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Join Barbara for an insightful episode taking listeners behind the scenes of Climate Week NYC, held September 22 to 29. This episode recaps conversations and highlights across a pivotal annual event gathering political and business leaders, innovative researchers, high-profile media, and local influencers from across the U.S. and the globe. Together, they discuss the current state of sustainability, evaluate climate action efforts, and explore cutting-edge technologies driving a net-zero future. Barbara speaks with Adam Lake, Head of Communications, North America, Climate Group; Shyla Raghav, Chief Climate Officer for TIME; and Kristy Drutman, Founder of Brown Girl Green. Discover what impressed them most about Climate Week NYC 2024 and their key takeaways from this influential event.
This week on O+O… our hosts discuss the US-China ‘Sunnylands statement'; China's positive 2024 emissions news, and ask how we hold this positivity, alongside the recently published UN report that warns of lack of global progress on climate change and the inexorable rise of greenhouse gas emissions, without our heads exploding! Our guests this week are Simon Mulcahy and Shyla Raghav from TIME, both responsible for founding TIME CO2, a division focused on providing businesses with the trusted content, solutions, applications and community that accelerate investment in climate solutions, and progress towards net zero. They recently released their TIME 100 CLIMATE inaugural list which includes our very own incredible Paul Dickinson. Music this week comes from completely DIY self taught Indie-alt-pop musicians and producers Bad Sounds, with their song ‘Beggin'. NOTES AND RESOURCES GUESTS Shyla Raghav, Chief Climate Officer, TIME Twitter | LinkedIn | Facebook | Instagram Simon Mulcahy, President Sustainability, TIME LinkedIn | Twitter TIME CO2 Twitter | LinkedIn | Website MUSICAL GUEST Bad Sounds Website | Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | Spotify | YouTube EXTRA LINKS Submit your awkward family climate questions via video or voice note to contact@globaloptimism.com OR comment the question on our Instagram Post Check out The Climate Question's Episode on COP - ‘What has COP Achieved?' – Learn more about the Paris Agreement. It's official, we're a TED Audio Collective Podcast - Proof! Check out more podcasts from The TED Audio Collective Please follow us on social media! Twitter | Instagram | LinkedIn
In this episode of 50 Shades of Green, we're bringing together some of the top minds in media and advertising to explore the role of marketing, entertainment, and journalism in shaping positive climate action and understanding. We speak to Chuck Monn, Creative Director at Go Humans and former Executive Creative Director of Apple's Media Arts Lab, about the power of messaging and branding on climate action. Climate Group's Adam Lake then dives the impact of some of the most influential print and broadcast media on covering climate change. He sits down with Shyla Raghav, Chief Climate Officer of TIME, and Steve Bodow, former Executive Producer and Showrunner of Patriot Act with Hasan Minhaj and The Daily Show, to explore the intersections and parallels between print and entertainment, and if these forms of media have the power to change the world.
Manish Dasaur, an Accenture Managing Director is joined by Shyla Raghav, who is the Head of Partnerships at New Division of Time called CO2, which is focused on sustainability and climate change. Hear as they discuss how we can use the latest technology and innovation, including AI, to combat climate change. Listen now.
