
People Places Planet (Environmental Law Institute)
Explore every episode of People Places Planet
Pub. Date | Title | Duration | |
---|---|---|---|
21 Apr 2022 | ELIâs Climate Judiciary Project | 00:20:06 | |
ELIâs Climate Judiciary Project bridges the gap between the climate science community and the judiciary, providing judges with neutral, objective information about the science of climate change. In this episode, ELI Research Associate Heather Luedke talks to Sandy Nichols Thiam, ELIâs Director of Judicial Education, and Dr. Paul Hanle, the Project Founder, to learn more. â Support this podcast â | |||
16 Jul 2019 | Trailblazing Tribes: Agriculture | 01:00:15 | |
When it comes to the 573 federally recognized tribes in the United States, agriculture represents not just a source of food security, but an opportunity to express tribal sovereignty, drive economic development, and reclaim the cultivation of plants and animals central to a tribeâs culture across generations. Join Cynthia R. Harris, ELIâs Director of Tribal Programs, as she explores how tribes are taking on challenges, reclaiming traditional practices, and innovating in agriculture and food production with special guests Zach Ducheneaux, Executive Director of the Intertribal Agriculture Council; Chris Roper with the Quapaw Services Authority; Pat Gwin, Environmental Resources Senior Director for the Cherokee Nation; and Colby Duren, director of the Indigenous Food and Agriculture Initiative at the University of Arkansas School of Law. â Support this podcast â | |||
14 Jul 2023 | Of Fish and Farms: Investigating Land-Based Aquaculture's Promises | 00:47:19 | |
Fish consumption is on the rise worldwide, and with it, fish farming. Land-based aquaculture and recirculating aquaculture systems (RAS) offer a lot of environmental promise, but do they live up to the hype? In this episode host Georgia Ray discusses the findings of a new ELI report, Fish Forward. Georgia is joined by Elissa Torres-Soto, Irene Jandoc, and Cynthia R. Harris as they explore the ways to measure the effectiveness of RAS facilities in Maine, the regulatory environment, and how the UAE might be a surprisingly helpful case study for best practice industry standards. â Support this podcast â | |||
10 Nov 2021 | Bubble Trouble | 00:26:14 | |
Land use climate bubbles are popping up all over the nation at an alarming rate, and they could very well lead to an economic crisis that will be more damaging than that of the housing bubble of 2008. What can we do to respond? Land Use Law expert John Nolon describes how the local land use legal system can leverage state and federal assistance to reduce per capita carbon emissions as an important and now recognized component of global efforts to manage climate change. The podcast is being released in tandem with CNNâs Call to Earth Day, an initiative to share the stories of those dedicated to conservation, environmentalism, and sustainability. â Support this podcast â | |||
03 Oct 2024 | Planted! How Local Governments are Engaging the Public on the Benefits of Plant-Based Proteins | 00:42:52 | |
There are myriad ways to engage the public on the climate, health, and other benefits of plant-based proteinsâfrom launching awareness campaigns to providing food sampling opportunities at municipal events. In this podcast, Sarah Backer and Linda Breggin learn about the efforts of a local government and nonprofit as well as get advice from a social psychology expert about how research findings can inform engagement strategies. Hear from Sarah Gardner about how Iowa City is partnering with farmers markets and other community organizations, Naijha Wright-Brown on how her non-profit launched a plant-based Restaurant Week in Baltimore, and from Toby Park on the most effective messaging and other strategies. â Support this podcast â | |||
06 Mar 2019 | Environmental Disruptors: Weed Like A Sustainable Cannabis Industry | 00:21:15 | |
Whatâs up with cannabis and the environment? From air, water, and nutrients, to packaging, waste, and pesticides, the cannabis sector is fraught with sustainability challenges. This episode of Conversation With Environmental Disruptors features Kaitlin Urso, a cannabis environmental consultant based in Denver, Colorado. Within the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environmentâs Small Business Assistance Program, Kaitlin works on the ground with growers and businesses to implement a strategy to drive sustainability in cannabis. Today, 33 states have legalized cannabis for medical use --- 10 of these states, in addition to Washington DC, have also legalized cannabis for recreational use. Just ten years ago, only 13 states had legalized medicinal cannabis. Recreational cannabis wasnât legal on the