Podcast appearances and mentions of tom wigley

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Latest podcast episodes about tom wigley

Alcarria Savage Tunes
14x16 - 20-03-2024

Alcarria Savage Tunes

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2024 60:00


is.gd/alcarria | Pagan, Macroblank, Staatseinde, The Frost, Fury Weekend, Steve End, Forbidden Fruit (Just Begun Vol.1 "A Journey Into Belgian Modern Grooves"), Mueran Humanos, Cecile (Toy Tonics "Gomma Dancefloor Gems Vol. 2"), KEITA SANO, Jay Son, Tom Wigley & surfbored 🔊 Podcast: https://is.gd/alcarria 📻 Radio: RUAH 🌐 Alcalá de Henares (Madrid) 🖱️ www.ruah.es 🗓️ MIE 17:00h Radio Malva 104.9 FM 🌐 Valencia 🖱️ radiomalva.org 🗓️ DOM 18:30h Radio Kolor Cuenca 106.2 FM 🌐 Cuenca 🖱️ www.radiokolor.es 🗓️ JUE 15:00h Cuac FM 103.4 FM 🌐 Á Coruña 🖱️ cuacfm.org 🗓️ VIE 17:00h Radio Arrebato 107.4 FM 🌐 Guadalajara 🖱️ radioarrebato.net 🗓️ SAB y DOM 18:30h Onda Cabanillas 107.0 FM 🌐 Cabanillas (GU) 🖱️ aytocabanillas.org 🗓️ MIE 21:00h

dom frost pagan sab guadalajara vie aacute cuenca alcal coru jue fury weekend cuac fm henares madrid tom wigley jay son
The FS Club Podcast
Apocalypse Never: Why Environmental Alarmism Hurts Us All

The FS Club Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2020 49:41


Find out more on our website: https://bit.ly/31cyybY Michael asserts that despite decades of news media attention, many remain ignorant of basic facts. Carbon emissions peaked and have been declining in most developed nations for over a decade. Deaths from extreme weather, even in poor nations, declined 80 percent over the last four decades. And the risk of Earth warming to very high temperatures is increasingly unlikely thanks to slowing population growth and abundant natural gas. Curiously, the people who are the most alarmist about the problems also tend to oppose the obvious solutions. What's really behind the rise of apocalyptic environmentalism? There are powerful financial interests. There are desires for status and power. But most of all there is a desire among supposedly secular people for transcendence. This spiritual impulse can be natural and healthy. But in preaching fear without love, and guilt without redemption, the new religion is failing to satisfy our deepest psychological and existential needs. Speaker: Michael Shellenberger is a Time Magazine "Hero of the Environment," Green Book Award winner, and the founder and president of Environmental Progress. He is author of the best-selling new book, Apocalypse Never (Harper Collins June 30, 2020), which has received strong praise from scientists and scholars including Harvard's Steven Pinker, MIT climate scientist Kerry Emanuel, and the former CEO and Chief Scientist of The Nature Conservancy. “This may be the most important book on the environment ever written,” writes leading climate scientist Tom Wigley. Michael has been called a “environmental guru,” “climate guru,” “North America's leading public intellectual on clean energy,” and “high priest” of the environmental humanist movement for his writings and TED talks, which have been viewed over five million times. Shellenberger advises policymakers around the world including in the U.S., Japan, Taiwan, South Korea, the Philippines, Australia, United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and Belgium. In January, 2020, Shellenberger testified before the Committee on Science, Space, and Technology of the U.S. House of Representatives. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change invited Michael in 2019 to serve as an independent Expert Reviewer of its next Assessment Report.

Gone Postal Radio
Episode 111: Ben Polzin, Tom Wigley, Arlo McHardyan, KNOW1, and SideBeatz

Gone Postal Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2020 31:47


This week on the Pretty Gritty Podcast we showcase new electronic from Ben Polzin, downtempo from Tom Wigley, future bass from Arlo McHardyan, dubstep from KNOW1, and tropical house from SideBeatz.

tom wigley
Palladium Podcast
Digital Salon with Michael Shellenberger: Nuclear Power Is the Real Green Energy

Palladium Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2020 91:55


Award-winning environmentalist and author Michael Shellenberger joins Wolf Tivy and Ash Milton to discuss ecomodernism, the history of the atomic age, and why nuclear is the real green energy. On June 30, Harper Collins will publish Michael Shellenberger’s timely new book, Apocalypse Never: Why Environmental Alarmism Hurts Us All, which is available for pre-order on Amazon and has received strong pre-publication praise from Harvard’s Steven Pinker, Pulitzer-winning author Richard Rhodes, and climate scientists Kerry Emanuel and Tom Wigley. Apocalypse Never is a comprehensive debunking of environmental misinformation about everything from climate change and rainforest destruction to nuclear energy and renewables.

