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Sustainability Now! on KSQD.org

Sustainability Now! on KSQD.org

By Ronnie Lipschutz

Are you concerned about the Earth's future? Are you interested in what is being done in Northern California and the world to address environmental issues? Do you want to act? Then tune in every other Sunday to "Sustainability Now!" on KSQD.org to hear interviews with scientists, scholars, activists and officials involved in the pursuit of sustainability. Sustainability Now! is underwritten by the Sustainable Systems Research Foundation in Santa Cruz, California
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Why are some people so up in arms about CEQA? with Professor Deborah Sivas, Stanford Law School

Sustainability Now! on KSQD.orgSep 17, 2023

00:00
53:40
Why are some people so up in arms about CEQA? with Professor Deborah Sivas, Stanford Law School

Why are some people so up in arms about CEQA? with Professor Deborah Sivas, Stanford Law School

What do you know about CEQA, the California Environmental Quality Act, passed in 1970 and signed into law by then-Governor Ronald Reagan? For more than 50 years, CEQA has been used to inform decisionmakers and the public about the potential environmental impacts of proposed projects but, in recent years, it has been applied in situations for which it was not designed, especially new housing development.  In response, both Governor Newsom and the State Legislature are seeking to amend the law to prevent various activists and opponents from obstructing new housing.  Not so fast, say the law’s supporters.  They point to a recent report by the Rose Foundations that CEQA has had little, if any, impact on housing projects across the state. So, who is correct?

Join host Ronnie Lipschutz for a conversation with Professor Deborah Sivas of the Stanford Law School. She teaches environmental law, directs the environmental law clinic and has represented various environmental organizations in the courts.  We will talk about CEQA and whether it is really standing in the way of more housing in California.

Sep 17, 202353:40
How Kinship Practices Could Foster New Relations between Humans and Nature, with Prof. Rosalind Warner

How Kinship Practices Could Foster New Relations between Humans and Nature, with Prof. Rosalind Warner

The Rights of Nature is one way to rethink the relationships between humans and Nature, but are there other ways to think about those connections? Join host Ronnie Lipschutz for a conversation with Dr. Rosalind Warner, professor of political science at Okanagan College in British Columbia and Research Fellow with the Earth System Governance Project.  Warner is studying the role of kinship metaphors in Earth System Law, with kinship connoting more ethical relationships among humans, Nature and earth’s non-human inhabitants. Earth System Law is an emerging body of legal precepts, principles and practices that bring together ethics and law with the planet’s dynamic physical and biological cycles. Tune in to hear a new take on human-nature relations.


Aug 21, 202346:52
Does Nature have Rights? with Katie Surma of Inside Climate News

Does Nature have Rights? with Katie Surma of Inside Climate News

More than 50 years ago, Christopher Stone, a UCLA law professor, wrote a groundbreaking book Should Trees Have Standing? in which he argued for the right of trees to be represented in courts of law.  Since then, the Rights of Nature movement has taken the world by storm; some countries have encoded such rights into their constitutions.  But what does it mean to say that trees, rivers and animals have rights? Does the “rights of nature” make any practical sense? And who is pushing for such rights?

Join Sustainability Now! host Ronnie Lipschutz for a conversation with Katie Surma, a reporter at Inside Climate News. She has been covering the “rights of nature” beat at ICN since 2021 and has written extensively on the topic.  Find out whether the trees and critters in your back yard and all around us are people, too.

Aug 07, 202354:35
Nature's Best Hope with Professor Douglas Tallamy A New Approach to Conservation that Starts in Your Yard

Nature's Best Hope with Professor Douglas Tallamy A New Approach to Conservation that Starts in Your Yard

According to those who know, we are in the midst of the Sixth Great Extinction, this one brought on by the activities of human civilization that are resulting in a species extinction rate that is estimated to be between 1,000 and 10,000 times higher than natural extinction rates.  So far, efforts to protect endangered plants, animals and insects have proven inadequate to the challenge.  What are we to do?

Join host Ronnie Lipschutz for a conversation with Professor Douglas Tallamy, who teaches in the Department of Entomology and Wildlife Ecology at the University of Delaware.  He is the author of Nature’s Best Hope—a New Approach to conservation that Starts in Your Yard, published in 2019, and a just-published companion version for children, subtitled How You Can Save the World in Your Own Yard.  Both books propose what some might consider a radical approach to protecting species through transformation of front and back yards into conservation zones.

