“As the climate crisis intensifies, so must our response. Join us in Outrage and Optimism as we try to make sense of the signals amidst the noise on all things climate this season. ” – Christiana Figueres, Co-host of Outrage + Optimism
Outrage + Optimism is a useful, weekly guide for anyone wanting to make sense of the complexity of the climate conversation.
Hosted by Christiana Figueres and Tom Rivett-Carnac – who famously helped deliver the historic Paris Agreement on Climate Change in 2015 – as well as sustainable economy expert Paul Dickinson, the show is the leading, global, independent climate podcast.
Asking their audience to face the climate crisis head on, the trio share their expertise, insight and humor with the world’s climate thought-leaders in science, business, finance, politics and culture to help listeners understand that we have the power to solve this.
New and loyal listeners to Outrage + Optimism’s Season 8 can expect:
A...
Outrage + Optimism is a useful, weekly guide for anyone wanting to make sense of the complexity of the climate conversation.
Hosted by Christiana Figueres and Tom Rivett-Carnac – who famously helped deliver the historic Paris Agreement on Climate Change in 2015 – as well as sustainable economy expert Paul Dickinson, the show is the leading, global, independent climate podcast.
Asking their audience to face the climate crisis head on, the trio share their expertise, insight and humor with the world’s climate thought-leaders in science, business, finance, politics and culture to help listeners understand that we have the power to solve this.
New and loyal listeners to Outrage + Optimism’s Season 8 can expect:
A...
- 9/7/2023
- Podnews.net
Netflix says it has a plan to hit net zero greenhouse gas emissions by the end of 2022, with a big part of the streaming giant’s efforts aimed at operating more eco-friendly film and TV productions.
The “Net Zero + Nature” plan was outlined Tuesday in a blog post by Emma Stewart, PhD, who joined Netflix as its first sustainability officer last fall. At Netflix, “we aspire to entertain the world,” she wrote. “But that requires a habitable world to entertain.”
In 2020, Netflix estimates its carbon footprint was 1.13 million metric tons, down slightly from 1.31 million the year prior (mostly due to delayed content productions during the Covid-19 pandemic). Roughly 50% of that was generated by the physical production of Netflix films and series, including third-party projects licensed as Netflix-branded originals. Another 45% came from corporate operations (e.g. office space) and purchased goods (like marketing spend) and 5% was attributed to internet cloud providers...
The “Net Zero + Nature” plan was outlined Tuesday in a blog post by Emma Stewart, PhD, who joined Netflix as its first sustainability officer last fall. At Netflix, “we aspire to entertain the world,” she wrote. “But that requires a habitable world to entertain.”
In 2020, Netflix estimates its carbon footprint was 1.13 million metric tons, down slightly from 1.31 million the year prior (mostly due to delayed content productions during the Covid-19 pandemic). Roughly 50% of that was generated by the physical production of Netflix films and series, including third-party projects licensed as Netflix-branded originals. Another 45% came from corporate operations (e.g. office space) and purchased goods (like marketing spend) and 5% was attributed to internet cloud providers...
- 3/30/2021
- by Todd Spangler
- Variety Film + TV
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