Angedeechuu
Future House Deep Mix #122 (ShowCast FL Kontrol S8)

Angedeechuu

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2018 33:33


124 - 128 BPM TRACKLIST : 001 - Tom Wigley x Futosé - Crazy For Your Love 2018 002 - Daredevils - Tender Love 2018 003 - Filth & Pleasure - It's About Time 2018 004 - Ash D - Falling Again 2018 005 - Ash D - Survive 2018 006 - Muzon - Askia 2018 007 - BassSoldier - Sax 2018 008 - Lucky Luke X Mizmo - Nowhere 2018 009 - Jacob Underwood - Rocker 2018 010 - Rob Feather - Spicy 2018 011 - Active Surfers - Never 2018 012 - JoshRox - Nocturnal 2018 013 - JoshRox - Rudeboy 2018 014 - Kendoll - What A Freak 2018 015 - Ruber & Opt1mum - Get Down 2018 016 - SubCandy - House 2018 017 - A.Lacosta & Aleks Marty & Igor Woods - Booty 2018 018 - Boothed - Octopussy 2018 . That's all.../... Thanks for all the Artists... .

WOMADelaide
2014 WOMADelaide Planet Talks - Climate Change and 100 Million Person Cities

WOMADelaide

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2014 58:08


Speakers: Tom Wigley | Steffen Lehmann | Amie Albrecht Hosted by: Bernie Hobbs Thanks to the latest research from a host of the world’s most respected climate scientists like Tom Wigley, the weight of evidence pointing to the human role in changing our weather is now beyond compelling. Consequently, if their forecasts of climate change increases do occur, life in our most densely populated areas face an unprecedented and urgent call to action.                With 26 cities on the planet currently housing between 10 and 20 million people each and projections of a future with 11 billion people on the planet including the first 100 million person cities, this panel looks at up to date research on how and why our climate may change and how our built environs and transport systems must adapt to accommodate life in future mega cities.

planet climate change cities womadelaide tom wigley
AMS Climate Change Video - Environmental Science Seminar Series (ESSS)
Two Engineering Measures to Reduce Global Warming: Injecting Particles into the Atmosphere and "Clean" Coal

AMS Climate Change Video - Environmental Science Seminar Series (ESSS)

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2009 88:29


Managing Incoming Solar Radiation Largely out of concern that society may fall short of taking large and rapid enough measures to effectively contain the problem of global warming, two prominent atmospheric scientists - Paul Crutzen, who won a Nobel Prize in chemistry in 1995, and Tom Wigley, a senior scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research - published papers in 2006, suggesting that society might consider using geoengineering schemes to identify a temporarily "fix" to the problem. The schemes were suggested as an interim measure intended to buy time to prevent the worst damage from global warming while society used that time to identify and deploy measures to address the root cause of the problem. Such suggestions however, are not new. The concept of geoengineering - deliberately using technology to modify Earth's environment - has been discussed in the context of climate change since at least 1960. Over the years, proposals have included everything from carbon sequestration through ocean fertilization to damming the oceans. Crutzen and Wigley argued that geoengineering schemes, if done continuously, could reduce global warming enough to buy society time to address mitigation. However, geoengineering schemes may not be the answer. And in fact, such measures have the potential to create more problems than they solve. In particular, Crutzen and Wigley focused on blocking incoming solar radiation, an idea that has generated much interest in the press and the scientific community. Nature offers an example of how to do this. Volcanic eruptions cool the climate for up to a couple of years by injecting precursors to sulfate aerosol particles into the stratosphere, which has the effect of temporarily blocking incoming sunlight. Clean Coal Technology and Future Prospects Clean coal technologies are real, commonly used in commercial industrial gasification and likely essential to reduce CO2 due to the fast growing use of coal worldwide, especially in China. Commercial example of clean coal technology in the USA is the 25 year-old coal to synthetic natural gas (SNG) plant in North Dakota where all of the CO2 is captured and most is geologically storage for use in enhanced oil recovery (EOR) in Canada. The key issue is expanding clean coal technologies into coal-based electric power generation. This expansion presents additional challenges - more technology options and higher cost of CO2 capture than for industrial gasification. This also requires large-scale demonstration of all three CO2 capture technology options: pre, post and oxygen combustion. In time, the CO2 capture and storage costs will be reduced by both “learning by doing” and developing advanced technologies already moving in to small-scale demonstrations. Biographies Dr. Alan Robock is a Distinguished Professor of atmospheric science in the Department of Environmental Sciences at Rutgers University and the associate director of its Center for Environmental Prediction. He also directs the Rutgers Undergraduate Meteorology Program. He graduated from the University of Wisconsin, Madison, in 1970 with a B.A. in Meteorology, and from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology with an S.M. in 1974 and Ph.D. in 1977 in Meteorology. Before graduate school, he served as a Peace Corps Volunteer in the Philippines. He was a professor at the University of Maryland, 1977-1997, and the State Climatologist of Maryland, 1991-1997, before coming to Rutgers. Dale Simbeck joined SFA Pacific in 1980 as a founding partner. His principal activities involve technical, economic and market assessments of energy and environmental technologies for the major international energy companies. This work includes electric power generation, heavy oil upgrading, emission controls and synthesis gas production plus utilization.