state level until 2012, with Colorado and Washington state forging the path. This year alone, Forbes predicts nine additional states could legalize recreational cannabis use. The cannabis industry is transforming rapidly. But what does this mean for the environment? Back in 2017 ELIâs Director of Technology Innovation and Environment, Dave Rejeski asked Is Marijuana the Next Big Thing? and considered some of the environmental implications of this fast-growing (pun intended) industry. In this episode Kaitlin Urso (cannabis environmental consultant at CDPHE) and Azi Akpan (science and policy analyst at ELI Innovation Lab) digs into some big sustainability questions, exploring the priorities, challenges, and obstacles to driving sustainability in cannabis. Last month, Kaitlin Urso led an air quality project to collect data on four cannabis farms, to track volatile organic compounds (VOCs) emissions across plant types, sizes, ages, and growing conditions. Read the Science Magazine article here. â Support this podcast â | |||
11 Apr 2024 | NEPA, Explained | 00:24:24 | |
When airports, buildings, highways, dams, power plants, and other federal activities are proposed, the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) requirements are invoked. Passed by Congress in 1969 and signed into law on January 1, 1970, NEPA fundamentally altered how lawmakers and regulators approach human impacts on the natural world. Despite significant success in involving the public in decision-making, NEPA regulations have been criticized for delaying projects and raising costs. In this episode, ELI Senior Attorney Amy Reed breaks down how NEPA works and explains proposed regulation changes. Relevant Resources: | |||
26 Jun 2019 | Environmental Disruptors: 3-D Printing Food Waste for Fine Dining | 00:23:47 | |
Food waste is one of the biggest and most overlooked global environmental challenges. Worldwide, approximately 30% of food is wasted across the supply chain. Food waste contributes to 8% of total greenhouse gases. This is tremendous. If food waste were a country, it would be the third largest emitter, after the United States and China. In the latest episode from People Places Planet Podcast, Azi Akpan of ELIâs Innovation Lab chats with Elzelinde van Doleweerd and Vita Broeken, co-Founders of Upprinting Food, based in Eindhoven in the Netherlands. Founded in November 2018, Upprinting Food reduces food waste by transforming it into beautiful, edible art using 3-D printing technology. Check out the Upprinting Food in action: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k3y-jOOIy6c â Support this podcast â | |||
08 Feb 2024 | Confidence in Climate Science: How Consensus Emerges in the Scientific Community | 00:18:37 | |
Building scientific agreement is a meticulous process. In climate science, this process has faced a lot of outside scrutiny. In this episode, ELIâs Staff Scientist Dr. John Doherty joins Host Sarah Backer to discuss the responsibilities of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and the US Global Change Research Program (USGCRP) and how they are communicating what we know about climate change. Relevant Resources: | |||
25 Oct 2023 | Weighing The Social Cost of Carbon with Cass Sunstein and Kip Viscusi | 00:32:42 | |
In this weekâs episode of the People Places Planet podcast, Harvard Law Professor Cass Sunstein engages in an illuminating discussion with Vanderbilt Professor W. Kip Viscusi about the social cost of carbonâa hotly debated and frequently litigated numberâthat is used to quantify the harm caused by one ton of carbon emissions. They are joined by ELI Senior Attorney Linda K. Breggin and Vanderbilt Law student Kyle Blasinsky. This important number is used in developing a range of regulations and soon will be used in federal budgeting and purchasing decisions, as well as National Environmental Policy Act reviews, under a new Biden Executive Order. Professor Sunstein, an Obama Administration Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs Administrator, discusses the key judgement calls that must be made in developing the social cost of carbon, such as the appropriate discount rate and approaches to incorporating equity, and offers his views on developing a number that can withstand arbitrariness review in any renewed effort to challenge the number in court. Professor Sunsteinâs related article Arbitrariness Review and Climate Change was selected for inclusion in this yearâs Environmental Law and Policy Annual Review, which recognizes scholarship that presents creative and feasible legal and policy solutions to pressing environmental problems. ELPAR is published annually by the ELIâs Environmental Law Reporter in collaboration with the Vanderbilt University Law School. â Support this podcast â | |||