Jul 24, 202351:21
When Public Works is Homeland Security, with Jackie McCloud

When Public Works is Homeland Security, with Jackie McCloud

When is the safety, health and well-being of people a concern for homeland security? Jackie McCloud, Watsonville’s Environmental Sustainability Manager in Public Works, has been accepted into the Naval Postgraduate School’s MA program in Security Studies at their Center for Homeland Defense and Security in Monterey.  According to McCloud, “People might see the words ‘Homeland Security’ and think that it doesn’t match with Public Works and climate change, but Public Works is homeland security adjacent in that we provide domestic security to residents. One of the greatest threats to our residents is climate change.”  Join Sustainability Now! host Ronnie Lipschutz and Jackie McCloud to hear a whole new take on “Homeland Security.”


Jul 10, 202351:10
Can Green Manure Cover Crops End Drought in Africa? With Roland Bunch

Can Green Manure Cover Crops End Drought in Africa? With Roland Bunch

Join Host Ronnie Lipschutz for a conversation with Roland Bunch, who has worked in agricultural development for more than half a century in more than 50 nations of Latin America, Africa and Asia. In 1982, he published the book, "Two Ears of Corn, A Guide to People-Centered Agricultural Improvement", which has since been published in ten languages and is an all-time best-seller in the field of agricultural development.  Beginning in 1983, Bunch began investigating and disseminating the use of plants that fertilize the soil, now called “green manure/cover crops.”  He has been honored for his work with nominations for the Global 500 Award, the End the Hunger Prize of the President of the United States, and the World Food Prize.


Jun 26, 202350:08
Innovation and Entrepreneurship at UC Santa Cruz, With Nada Miljkovic
Jun 12, 202353:40
Under a White Sky: The Nature of the Future--Elizabeth Kolbert and Ezra Klein in Conversation

Under a White Sky: The Nature of the Future--Elizabeth Kolbert and Ezra Klein in Conversation

Listen to a conversation between Elizabeth Kolbert and Ezra Klein on May 21st, part of UC Santa Cruz’s annual Deep Read, about  Kolbert's 2021 book, Under a White Sky. Kolbert is a writer, observer and commentator on the environment for The New Yorker and recipient of the Pulitzer Prize for The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History. Ezra Klein is a New York Times columnist, host of The Ezra Klein Show podcast and a UC Santa Cruz alum.

You can watch the video of the entire event at: https://tinyurl.com/57czndz4.

 

May 29, 202301:08:29
Electrification of California & the Battle over Solar Farms in the Deserts with Professor Dustin Mulvaney
May 15, 202359:03
The Ideal River: How control of nature shaped the international order, with Dr. Joanne Yao

The Ideal River: How control of nature shaped the international order, with Dr. Joanne Yao

Rivers have long been the object of poems, songs, novels, studies, fishers, swimmers, sewage, engineers, farmers and salmon.  In California, rivers and the water in them are the focus of near-eternal political struggle.  And, there is that old saying, attributed to Heraclitus, “one never steps into the same river twice.”  Every river is different, yet there is some human drive to make every river the same: the ideal river.

Join SN! host Ronnie Lipschutz for a conversation about rivers with Dr. Joanne Yao, Senior Lecturer in the School of Politics and International Relations at Queen Mary University of London. Yao is the author of The Ideal River: How control of nature shaped the international order. Her book is about the Rhine, Danube and Congo Rivers. How they were reshaped and managed (or not) and the role they played in the imaginaries and emergence of the European imperialist order of the 19th century and in the shaping of nature around the world, before and since.  Yao’s book has special relevance for California, where the struggle to make virtually all of our rivers ideal ones has been going on since the middle of the 1800s.

May 02, 202343:49
W(h)ither UCSC’s East Meadow? with Nadia Peralta and Bob Majzler

W(h)ither UCSC’s East Meadow? with Nadia Peralta and Bob Majzler

Many KSQD listeners may know that the UC Regents recently approved UCSC’s Student Housing West proposal, which includes

relocation of Family Student Housing to the iconic East Meadow, on the east side.  Join Sustainability Now! host Ronnie Lipschutz for a conversation with Nadia Peralta and Bob Majzler of Protect East Meadow, which has been active at UCSC in opposing the Family Student Housing project on both financial and ecological grounds.  Nadia is a full-time pre-med student and practicing clinical herbalist.  Bob is a UCSC lecturer in Psychology with interests in social and environmental justice.  Both are strongly committed to preserving open space on the UCSC campus.

Apr 17, 202351:56
Songs for Earth Day, with Dr. Peter Weiss, the Singing Scientist, and His Guitar

Songs for Earth Day, with Dr. Peter Weiss, the Singing Scientist, and His Guitar

Join SN! host Ronnie Lipschutz and Dr. Peter Weiss, the Singing Scientist, in honor of Earth Day. Weiss is well-known in Santa Cruz as “The Singing Scientist” and he is leader of the Earth Rangers, which plays music that educates and uplifts people, especially children. Weiss and his colleagues started performing a decade ago to combat environmental illiteracy and connect with kids. They have released two albums, “Do What You Otter” and “One for the Sun.” Peter sings some of his songs and we’ll play others from the albums.