The world of rainforest conservation is quickly changing. Technology’s exponential development is enabling a wide range of advances in conservation, while simultaneously showing the limitations of humanity’s knowledge. We know now more than ever about earth’s most diverse ecosystem, yet there is so much left to be understood. On today’s podcast we bring you a discussion between two incredible conservationists, and two members of the XPRIZE Rainforest Advisory Board: Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim and Shyla Raghav, who take a deep dive into People, Climate & Policy and why the world needs much more than international climate agreements. Their conversation was originally recorded as part of the XPRIZE Rainforest Summit: Pathways to Conservation held on the 18th and 19th February 2021. Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim is an expert in the adaptation and mitigation of indigenous peoples to climate change. She is a member of the Mbororo pastoralist people in Chad and President of the Association for Indigenous Women and Peoples of Chad (AFPAT). Oumarou Ibrahim is an advocate for the greater inclusion of indigenous people and their knowledge and traditions in the global movement to fight the effects of climate change. Oumarou Ibrahim received the Pritzker Emerging Environmental Genius Award and was appointed as a United Nations Sustainable Development Goals Advocate. She serves as a Member of the United Nations Permanent Forum for Indigenous Issues; Member of the Indigenous Peoples of Africa Coordinating Committee (IPACC); Member of the Advisory Committee to the Secretary-General’s 2019 Climate Action Summit; and Conservation International Senior Indigenous Fellow. In 2019, she was listed by Time Magazine as one of 15 women championing action on climate change.Shyla Raghav leads Conservation International’s climate strategy to build and support the development and implementation of climate change mitigation and adaptation action globally. Shyla and her interdisciplinary global team engage with key partners to amplify Conservation International's successful climate change strategies, which demonstrate that ecosystem-based mitigation and adaptation offer tremendous opportunities for meeting the climate challenge. Having attended nearly a decade of United Nations climate change negotiations at the international level on climate change adaptation, she works closely with partners through innovation and research, demonstration projects, and amplification to bring nature-based solutions for climate change to scale. Links: https://www.xprize.org/prizes/rainforest https://www.xprize.org/prizes/rainforest/articles/xprize-rainforest-summit https://www.weforum.org/people/hindou-oumarou-ibrahim https://www.conservation.org/experts-list/shyla-raghav See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
We are bringing you a new series from Allure: The Science of Beauty, where we answer the tough questions about skincare, makeup, and more. If you love beauty and are curious about the science behind it, you're going to love this episode on sunscreen. Without protection from UV rays, every one of the greatest beauty innovations of the modern age — retinoids, AHAs, hyaluronic acid, lasers — is a big, old waste of time and money. It's fitting then that our debut episode is all about SPF. First, Michelle and Jenny have a frank talk with Shyla Raghav, vice president of climate at Conservation International, about how the state of our environment makes wearing sunscreen more crucial than ever before. Then, dermatologist Caroline Robinson shares everything you'd ever want to know about how to choose and use SPF, including the one place you're definitely not applying it — but should. If you like what you hear, subscribe to Science of Beauty now on your preferred podcast app: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/id1531535720 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/7mwxxPykxDZtCQRiqsdK0X Stitcher: https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/allure-the-science-of-beauty Or wherever you get your podcasts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Shyla Raghav is a conservationist and Vice President at Conservation International. She is focused on restoring a balance between humans and their environment by seeking political and economic incentive structures that reinforce ecologically healthy decision-making. The conversation seeks solutions in this realm, including how to find common ground in rhetorical climate paradigms, the problems with environmental arguments singularly focusing on reductionist metrics, and the importance of reciprocity. Please subscribe so we can bring you more conversations!!! Podcast version available at all usual locations: https://anchor.fm/demystifying-science Conservation International: https://www.conservation.org More readings from us: https://demystifyingscience.com/blog Join the Demystifying Science Mailing List: http://eepurl.com/gRUCZL Let's talk! @DemystifySci Twitter: https://twitter.com/demystifysci Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/demystifysci Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/demystifysci Podcast: https://anchor.fm/demystifying-science ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Music: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ intro by Shilo Delay: https://soundcloud.com/laterisgone Underdog by Lilo Sound Link: https://filmmusic.io/song/6538-underdog License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/demystifying-science/support