10 Aug 2022 | The Youth Review: Environmental Peacebuilding, Conservation, and Nonprofit Cooperation | 00:32:38 | |
In this episode of the People Places Planet Podcast, former Research Associate Shehla Chowdhury joins host Georgia Ray to reflect on her time as a research associate, which ended in June 2022. She discusses her work in the nascent field of environmental peacebuilding, while also delving into her contributions to the local government environmental assistance network, differences between domestic and international environmental work, and her takeaways from studying non-governmental organizations in the Global North and Global South. â Support this podcast â | |||
06 Apr 2022 | The Enforcement Angle: Nuts and Bolts of EJSCREEN 2.0 | 00:43:28 | |
As the Agency responsible for protecting human health and the environment across the entirety of the United States, EPA has developed EJSCREEN, a mapping and screening tool that combines environmental and demographic data to highlight areas with potential environmental justice concerns. In February, EPA released EJSCREEN 2.0, adding new indicators and datasets to the tool. In this episode, Nicole Noelliste, a managing associate in the environmental practice at Sidley Austin LLP, talks to Matthew Tejada, Director of EPAâs Office of Environmental Justice, and Tai Lung, also with EPAâs Office of Environmental Justice, to learn about EJSCREEN 2.0. â Support this podcast â | |||
15 Jul 2021 | Into the Legal Void: Asteroid Mining and the Second Space Age | 00:48:38 | |
After millennia of humankind exploiting terrestrial resources, national governments and private enterprises alike are eyeing the skies. Thereâs evidence of asteroids containing precious metals. Ice on the Moon can be extracted to generate drinking water, oxygen, hydrogen, and helium-3. And Mars has useful minerals, ice, and perhaps even liquid water. All of this requires miningâa pollution-heavy industry. But if activities impacting the environment are being carried out in outer space, what law applies? Or is it all just a . . . legal void? In this episode, ELIâs Cynthia Harris talks to Scot Anderson and Julia La Manna, attorneys with Hogan Lovells in Denver, Colorado, to help us navigate the uncertain terrain of space mining. â Support this podcast â | |||
24 Feb 2021 | Working Remotely During the Pandemic at ELI | 00:24:01 | |
As we approach one year of remote work here at ELI, we were curious about the working-from-home experiences of our own staff. In this episode, we talk to three members of ELIâs Research and Policy Department: Linda Breggin, a Senior Attorney; Akielly Hu, a Research Associate; and Jarryd Page, our Public Interest Law Fellow. The trio talk about their own working-at-home experiences and the challenges and unexpected opportunities of this new era of work. â Support this podcast â | |||
17 Mar 2022 | Groundtruth: EJ & ESG, Intersected | 00:51:13 | |
Interest and urgency in advancing environmental justice (EJ) has gained new momentum. As such, it is becoming increasingly important for companies to proactively address EJ issues. How might companiesâ environmental, social, and governance (ESG) commitments strengthen and work in tandem with EJ initiatives? In this episode, Stacey Sublett Halliday and Julius Redd of Beveridge & Diamond recap recent EJ policy developments and then talk with Matthew Tejada, Director of EPAâs Office of Environmental Justice, and Samantha Phillips Beers, Director of the EPA Region III Office of Communities, Tribes, and Environmental Assessment, about the intersection of EJ and ESG. The episode is part of the Groundtruth series created in partnership with Beveridge & Diamond, one of the nationâs leading environmental law firms. â Support this podcast â | |||
17 Dec 2020 | The Enforcement Angle: NJ DEPâs Catherine McCabe | 00:46:51 | |
Founded on the first Earth Day in 1970, the New Jersey DEP protects the Garden Stateâs air, lands, water, and natural and historic resources. In the latest episode of People Places Planet Podcast, Justin Savage, a Partner at Sidley Austin LLP who co-leads the firmâ global environmental practice, talks to NJ DEP Commissioner Catherine McCabe. The two discuss a wide range of issues, including the incoming Biden Administration, PFAS, and environmental justice. â Support this podcast â | |||
24 May 2023 | 2023 National Wetlands Awards: Charlotte Michaluk, Youth Leadership Award Winner | 00:11:13 | |
Charlotte Michaluk has been a successful, data-driven advocate for wetland conservation and a continuous force in educating the community, notably through her wetland monitoring curriculumsâall before the age of 18.   In this miniseries, ELIâs Georgia Ray sits down with each of the 2023 National Wetlands Awardees. â Support this podcast â | |||