Apr 03, 202355:34
A Visit to the SC Museum of Natural History, with Marisa Gomez

A Visit to the SC Museum of Natural History, with Marisa Gomez

SN! Host Ronnie Lipschutz welcomes Marisa Gomez, Community Education and Collaboration Manager at the Santa Cruz Museum of Natural History.  In that role, Marisa leads the Museum’s onsite school programs, coordinates group visits, orchestrates public programs, and specializes in immersing visitors in the culture and stewardship practices of the native people of Santa Cruz, the Amah Mutsun.  She also is the voice of the Museum’s social media sites.  We talk about the Museum's programs and offerings.

Mar 20, 202350:59
Firepower & Global Security: Past, Present and Future, with Professor Simon Dalby

Firepower & Global Security: Past, Present and Future, with Professor Simon Dalby

According to Simon Dalby, Professor emeritus in the Balsillie School of International Affairs at Wilfrid Laurier University in Ontario, Canada, global politics over the past 70 years has been driven by an overabundance of "firepower," both nuclear and carbon-based.  The first was used by Great Power to threaten incineration of the world, by intention or accident, in the name of "national security."  The second now threatens the future of life on Earth--human and nonhuman--but Great Powers (and the not-so-great) resolutely refuse to give them up in the name of "national security" and "lifestyle."  In 2022, Dalby published Rethinking Environmental Security, an analysis of firepower past, present and futureJoin host Ronnie Lipschutz for a thought-provoking conversation with Simon Dalby about these two threats and what countries are not doing about it.

Previous shows are available at https://ksqd.org/sustainabilitynow/

Sustainability Now! is underwritten by the Sustainable Systems Research Foundation.

Feb 20, 202358:21
What’s a CAP?  And what does it do? With Rachel Kippen  
Feb 06, 202354:18
“You’re going to have to change the priorities of your life if you love this planet” with Dr. Helen Caldicott

“You’re going to have to change the priorities of your life if you love this planet” with Dr. Helen Caldicott

Join host Ronnie Lipschutz in welcoming Dr. Helen Caldicott to Sustainability Now!, live from Australia, to talk about the looming threat of nuclear war. According to Dr. Caldicott, the nuclear doomsday clock of The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists is set at 100 seconds to Midnight, but 20 seconds is closer to the mark. Dr. Caldicott has devoted the last forty-two years to an international campaign to educate the public about the medical hazards of the nuclear age and the necessary changes in human behavior to stop environmental destruction and nuclear catastrophe. She calls this “Global Preventive Medicine.” Caldicott is also the subject of “If You Love This Planet,” which won an Academy Award in 1982 for best documentary.

Jan 14, 202345:04
Transit Equity Week 2023 with Lani Faulkner, Michael Wool and Equity Transit

Transit Equity Week 2023 with Lani Faulkner, Michael Wool and Equity Transit

Join host Ronnie Lipschutz for a conversation with Lani Faulkner, Founder and Director of Equity Transit of Santa Cruz County and Michael Wool, a transit activist and senior at UCSC.  We’ll be talking about Transit Equity Week 2023, which will run from January 30-February 4th, 2023. Transit Equity Day is a National Coalition movement event celebrated on Feb 4th, in honor of Rosa Parks’ Birthday and her pivotal role in combating racial segregation on public buses, trains, and trolleys.  Transit Equity Week will bring awareness to the need for robust public transportation and safe streets in Santa Cruz County. Transit Equity advocates for a robust and affordable public transportation system, a clean environment, affordable housing, safe walkable streets, and opportunity access for work, school, and everyday life.

Dec 12, 202252:36
Trees are Shape Shifters--Italian Landscapes and Human Interventions in the Anthropocene

Trees are Shape Shifters--Italian Landscapes and Human Interventions in the Anthropocene

Have you ever wondered about the history of the landscapes around you, how they were shaped and by whom?  UCSC Associate Professor of Anthropology Andrew Mathews has and he has studied landscape histories and their transformations in Italy.  Now he has published his research in Trees are Shape Shifters--How Cultivation, Climate Change and Disaster Create Landscapes, a closely-documented study of trees and people in central Italy and "how they make sense of social and environmental change" around them.  Join host Ronnie Lipschutz for a widely-ranging conversation with Mathews about landscape histories, human action and ecological change in Italy, California and the rest of the world.

You can read about Mathew's work on his web site.

