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A conversation with the long-time director of the UN Nobel Peace Prize-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Dr. Rajendra Pachauri, who also directs the Yale Climate and Energy Institute.
De la COP25 à la COP26… Aujourd’hui on parle : Présidence Champion Afrique NDC Earth Hall of Fame Et comme d’hab une reco! ---------- Pour aller plus loin: l'épisode sur les algorithmes avec Sylvain Peyronnet l'épisode sur le jardin avec Damien Deville le livre "Toutes les couleurs de la terre" publié chez Tana Editions Reclaim publié aux éditions Cambourakis ---------- Retrouvez #2050 sur Twitter, Facebook, Instagram. Le répondeur du podcast vous est toujours ouvert, ici! ---------- Générique: Simon Vandendyck ---------- Extraits (dans l'ordre d'apparition): sujet de France 24 du 27 septembre 2019 suite au décès de Jacques Chirac remix improbable de l'hymne "on est les champions" sujet de France 24 du 5 juin 2017 sur Ouma Sangaré Ginette Reno chantant "un peu plus haut, un peu plus loin" introduction de la chanson "Hall of fame" Damien Deville au TedX Dijon sur l'écologie relationnelle
The world’s leading climate change authority has lost its chairman after Rajendra Pachauri resigned amid allegations he had sexually harassed a junior female colleague. This comes at the worst possible time in the run up to important climate change talks later this year. Fiona Symon discusses the news with Pilita Clarke and Amy Kazmin. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Apple tries to make conservation cool with energy-efficient products and green manufacturing practices. Can they lead the way to cleaner capitalism? Lisa Jackson, Vice President, Environmental Initiatives, Apple; Former Administrator, US Environmental Protection Agency Rajendra Pachauri, Chair, Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change This program was recorded in front of a live audience at the Commonwealth Club of California on January 14, 2015.
with Brad Friedman & Desi Doyen
with Brad Friedman & Desi Doyen
with Brad Friedman & Desi Doyen
with Brad Friedman & Desi Doyen
When we think about tracking the carbon footprint of a company or a region, we typically take into consideration things like energy use, transportation and manufacturing. But today's guest, Adam Smargon, is a doctoral candidate at the University of Delaware's Center for Energy and Environmental Policy, and his dissertation addresses another source of carbon emissions –artificially carbonated beverages. In April 2011, Mr. Smargon had the opportunity to speak with Dr. Rajendra Pachauri, the chairperson of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), who said that he had no knowledge of any studies on this topic, and encouraged Adam to pursue this project. On today's episode, Adam will discuss the scope of the carbon emissions of the beverage industry, and possible solutions to offset the emissions.
We discuss the advantages of literary brevity, contemplate the use of vindaloo curry as a weapon and find out what happens when celebrity footballers accidentally stumble into book launches. Plus new lab lit fiction from novelist Ian McEwan, and scientists Rajendra Pachauri and EO Wilson. Join Jenny and Richard in London for these stories and more from the world of science in art, literature and popular culture!
Cutting Through the Matrix with Alan Watt Podcast (.xml Format)
--{ Reality -- Get it Flowing by Contemplative Knowing: "A Reality Check Can Take Some Doing, Do You Lead or Tend to Follow, Cheering or Boo-ing, The Longest Journey Starts with the Self, Uncomfortable Denials Taken Down Off Shelf, Malodorously Opened One by One, Critically Examined till All is Done, With a New Understanding of Who You Are, You'll See Deeply into Things, You'll Go Far, Then Take a Stand for All that's Good, Free Others with Wisdom, You Must and Should" © Alan Watt }-- Standardized Indoctrination Worldwide - Public Kept in Dark, Media Complicit - Scientist David Kelly Murdered, Autopsy to be Kept Secret 70 Years - Assassination Squads. Paying for EVERYTHING in New Global Plantation - Ireland gets Meters and Charges for Water Use - "Smart" Electric Meters, Remote Readings and Cut-Offs. U.S. Debts more than Value of all Private Wealth - N.Z. Councils Grab Taxes right from Bank Accounts (Stealing) - No Jury Trials for Britain. Marketers Target the Herd - Online Posting of All Financial Info. South Carolina Governor Candidate-Eugenicist - "Humane" Euthanasia. $Millions in Grants for Institutes making Bogus Climate Claims, IPCC's Rajendra Pachauri. Increased Taxes for UK due to "National Debt" - Taxes to Send Money to Third-World, Redistribution of Wealth - Fabianism and Marxism, Everyone Works for Government. Military Spy Drones for Domestic Surveillance, CCTV, Monitoring "Antisocial" Behaviour - Militarized Police. Putting Out Real Information to People in the Right Sequence for Understanding. Purpose of Credit Cards - Introduction of Credit System to Replace Cash. (See http://www.cuttingthroughthematrix.com for article links.) *Title/Poem and Dialogue Copyrighted Alan Watt - Jan. 26, 2010 (Exempting Music, Literary Quotes, and Callers' Comments)
Climate One in Copenhagen Segment One Arnold Schwarzenegger, Governor, California Huang Ming, Founder and CEO, Himin Solar (one of China's largest renewable energy companies) Segment Two Rajendra Pachauri, Chair, Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Caio Koch-Weser, Vice Chair, Deutsche Bank As the tumultuous climate negotiations in Copenhagen near the end, California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger says it is embarrassing that the US does not have a national climate policy as do many of the 192 countries meeting here. He says sub-national actors such as states and cities can act as "laboratories of action" on climate change as they have on many other issues. Huang Ming, a former petroleum engineer turned clean energy entrepreneur, says that shaping popular culture and thinking is as important as the policies being discussed in Copenhagen. In a light moment he and the governor discuss heating hot tubs with solar energy. Rajendra Pachauri says India and other countries are doing a lot at the local level to reduce carbon pollution. "We don't need to wait for leadership at the top," he says, urging a grassroots movement to spur deadlocked negotiations among countries here trying to reach a global climate framework. He believes rich countries do have a moral obligation to address the carbon pollution their economic development has created. Among the most contentious issues in Copenhagen is the question of transferring funds from wealthy countries to help less developed nations reduce future pollution and deal with changes already happening. Koch-Weser, a former official with the World Bank and German Finance Ministry, says that financial markets can leverage taxpayer money to reach the $65 billion to $100 billion a year in financing that developing countries say they need to cut a deal. He also says electric cars in the future will be "built in China not Stuttgart or Detroit" because China's automotive technologies will leapfrog industrialized countries.