26 Aug 2020 | Compensatory Mitigation Project Review: Impediments & Best Practices | 00:29:16 | |
Compensatory mitigation offers a viable way to protect the long-term health of the nationâs watersheds, and its success relies on a robust review and approval process that ensures that the protections in federal regulations are implemented in practice on the ground and that compensation projects effectively offset permitted impacts. However, the review and approval process can often be lengthy, sometimes greatly exceeding the regulatory timelines. In this episode, Rebecca Kihslinger, Director of ELIâs Wetlands Program, discusses a new ELI research report that aims to identify some of the main impediments to efficiency in compensatory mitigation project review, as well as best practices to improve the process and ensure timely, ecologically viable mitigation outcomes. â Support this podcast â | |||
30 Mar 2022 | Bridges to A New Era: The Past, Present, and Future of Tribal Co-Management on Federal Lands | 00:52:37 | |
Linda Breggin, a Senior Attorney at ELI and Director of ELIâs Center for State, Tribal and Local Environmental Programs, talks to Professors Monte Mills and Martin Nie about their article, Bridges to a New Era: A Report on the Past, Present, and Potential Future of Tribal Co-Management on Federal Public Lands. In it, they posit that the United States can meaningfully connect public land law to the federal governmentâs long-standing trust-based and treaty-based responsibility to promote the sovereign and cultural interests of Native Nations and enhance and engage in a new era of tribal co-management across the federal public land system. The article received honorable mention in this yearâs Environmental Law and Policy Annual Review (ELPAR), a 15-year collaboration between ELI and Vanderbilt University Law School. Vanderbilt Law students Connor Kridle and Thomas Boynton join in on the conversation. â Support this podcast â | |||
23 Feb 2024 | Cumulative Impact Analysis: Massachusetts, EPA, and Beyond | 00:35:19 | |
Communities are exposed to pollution through the air, water, and land. Multiple sources of pollution and other environmental stressors can add up over time to cause adverse effects to human health and wellbeing. This is known as âcumulative impacts.â Environmental justice (EJ) communities tend to face greater cumulative impacts, as they are disproportionately exposed to multiple environmental, health, and social stressors. This episode of Groundtruth discusses new regulations in Massachusetts involving cumulative impact analyses for air permit issues in areas near EJ communities. Join Lauren Karam, Beveridge & Diamond's Boston Associate, Stella Keck, a Senior Scientist at Roux, and Andrew Shapero, a Senior Engineer at Roux, to learn more about how states, like Massachusetts, and the EPA are addressing cumulative impacts in EJ communities. â Support this podcast â | |||
02 Nov 2022 | The Enforcement Angle: INTERPOLâs Pollution Crime Working Group | 00:44:34 | |
INTERPOLâs Pollution Crime Working Group, a global network of national experts, initiates and leads a number of projects to combat the transport, trading, and disposal of hazardous wastes or resources in contravention of national and international laws. Justin Savage, a Partner and the Global Co-Leader of the Environmental practice at Sidley Austin LLP, and Nicole Noelliste, a Managing Associate at Sidley Austin LLP, talk to two members serving on INTERPOLâs Pollution Crime Working Group: Joseph Poux and Anne Brosnan. Also available on video! â Support this podcast â | |||
13 Dec 2022 | The Youth Review: Electric Vehicles and Just Energy Transitions | 00:29:40 | |
The significant environmental and human health benefits that are linked to electrifying transportation cannot be downplayed. Electric vehicles (EVs) do not produce tailpipe emissions, and, when charged using electricity generated from renewable sources like solar and wind, result in no operational upstream emissions either. But as more EVs reach the roads, governments will need to address a host of new environmental and social challenges. In this episode, ELIâs Georgia Ray and Jack Lyman, a partner at Marten Law LLP, reflect on the role EV production and use plays within a just energy transition. The episode is part of The Youth Review podcast series.  Interested in learning more? Check out these articles and posts on EV emissions, EV battery production, EV charging networks, and environmental justice. â Support this podcast â | |||
09 Nov 2023 | Dr. Marshall Shepherd and âThe Climate Moonshotâ | 00:27:33 | |