Nov 28, 202252:35
Report from the Climate Conference in Sharm El-Sheikh, with Professor Sander Chan and Andrew Deneault
Nov 14, 202254:37
Funding for the Future! with Dr. Delton Chen and Renegade Economist Della Duncan

Funding for the Future! with Dr. Delton Chen and Renegade Economist Della Duncan

What if humanity could take a giant step forward towards a climate transformation? We are rebroadcasting Christine Barrington's October 12, interview with Dr. Delton Chen, Founder of the Global Carbon Reward along with Renegade Economist, Della Duncan, who together will headline at a November 2 event at the Resource Center for Non-Violence called Funding for the Future: New Ways to Value Life on our Planet.

The Global Carbon Reward is a bold policy proposal that seeks to leverage the power of the world’s central banks to institute a global monetary policy that rewards the mitigation of carbon. This policy would create a parallel economy powered by a Carbon Currency whose value is derived through increasing the health of the biosphere. Dr. Chen’s ideas were featured in Kim Stanley Robinson’s Ministry for the Future, and he is on a bi-coastal tour to raise awareness and engage interest in the policy. He will be presenting, along with Kim Stanley Robinson, at the Verge 22 Climate Tech Summit in San Jose at the end of October.

Della Duncan is a Co-Founder of the California Doughnut Economics Coalition and a Public Banking advocate. She works alongside others to shift the mindset around economics in order to tackle the 21st century’s grand challenge of meeting the needs of all people within the means of the planet.  Della dynamically pursues this vision through teaching, organizing, and mentoring. She is a Senior Fellow at the London School of Economics International Inequalities Institute and since 2016 has produced and hosted the Upstream Podcast, which invites listeners to unlearn everything they thought they knew about economics and imagine what a better world could look like.  She will address ideas around De-growth and the questioning of “Green Capitalism” as applied to the Global Carbon Reward.

Della’s 2-Part audio documentary is powerful journalism and full of provocative ideas well worth considering. Part 1:  The Problem with Green Captitalism;  Part 2: A Green Deal for the People

You can also listen to Christine's Talk of the Bay broadcast "Pricing Nature through the Global Carbon Reward: A Conversation with Dr. Delton Chen, Author Kim Stanley Robinson and Renegade Economist Kate Raworth."

Sustainability Now! is underwritten by the Sustainable Systems Research Foundation. and Environmental Innovations.

Nov 01, 202256:04
“Fire, Fire on the Mountain!” New Threats to Organic Farming in California
Oct 17, 202255:52
Open Farm Tours is Back!
Oct 05, 202251:41
Letter to Fellow Citizens of Earth, with Dr. Sharachchandra Lele

Letter to Fellow Citizens of Earth, with Dr. Sharachchandra Lele

Join Host Ronnie Lipschutz for a conversation with Dr. Sharachchandra Lele who is coleader of an Expert Writing Group of natural scientists, social scientists and humanities scholars who have published a “Letter to Fellow Citizens of Earth,” “an urgent call to our global neighbours, to acknowledge the climate crisis, make personal and collective commitments in line with differences in privileges and responsibilities and work toward transformative changes.” Dr. Lele is  a Distinguished Fellow in Environmental Policy & Governance at the Centre for Environment & Development of the Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment in Bangalore, India  and an Adjunct Faculty Member in the Department of Humanities and Social Sciences at the Indian Institute of Science Education & Research (IISER) Pune. His research interests include conceptual issues in sustainable development and sustainability, and analyses of institutional, economic, ecological, and technological issues in forest, energy, and water resource management.

We'll be reaching beyond California on this show, so don’t miss it!

Sep 19, 202258:50
In the Shadow of Climate Change: What can the Children Tell Us?

In the Shadow of Climate Change: What can the Children Tell Us?

In the Shadow of Climate Change: What can the Children Tell Us? with Filmmaker Eric Thiermann Join Host Ronnie Lipschutz for a conversation with filmmaker and media producer Eric Thiermann. During his 40-year career, Thiermann has filmed, produced and directed hundreds of media projects in over 40 countries. These include "Art and the Prison Crisis," "The Last Epidemic: Medical Consequences of Nuclear Weapons and Nuclear War," "In the Nuclear Shadow: What Can the Children Tell Us?" nominated for an Academy Award in 1984, and "Women for America," which received the Academy Award for best short documentary film in 1986. More recently, he has been involved in creating a radio show called “Kids on Climate” and “Connected Universe,” a game-like educational platform where the player is offered an island paradise which is suffering from climate change.

Sustainability Now! is underwritten by the Sustainable Systems Research Foundation. and Environmental Innovations.