Did you know that anyone can be a Climate Action Hero? This month, we're exploring climate science, and learning about how to use our climate action superpowers to fight back against climate change! We dig into big questions like, “What is climate change?” and, “What can we be doing now to positively affect climate change in the future?” You'll also hear from Shyla Raghav, Vice President of Climate Change at Conservation International, and Victoria Herrmann, President and Managing Director of The Arctic Institute, to learn more about their jobs as real life climate champions. To take the Climate Action Heroes Quiz, go to climate-heroes.org. You can learn all about your Climate Action Superpower, and check out our STEAMwork videos and activities. For STEAM videos, programs, resources, and more from National Children's Museum, check out nationalchildrensmuseum.org. STEAM Daydream with National Children's Museum is narrated by A.J. Calbert and produced by Aubrey Vaughan, with post-production by Stevie Zampanti of Conceptual Podcasting. Special thanks to IF/THEN, an initiative of Lyda Hill Philanthropies, for connecting us with the scientists in today's episode. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/national-childrens-museum/message
Typhoon Haiyan, one of the most powerful tropical cyclones ever recorded, robbed Marinel Ubaldo of her childhood and took away her family's means to live. Marinel struggled to finish high school because her father, a fisherman, could no longer provide for his family. Marinel's vulnerability, however, became her greatest strength. She found her voice in global climate activism. Now in her 20s, Marinel shares her story of resilience and even got involved in the world's first human rights investigation into corporate responsibility for climate change. In this episode, we talk about key concepts and the impact of climate change on natural disasters, the responsibility of fossil fuel companies and what each of us can do to save our planet. Learn from expert voices: Shyla Raghav, Vice President of Climate Change and Global Strategy at Conservation International and May Boeve, Executive Director of 350.org. -- Finding Humanity is a production of Humanity Lab Foundation and Hueman Group Media. Our inaugural season is made possible in part by our collaborating partner, The Elders. Subscribe, rate and leave us a review. For more information, visit findinghumanitypodcast.com. Follow us on Twitter @find_humanity and Facebook.
This was a National Earth Day interview produced by Entercom. The interview was hosted by Corinna Delgado from the Entercom affiliate in Washington D.C. 94.7 The Drive. She spoke with Conservation International’s Vice President of Climate Change, Shyla Raghav, on COVID-19’s environmental effects, as well as Conservation International’s tool to measure our carbon footprint.
1st Guest: Bernice L. Hausman is Chair of the Department of Humanities at the Penn State College of Medicine in Hershey, Pennsylvania. She joins Bob Salter to talk about her latest book Anti/Vax: Reframing the Vaccination Controversy. 2nd Guest: Corinna Delgado of The Drive in Washington D.C. is joined by Shyla Raghav who is the Conservation International's Vice President of Climate. Shyla joins Corinna to talk about our earth, environment and the COVID-19 crisis and how they all intertwine. 3rd Guest: Rich Cahan is a writer who joins Bob to talk about his new book 'River of Blood: American Slavery from the People Who Lived It: Interviews & Photographs of Formerly Enslaved African Americans'
Corinna Delgado of Entercom Classic Hits “94.7 The Drive” WIAD Bethesda/Washington talks with Shyla Raghav who leads Conservation International’s climate strategy to build and support the development and implementation of climate change mitigation and adaptation action globally. they discuss EarthDay.
Green Dreamer: Sustainability and Regeneration From Ideas to Life
Shyla Raghav is the global climate change strategy lead for Conservation International, who's attended almost a decade of United Nations climate change negotiations and international conferences. On this episode, Shyla sheds light on her learning lessons from having attended these key negotiations; how competition for power, economic status, and technological advancement between countries impact our ability to collaborate on climate mitigation; what "422pm" means and how we can meaningfully lower greenhouse gases through nature-based solutions; and more. Episode notes: www.greendreamer.com/140 Support the show: www.greendreamer.com/support Instagram: www.instagram.com/greendreamerpodcast
This week we take a close look at conservation NGOS: what they do, how they work, and - most importantly - why we need them. We'll be speaking with Shyla Raghav, the Climate Change Lead at Conservation International, about using strategy and policy to tackle climate change. Then we'll speak with Rebecca Shaw, Lead Scientist at the World Wildlife Fund, about how and why you should get involved with conservation initiatives.