In this weekâs episode of People Places Planet Podcast, host Sarah Backer sits down with Dr. Marshall Shepherd, ELIâs 2023 Environmental Achievement Award recipient and renowned scientist, to have a conversation in celebration of his work. They discuss Shepherdâs background, inspirations, and views on solutions for the climate crisis. He delves into topics like climate delayism and the need for a âclimate moonshot,â providing a self-proclaimed âWeather Geekâ perspective into extreme weather events, environmental justice issues, and other important climate issues facing our communities today. â Support this podcast â | |||
08 Dec 2021 | Groundtruth: Environmental Justice in 2022âPerspectives From EPA | 00:41:12 | |
Interest and urgency in advancing environmental justice has gained new momentum. The Biden-Harris Administration has placed an unprecedented federal focus on environmental justice using a whole of government approach. Meanwhile, a growing list of states continue to develop, implement, and enforce EJ-focused legislation, accelerated by the intensity at the federal level. Will this momentum carry into the new year? In this episode, Stacey Halliday of Beveridge & Diamond talks to two EJ leaders at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency â Charles Lee, Senior Policy Advisor, and Matthew Tejada, the Director of the Office of Environmental Justice â to find out whatâs in store for 2022. This episode is part of the Groundtruth series created in partnership with Beveridge & Diamond, one of the nationâs leading environmental law firms. â Support this podcast â | |||
14 Oct 2020 | The Enforcement Angle: EPAâs Susan Bodine | 00:33:18 | |
The United States has created an intricate system of laws, regulations, policies, and programs to respond to environmental and public health concerns. Enforcement is vital to the systemâs effectiveness. In the latest episode of People Places Planet Podcast, Justin Savage, a Partner at Sidley Austin LLP who co-leads the firmâ global environmental practice, talks to Susan Bodine, the Assistant Administrator for EPAâs Office of Enforcement and Compliance Assurance. This episode is the first of a year-long series, The Enforcement Angle, created in partnership with Sidley Austin LLP. â Support this podcast â | |||
29 Mar 2023 | The Enforcement Angle: Corporate Compliance Monitors | 00:45:47 | |
Increasingly, independent third partiesâbetter known as âcorporate compliance monitorsâ--are appointed to oversee a companyâs compliance following the settlement of a criminal or, sometimes, civil enforcement case. Justin Savage of Sidley Austin LLP, speaks with Ike Adams, a Partner at Sidley Austin, and Michele Edwards and Brad Wilson, both with StoneTurn, a global advisory firm. The trio discuss corporate compliance monitorships, which has been a perennial hot topic in DOJ enforcement, particularly in the environmental space over the last 5 years. The episode is part of The Enforcement Angle series, featuring conversations about state and federal enforcement of environmental laws and regulations with senior enforcement officials and thought leaders on environmental enforcement in the United States and globally. â Support this podcast â | |||
12 Jan 2022 | Environmental Justice Initiatives at ELI | 00:15:12 | |
Environmental justice embraces the principle that all people deserve equal access to environmental protection and enforcement while acknowledging the fact that, both historically and still today, this fails to play out in reality. Recognizing that the legal system has contributed to an unequal distribution of environmental burdens and benefits, ELI is committed to providing research and educational tools to help alleviate the harm faced by environmental justice communities across the nation. In this episode, Arielle King, ELIâs Environmental Justice Staff Attorney, shares with listeners some of the tools ELI is developing to eliminate the harmful impacts of environmental injustice. â Support this podcast â | |||
20 Mar 2019 | Environmental Disruptors: Breaking the Grass Ceiling of Cannabis Cultivation | 00:20:22 | |
Today, the Environmental Disruptors series is thrilled to take you behind the scenes of an indoor cannabis grow operation. Through this audio and visual episode we feature Jesse Peters, the co-founder of Eco Firma Farms. This 23,000 square foot facility is located just outside Portland, Oregon and is no ordinary operation. Sensor devices, LED lighting and automation systems blend with a software platform to monitor and regulate the nutrient feed, light and water needed for optimal plant growth. Jesse explains how the capital investment in technology has ultimately translated into financial and environmental sustainability for Eco Firma Farms. As a seasoned cultivator, Jesse believes that technology has a vital role to play in cultivating sustainability in the cannabis industry. To watch the video, click here. This episode is the fourth in a series presented by the ELI Innovation Lab, an initiative of the Environmental Law Institute, working to drive environmental performance in business and technology. The series, Environmental Disruptors, features a diverse set of innovators (including entrepreneurs, inventors, and government officials), and shares stories of their work to transform conventional systems to create a more equitable and sustainable world. â Support this podcast â | |||