Sep 05, 202256:29
Well, Well, Well! Clean Water for Everyone!
Aug 22, 202249:09
How a Republican Grandfather Helped Legalize Abortion
Aug 09, 202251:09
 Finding the Mother Tree with Professor Suzanne Simard, University of British Columbia (rebroadcast)

Finding the Mother Tree with Professor Suzanne Simard, University of British Columbia (rebroadcast)

Join host Ronnie Lipschutz in this Blast from the Past (originally broadcast on May 23, 2021) as he speaks with Dr. Suzanne Simard, Professor of Forestry and Conservation Sciences about the social life of trees.   Her 2021 book, Finding the Mother Tree--Discovering the Wisdom of the Forest, has just been published.  According to Simard, communication between trees happens not in the air but deep below our feet in an incredibly dense, complex network of roots and chemical signals. ... “In a single forest, a mother tree may be connected to hundreds of other trees.”

Here is what Bookshop Santa Cruz wrote about Simard: “Suzanne Simard is a pioneer on the frontier of plant communication and intelligence; she’s been compared to Rachel Carson, hailed as a scientist who conveys complex, technical ideas in a way that is dazzling and profound…. Simard writes—in inspiring, illuminating, and accessible ways—how trees, living side by side for hundreds of years, have evolved, how they perceive one another, learn and adapt their behaviors, recognize neighbors, and remember the past; how they have agency about the future; elicit warnings and mount defenses, compete and cooperate with one another with sophistication, characteristics ascribed to human intelligence, traits that are the essence of civil societies—and at the center of it all, the Mother Trees: the mysterious, powerful forces that connect and sustain the others that surround them.”

You can learn more about Simard's work in "The Social Life of Forests," New York Times Magazine, Dec. 2, 2020, and at The Mother Tree Project.  If you search for "Suzanne Simard" on You Tube, you will turn up a dozen videos, including a TED talk, about her work.

The articles referred to in the show are:

Lincoln Taiz, et al, "Plants Neither Possess nor Require Consciousness," Trends in Plant Science 24, #8 (August 2019): 677-87

Michael Pollan, "The Intelligent Plant," The New Yorker, December 23, 2013.

Sustainability Now! is underwritten by the Sustainable Systems Research Foundation and Environmental Innovations.

Jul 27, 202254:41
In Santa Cruz, July is Not too Late to Plant Seeds!

In Santa Cruz, July is Not too Late to Plant Seeds!

Have you procrastinated on planting a garden or been too busy?  Do you think it’s too late and you’ll have to wait until next year?  Not on the Central Coast!  Join Host Ronnie Lipschutz for a conversation with Renee Shepherd, founder of Renee’s Garden and seed entrepreneur extraordinaire.  Not only do we talk about what can be sown now to be ripe and ready late summer and fall harvesting, we’ll also cover topics such as heirloom, heritage and hybrid seeds and discuss where the seeds for your garden come from.

Sustainability Now! is underwritten by the Sustainable Systems Research Foundation and Environmental Innovations.

Jul 11, 202243:21
Some of My Best Friends are Elephants! with USF Professor Matthew Liebman

Some of My Best Friends are Elephants! with USF Professor Matthew Liebman

Are elephants people, too?  Do they have rights?  A recent ruling by a New York state court said that “elephants may be intelligent and deserving of compassion” but that Happy, an elephant confined in the Bronx Zoo, is not a person.  A growing number of human people around the world disagree and argue that both animals and nature have rights. Listen to a Sustainability Now! conversation about the rights of animals and nature with Host Ronnie Lipschutz and  Professor Matthew Liebman, Associate Professor and Chair of the Justice for Animals Program at the Law School at University of San Francisco University.  We will talk about the history of “rights,” how they have been extended over time, and why animals and nature are deserving of the same consideration.

Sustainability Now! is underwritten by the Sustainable Systems Research Foundation. and Environmental Innovations.

Jun 27, 202254:25
Meet the Monterey Bay Economic Partnership, with Tahra Goraya

Meet the Monterey Bay Economic Partnership, with Tahra Goraya

Sustainability Now! co-host Brooke Wright speaks with Tahra Goraya, the new President & CEO of the tri-county Monterey Bay Economic Partnership (MBEP).  MBEP works on housing, broadband access, workforce development, renewable energy and climate policy, water conservation,  regional recycling, transportation and more. We will talk with Tahra about her journey into this role and about what MBEP is and what it is getting done to address climate change and other environmental issues.


Jun 16, 202255:49
Fighting Fires with Fire with Dr. Sasha Berleman, Wildland Fire Scientist

Fighting Fires with Fire with Dr. Sasha Berleman, Wildland Fire Scientist

Once again, California is dry, dry, dry and that probably means we are in for a wild wildfire season. Since the beginning of 2021, there have been 10,000 wildfires across the state, and those that know are predicting the worst for this year's fire season.  So, what are we to do? Hear from Dr. Sasha Berleman, Wildland Fire Scientist. She is director of Fire Forward at Audubon Canyon Ranch in Stinson Beach. She is a CA State Certified Burn Boss, a Prescribed Fire Training Exchange (TREX) coach and leader, and a wildland firefighter with Fire Effects Monitoring, Squad Boss, Crew Boss, Firing Boss, and Incident Commander qualifications.  In this show from June 2021, find out about the risk of wildfires and what we can do to reduce the threat.

