, up to the modern era and the “hydraulic century”, where institutions are shaped by the relationship between man and water.Join us on this journey with scientist Giulio Boccaletti, author of the book “Water. A Biography”, and Rehab Abd Almohsen, Egyptian science journalist and water expert: two voices that will help us understand the key role of water in the future and in the build-up to COP27.Foresight – Deep into the Future Planet, a podcast produced by the CMCC Euro-Mediterranean Centre on Climate Change and FACTA.The concept, interviews and writing are by Elisabetta Tola and Giulia Bonelli.The audio editing is by Lisa Lazzarato.The Executive Producer at CMCC is Mauro Buonocore.Foresight – Deep into the Future Planet, available on climateforesight.eu and wherever you listen to your podcasts.
Si sta per aprire a Glasgow la COP26: qual è la posta in gioco e come siamo arrivati fin qui?
Facebook punta a cambiare nome. E a creare un metaverso, cioè un mondo virtuale 3D popolato dai nostri avatar
Al festival della Scienza di Genova, tra linguistica computazionale e geometria delle mappe
È il momento di assicurarci che saper leggere i dati faccia parte della nostra educazione
Pier Paolo Di Fiore, con "Il prezzo dell'immortalità" (Il Saggiatore, 2020), è il vincitore del Premio Galileo 2021
Ospiti: Stefano Bertacchi; Elisabetta Tola; Federica Ferrario
Da venerdì a domenica Mantova ospita il Food and Science Festival
Da oggi a domenica il capoluogo friulano ospita Trieste NEXT, grande kermesse dedicata ogni anno alla ricerca applicata e alle nuove tecnologie
Ragazzo prodigio da piccolo, Terence Tao, 46 anni, è oggi uno dei più grandi matematici del nostro tempo
L'intreccio tra scienza e letteratura in "Atlante occidentale", il capolavoro di Daniele Del Giudice, scomparso a settembre
"Rumore. Un difetto del ragionamento umano" (UTET 2021): sfogliamo il nuovo saggio di Daniel Kahneman, Olivier Sibony e Cass R. Sunstein sui processi decisionali
Da oggi cominceranno le somministrazioni delle terze dosi di vaccini anti-Covid. A quali soggetti saranno distribuite e secondo quali criteri?
Storie di inventori a cui fu "soffiata" l'idea
Come vincere l'eterno testa a testa tra antibiotici sempre più sofisticati e batteri sempre più resistenti?
La crisi climatica rende l'acqua sempre più preziosa
Non ci pensiamo quasi mai, ma le tracce che lasciamo online ci sopravvivono
Il consumo di tabacco in Italia e il ruolo della Cina nel commercio internazionale di tabacco
Hua Zhibing è la prima studentessa virtuale al mondo
Ripercorriamo le storie delle materie prime che hanno decretato lo sviluppo o la crisi delle nostre società
Domani, per la prima volta, lo stato italiano sarà denunciato per inazione climatica
Con il nuovo ddl 1441, i defibrillatori automatici esterni saranno quasi ovunque e a portata di tutti
Tra traffico di animali e specie aliene invasive, qual è il nostro rulo per arginare la perdita di biodiversità?
Una volta che gli adulti saranno in gran parte coperti, sarà importante immunizzare anche i ragazzi che tornano a scuola?
Ben cinque ittiosauri sono emersi da una ricerca tra le collezioni preesistenti nei sotterranei dei musei
Può un videogioco insegnarci ad essere più sostenibili e a contrastare i cambiamenti climatici?
Incontro con Incontro con Christian Raimo (insegnante, giornalista e scrittore), Elisabetta Tola (giornalista scientifica - Radio 3 Scienza), Tiziana Metitieri (neuropsicologa - Ospedale pediatrico Anna Meyer di Firenze), Pietro Blu Giandonato (insegnante, esperto di tecnologie educative e formatore docenti) e Arianna Ciccone (Valigia Blu) Qui il video dell'incontro.
Una figura di riferimento dell'ambientalismo italiano fin dagli anni Settanta: la storia di Laura Conti
I dati della pandemia: giornalisti, ricercatori e pubblico hanno finalmente accesso ai numeri del contagio?
La lettura ai tempi del lock-down e della didattica a distanza
La situazione pandemica in India conosce in questi giorni il suo momento più acuto dall'inizio dell'emergenza sanitaria.
Un viaggio attraverso le malattie che hanno investito l'Italia e il mondo negli ultimi cinquant'anni
L'11 marzo 2020 l'Organizzazione Mondiale della Sanità dichiara ufficialmente la pandemia da COVID-19. Un anno dopo cosa possiamo dire di aver imparato, cosa ancora non sappiamo? E come giudicheranno le generazioni future la risposta dell'umanità alla pandemia che ad oggi ha fatto, secondo i dati ufficiali, oltre 2,8 milioni di morti e oltre 127 milioni di casi confermati con circa 221 paesi o territori coinvolti? Incontro con Marco Cattaneo, direttore Le Scienze ed Elisabetta Tola, Radio3 Scienza. Qui il video dell'incontro.
Non solo Sputnik V: altri vaccini potrebbero affacciarsi in Europa.
Un mese fa ci lasciava la nostra Rossella Panarese, ideatrice di Radio3 Scienza. Oggi ricordiamo la sua visione della scienza alla radio e della comunicazione scientifica.
Riaprire le scuole e tracciare le infezioni da Covid-19: potrebbe essere tutto in mano ai test salivari e alla ricostruzione della rete dei contagi
La nuova corsa all'oro si svolge negli abissi e si chiama deep sea mining
Al momento il personale sanitario non è obbligato a vaccinarsi contro Covid-19. Ma il governo Draghi ha annunciato un decreto per rendere obbligatoria la vaccinazione per medici e infermieri
Il cancro della cervice uterina potrebbe diventare il primo tumore eradicato dalla faccia della Terra. E grazie a un vaccino
Quanto è difficile aumentare la disponibilità di vaccini anti-Covid con nuovi impianti produttivi?
Covid-19 e nuove varianti: come procede questo anno scolastico e come corrono i contagi, tra regioni e province?
Ma il vaccino è sicuro o l'hanno fatto troppo in fretta? Quali sono gli effetti collaterali? Conferisce l'immunità? E quando sarà il mio turno? E a che punto è la vaccinazione in Italia? Perché non sappiamo esattamente quanti sono i morti da covid-19? Con Alessio Cimarelli ci addentriamo nel sentiero tortuoso della comunicazione dell'incertezza. Ne parliamo con Elisabetta Tola e Giancarlo Sturloni. Elisabetta Tola, è CEO e co-fondatrice dell'agenzia italiana di comunicazione della scienza FormicaBlu e di datajournalism.it, un laboratorio di storie e strumenti data-driven. Conduttrice radiofonica a Radio3Scienza, Radio3 e anche co-autrice con Marco Boscolo di "Semi ritrovati" Codice (2020), un saggio sull'agrobiodiversità. Giancarlo Sturloni, comunicatore della scienza e giornalista scientifico, è da oltre 15 anni consulente e formatore in ambito scientifico, sanitario e ambientale. È inoltre autore di diversi saggi tra cui La comunicazione del rischio per la salute e per l'ambiente (Mondadori Università 2018).
Le giravolte della scienza compiute grazie a software e potenza di calcolo