AMS Climate Change Audio - Environmental Science Seminar Series (ESSS)
Two Engineering Measures to Reduce Global Warming: Injecting Particles into the Atmosphere and "Clean" Coal

AMS Climate Change Audio - Environmental Science Seminar Series (ESSS)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2008 89:00


Managing Incoming Solar Radiation Largely out of concern that society may fall short of taking large and rapid enough measures to effectively contain the problem of global warming, two prominent atmospheric scientists - Paul Crutzen, who won a Nobel Prize in chemistry in 1995, and Tom Wigley, a senior scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research - published papers in 2006, suggesting that society might consider using geoengineering schemes to identify a temporarily "fix" to the problem. The concept of geoengineering - deliberately using technology to modify Earth's environment - has been discussed in the context of climate change since at least 1960. Over the years, proposals have included everything from carbon sequestration through ocean fertilization to damming the oceans. Crutzen and Wigley argued that geoengineering schemes, if done continuously, could reduce global warming enough to buy society time to address mitigation. However, geoengineering schemes may not be the answer. And in fact, such measures have the potential to create more problems than they solve. In particular, Crutzen and Wigley focused on blocking incoming solar radiation, an idea that has generated much interest in the press and the scientific community. Nature offers an example of how to do this. Volcanic eruptions cool the climate for up to a couple of years by injecting precursors to sulfate aerosol particles into the stratosphere, which has the effect of temporarily blocking incoming sunlight. It is true that volcanic eruptions cool the climate, but their effects are not innocuous, and should serve as a warning to society to be very cautious about deploying such geoengineering “solutions” without careful and considered evaluation beforehand. Among other things, the particles from volcanic eruptions also cause ozone depletion. Clean Coal Technology and Future Prospects Clean coal technologies are real, commonly used in commercial industrial gasification and likely essential to reduce CO2 due to the fast growing use of coal worldwide, especially in China. Commercial example of clean coal technology in the USA is the 25 year-old coal to synthetic natural gas (SNG) plant in North Dakota where all of the CO2 is captured and most is geologically storage for use in enhanced oil recovery (EOR) in Canada. The key issue is expanding clean coal technologies into coal-based electric power generation. This expansion presents additional challenges - more technology options and higher cost of CO2 capture than for industrial gasification. This also requires large-scale demonstration of all three CO2 capture technology options: pre, post and oxygen combustion. In time, the CO2 capture and storage costs will be reduced by both “learning by doing” and developing advanced technologies already moving in to small-scale demonstrations. Biographies Dr. Alan Robock is a Distinguished Professor of atmospheric science in the Department of Environmental Sciences at Rutgers University and the associate director of its Center for Environmental Prediction. He also directs the Rutgers Undergraduate Meteorology Program. He graduated from the University of Wisconsin, Madison, in 1970 with a B.A. in Meteorology, and from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology with an S.M. in 1974 and Ph.D. in 1977 in Meteorology. Before graduate school, he served as a Peace Corps Volunteer in the Philippines. He was a professor at the University of Maryland, 1977-1997, and the State Climatologist of Maryland, 1991-1997, before coming to Rutgers. Dale Simbeck joined SFA Pacific in 1980 as a founding partner. His principal activities involve technical, economic and market assessments of energy and environmental technologies for the major international energy companies. This work includes electric power generation, heavy oil upgrading, emission controls and synthesis gas production plus utilization.