This show was originally broadcast on June 21, 2021.

Watch these videos online:

Why These Californians Are Starting Fires On Purpose 

Community-Based Burning: Caring for our Land Together

Andrew Selsky, "Amid clamor to increase prescribed burns, obstacles await," AP News, June 22, 2021.

May 30, 202252:58
Science by the People! Biodiversity and Community Science with Rebecca Johnson & Alison Young, California Academy of Sciences

Science by the People! Biodiversity and Community Science with Rebecca Johnson & Alison Young, California Academy of Sciences

Science by the People! Biodiversity & Community Science with Rebecca Johnson & Alison Young, California Academy of Sciences On Sustainability Now! Sunday, May 15th, 5-6 PM on KSQD 90.7 FM and KSQD.org

Join Ronnie Lipschutz for a conversation with Rebecca Johnson and Alison Young, Co-Directors of the Center for Biodiversity and Community Science at the California Academy of Sciences. Community science is a global movement through which scientists and non-scientists alike make observations, collect data, and help answer some of our planet's most pressing questions. It is research- and monitoring-driven and controlled by local communities, and characterized by place-based knowledge, social learning, collective action, and empowerment.

May 17, 202252:45
Let's Go Ride our Bikes!
May 02, 202239:12
To be an Elephant Seal in the Spring! with Theresa Keates
Apr 22, 202254:18
Electrify California!

Electrify California!

Electrify California! with Benjamin Eichert On Sustainability Now! Sunday, April 3rd, 5-6 PM on KSQD 90.7 FM and KSQD.org

Hosts Brooke Wright and Ronnie Lipschutz speak with Benjamin Eichert, Director of  Let’s Green California—an initiative launched by the Romero Institute in Santa Cruz to create a California Green New Deal and get the core legislation passed into law by September 30, 2022.

Let’s Green California has also created “Electrify CA!” based on a simple idea: make the switch from fossil fuel-based technologies to electric alternatives powered by clean energy, and ensure that low-income communities and working families both lead and benefit from this transition.

Previous broadcasts of Sustainability Now! are archived at KSQD.org and on Pocket Casts, Google Podcasts and Spotify.

Sustainability Now! is underwritten by the Sustainable Systems Research Foundation. and Environmental Innovations.

Apr 03, 202257:59
A Spectre is Haunting Europe: Nuclear Winter!

A Spectre is Haunting Europe: Nuclear Winter!

A Spectre is Haunting Europe: Nuclear Winter with Dr. Alan Robock & Dr. Joshua Coupe On Sustainability Now! Sunday, March 20th, 5-6 PM on KSQD 90.7 FM and KSQD.org

“A spectre is haunting Europe,” but this time it is not communism. Vladimir Putin has put Russia’s nuclear forces on “special combat readiness,” bringing back memories and fears for some of us, reminiscent of the darkest days of the Cold War.  What would be the climatic consequences of nuclear war?  Our guest are Dr. Alan Robock, Distinguished Professor in the Environmental Sciences Department at Rutgers University and Dr. Joshua Coupe, a postdoctoral researcher at Louisiana State University.  They and their colleagues are modeling the climatic consequences of a nuclear exchange between Russia and the United States, aka, “Nuclear Winter,” a notion popularized by Carl Sagan in the 1980s (some of us are old enough to remember both).

That’s our explosive show broadcast on Sunday, March 20th, 2022.

Previous broadcasts of Sustainability Now! are archived at KSQD.org and on Pocket Casts, Google Podcasts and Spotify.

Sustainability Now! is underwritten by the Sustainable Systems Research Foundation and Environmental Innovations.

Here are some resources:

Coupe, J., Bardeen, C. G., Robock, A., & Toon, O. B. (2019). "Nuclear winter responses to nuclear war between the United States and Russia in the Whole Atmosphere," Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres 124, 8522–43.

Jeannie Peterson, ed. The Aftermath--The Human and Ecological Consequences of Nuclear War (New York: Pantheon/Ambio, 1983).

Kjølv Egeland (2021) "The Ideology of Nuclear Order," New Political Science, 43:2, 208-230.

Rutgers U. Research Archive: http://climate.envsci.rutgers.edu/nuclear/

Mar 21, 202255:32
What are Seabed Mineral Nodules and Who Wants Them?

What are Seabed Mineral Nodules and Who Wants Them?

What are Seabed Mineral Nodules and Who Wants Them? with Emily Jeffers, Center for Biological Diversity California Assembly Member Luz Rivas recently introduced a bill to ban mining of seabed nodules on 2,500 square miles of sea floor off the coast of California.  According to the San Francisco Chronicle, critics say such mining would “kill marine life, damage habitats and pollute surrounding areas, and ultimately could have a negative impact on fishing and tourism, which together contribute more than $20 billion annually to the state’s economy.” Proponents argue that seabed mining could provide access to many metals used in cell phones and electric cars and would contribute to the coming green economy.

What is seabed mining and what are those mineral nodules that seem to promise a future full of green devices?  Join host Ronnie Lipschutz for a conversation with Emily Jeffers, a Berkeley-based staff lawyer for the Center for Biological Diversity.  We’ll explore why mineral companies are so gung ho about getting out there and scooping up those nodules.

Here are a few articles about the topic:

Elizabeth Kolbert, "Mining the Bottom of the Sea," The New Yorker, December 26, 2021.

Jessica Aldred, "The Future of Deep Seabed Mining," China Dialogue Ocean, February 25, 2019.

Kathryn A. Miller, Kirsten F. Thompson, Paul Johnston and David Santillo, "An Overview of Seabed Mining Including the Current State of Development, Environmental Impacts, and Knowledge Gaps," Frontiers of Marine Science 4 (2018): article 418.

Sustainability Now! is underwritten by the Sustainable Systems Research Foundation and Environmental Innovations.

Mar 07, 202201:02:02
From Food Waste to Soil at Hard Core Compost

From Food Waste to Soil at Hard Core Compost

Sustainability Now! Sunday, February 20th: From Food Waste to Soil at Hard Core Compost

Join Ronnie Lipschutz for a trip to Hard Core Compost. My guests will be Kumi Maxson and Zav Hershfield, two members of the Hard Core Compost collective. Hard Core uses cargo bicycles to haul food scraps from home kitchens to their composting site on the Westside of Santa Cruz, next to the Homeless Garden Project. We’ll be touring their site, talking about organic waste management in Santa Cruz and what is Hard Core’s role in composting food scraps locally, especially as the city’s composting program gets going.

Previous broadcasts of Sustainability Now! are archived at KSQD.org and on Pocket Casts, Google Podcasts and Spotify.

Sustainability Now! is underwritten by the Sustainable Systems Research Foundation and Environmental Innovations.

Feb 21, 202253:44
Latinx Farmers’ Survival in the U.S. Agricultural System, with Josefina Lara Chavez

Latinx Farmers’ Survival in the U.S. Agricultural System, with Josefina Lara Chavez

Join host Ronnie Lipschutz in a conversation with Josefina Lara Chavez, Farm-to-Market specialist and Senior Manager, Latinx Farmer Program for the Community Alliance for Family Farmers in Davis. Our focus will be on Latinx farmers in the Monterey Bay Region and their struggle to survive and thrive in the face of an agricultural system that takes little account of them.  Lara Chavez a fourth generation family farmer and is currently working at getting her farm and food hub in Hollister, Lara Organics, off the ground.

Previous broadcasts of Sustainability Now! are archived at KSQD.org and on Pocket Casts, Google Podcasts and Spotify.

Sustainability Now! is underwritten by the Sustainable Systems Research Foundation. and Environmental Innovations.

North Bay Jobs with Justice has launched a campaign to support farmworkers in Sonoma County. For more information, see https://northbayjobswithjustice.org/

Feb 07, 202253:23
Solar Panels and Solar Panics, with Dr. Ahmad Faruqui

Solar Panels and Solar Panics, with Dr. Ahmad Faruqui

January 2022 is Solar Energy Month on Sustainability Now!  On Sunday, January 23rd, hosts Ronnie Lipschutz and Brooke Wright welcome Dr. Ahmad Faruqui, an energy economist who has been deeply involved in solar electricity issues in California. We talk about the pending decision by the California Public Utilities Commission to reduce compensation for rooftop solar electricity and to charge households for access to the state’s electricity grid.

You can learn about the proposed decision at: https://www.cpuc.ca.gov/nemrevisit

Dr. Faruqui's comments on the proposed decision are at: http://ahmadfaruqui.blogspot.com/2022/01/my-comments-on-cpucs-proposed-decision.html

Dr. Severin Borenstein of the UC Berkeley Haas School and Dr. Faruqui debated the choices before the State of California on Wednesday, January 26th. You can watch the debate at: https://www.canarymedia.com/articles/solar/live-debate-how-to-fix-rooftop-solar-policy-in-california?utm_id=canary&utm_medium=email&_hsmi=202127337&_hsenc=p2ANqtz--K_uhTUcmpl88UhS4iCADMc_gKWQWrB2ziu5wcLOqakZayxzHba7UwZXOB4xjYk6bZ1-TYV6J4NWWCzsT3x64XRPLsMQ&utm_source=nem

Previous broadcasts of Sustainability Now! are archived at KSQD.org and on Pocket Casts, Google Podcasts and Spotify.

Sustainability Now! is underwritten by the Sustainable Systems Research Foundation and Environmental Innovations.

Jan 24, 202251:60
Here Comes the Sun!

Here Comes the Sun!

Here Comes the Sun!  on Sustainability Now! Sunday, January 9th, 5-6 PM on KSQD

January 2022 is Solar Energy Month on Sustainability Now!  On Sunday, January 23rd, we will be welcoming Dr. Ahmad Faruqui, an energy economist who has been deeply involved in solar electricity issues in California.  We will be talking about the pending decision by the California Public Utilities Commission to impose “grid participation charges” on households with rooftop solar.

To get listeners prepared for Dr. Faruqui, we have assembled a show that draws on past episodes focused on solar.   We’ll be hearing from: Dr. Dustin Mulvaney, a SJSU professor and solar energy expert, to talk about PG&E; Fred Keeley, who has been deeply involved in electricity law and regulation for more than 20 years, to talk about the future of electric utilities in California; Allie Detrio, Chief strategist at Reimagine Power in San Francisco, who will run us through how solar law and regulation functions in California, and Bob Stayton, who will talk about his Solar Dividends proposal, to give every Californian a month basic income from the sale of solar electricity.

Jan 09, 202255:36
Foodware Beware! with Tim Goncharoff
Dec 13, 202155:06
Being in the World with Bees (or, What is it to Be a Bee?) with Professor Eve Bratman
Dec 01, 202151:17
W(h)ither Water? with Sierra Ryan, County Water Resources Manager
Nov 15, 202154:39
Oil and Water Don’t Mix! with Fred Keeley
Oct 31, 202159:24
What’s slough? I don’t know, what’s slough with you? with Dr. Kerstin Wasson, Elkhorn Slough
Oct 23, 202156:02
There's Fungus Among Us--Mycopermaculture, Mycomimicry, and Mycopsychology, with Maya Elson of CoRenewal

There's Fungus Among Us--Mycopermaculture, Mycomimicry, and Mycopsychology, with Maya Elson of CoRenewal

Join hosts Ronnie Lipschutz and Brooke Wright for a conversation with Maya Elson, Executive Director of CoREnewal (formerly known as the Amazon MycoRenewal Project).  She is a founding member of the Radical Mycology network, she’s worked on various fungal cultivation and educational projects in Olympia, WA and the San Francisco Bay area. Maya is a teacher, naturalist, mycologist, organizer and lover of the wild, dedicated to enacting effective and just solutions to environmental and social crises by working in collaboration with fungi. CoRenewal is a non-profit organization dedicated to providing education and research in ecosystem restoration, health and healing, and sustainable community dynamics through community development and bioremediation, the nature-based solutions to human caused pollution.

Sustainability Now! is underwritten by the Sustainable Systems Research Foundation.

For further reading:  Zoë Schlanger, "Our Silent Partners," New York Review of Books, October 7, 2021: Review of Merlin Sheldrake, Entangled Life: How Fungi Make Our Worlds, Change Our Minds and Shape Our Futures (Random House, 2021).

For viewing: "Fantastic Fungi," https://fantasticfungi.com/

Oct 04, 202152:27
The Sustainable Systems Research Foundation: Who are those guys?

The Sustainable Systems Research Foundation: Who are those guys?

Sustainability Now! is underwritten by the Sustainable Systems Research Foundation.  But what is SSRF?  Join host Ronnie Lipschutz and new co-host Brooke Wright in a discussion of two SSRF projects in development.  The Watsonville Basic Income Pilot Project will take revenues from sale of solar electricity to a local business and distribute to selected farmworker households as basic income stipends.  The Sustainable Urban Food Initiative will bring the benefits of agricultural technology and farm management techniques to small farms and gardens in the Monterey Bay Region.  Both projects are examples of the kinds of local development pursued by SSRF.

Sep 20, 202156:38
Clean Energy Now! with Shaina Nanavati of Reclaim Our Power

Clean Energy Now! with Shaina Nanavati of Reclaim Our Power

Join host Ronnie Lipschutz for a conversation with Shaina Nanavati, a research organizer for the Reclaim Our Power Utility Justice Campaign and staff member of the Local Clean Energy Alliance. Reclaim Our Power is an statewide initiative mobilizing a broad coalition of utility ratepayers, social justice advocates, and allies to develop an equitable, sustainable, decentralized restructuring of California’s energy system.  Tune in to learn about this transformative project and what it will require to succeed.

Sustainability Now! is underwritten by the Sustainable Systems Research Foundation.

Sep 06, 202153:54
An SN! Revisit with Dr. Rupa Basu. Climate Change and Public Health
Sep 06, 202155:50