05 Oct 2022 | State Protection of Nonfederal Waters | 00:22:55 | |
What happens when federal regulatory changes to the CWA framework result in regulatory âgapsâ for the states to resolve? Jim McElfish, a Senior Attorney and Director of ELIâs Sustainable Use of Land program, explains the challenges of water regulation when federal protections are taken away. Jim also offers his thoughts on what may happen if the U.S. Supreme Courtâs impending decision in Sackett v. Environmental Protection Agency results in a rollback in what qualifies as WOTUS. Listeners hungry for more information on this important topic are encouraged to read Jimâs article from the September 2022 issue of ELRâThe Environmental Law Reporter, available for free download here. â Support this podcast â | |||
29 Sep 2021 | Groundtruth: All of IndustryâCorporate Approaches to Advancing Environmental Justice | 00:47:14 | |
Environmental Justice (EJ) has gained new momentum in recent years, amplified by a global focus on social justice, climate, and equity. The Biden-Harris Administration has brought EJ to the federal spotlight, and even before 2021, states were starting to implement ambitious, history-making EJ-focused legislation. But what about corporate America? In this episode, Roy Prather, a Shareholder at Beveridge & Diamond who advises clients on corporate social responsibility and environmental justice, interviews Chonda Nwamu, Senior Vice President, General Counsel & Secretary for Ameren Corporation, and Roger Martella, Chief Sustainability Officer for General Electric. This episode is part of the Groundtruth series created in partnership with Beveridge & Diamond, one of the nationâs leading environmental law firms. â Support this podcast â | |||
28 May 2020 | Reflections from ELIâs 2020 National Wetlands Awardees | 00:17:37 | |
Since 1989, ELI has honored over 200 champions of wetlands protection through the National Wetlands Awards program, which recognizes individuals who have demonstrated exceptional effort, innovation, and excellence in protecting the nationâs wetlands. In this episode, we invite our 2020 National Wetlands Awardees to share their thoughts on the same question: What is the importance of wetlands protection now and in the future? â Support this podcast â | |||
26 May 2023 | 2023 National Wetlands Awards: Rebecca Swadek, Wetlands Program Development Award Winner | 00:13:56 | |
New York City might not be the concrete jungle you think it is. Rebecca Swadek has secured over $22 million in city and grant funding to implement wetlands projects across the city and has co-authored a thirty-year plan for the continued protection, restoration, and care of the city wetlands. In this miniseries, ELIâs Georgia Ray sits down with each of the 2023 National Wetlands Awardees.  â Support this podcast â | |||
04 Nov 2020 | The Enforcement Angle: CARBâs Todd Sax | 00:36:29 | |
The United States has created an intricate system of laws, regulations, policies, and programs to respond to environmental and public health concerns. Enforcement is vital to the systemâs effectiveness. In the latest episode of People Places Planet Podcast, Justin Savage, a Partner at Sidley Austin LLP who co-leads the firmâ global environmental practice, talks with Todd Sax, Section Chief of CARBâs Enforcement Division. The two discuss a wide range of issues, including COVID-19, wildfires, and environmental justice. â Support this podcast â | |||
03 Nov 2021 | The Enforcement Angle: SECâs Kelly Gibson | 00:35:22 | |
As investor demand for climate and other environmental, social, and governance (ESG) products soars, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has formed a climate and ESG task force and taken other steps. In this episode, Justin Savage, a Partner at Sidley Austin LLP, talks with Kelly Gibson, Director of the SECâs Philadelphia Regional Office who also leads the Climate and ESG Task Force within the SECâs Division of Enforcement, and Ranah Esmaili, a partner at Sidley who recently joined the firm from the SECâs Asset Management Unit within the Division of Enforcement. The panel discusses a wide range of SEC developments, including potential rulemaking, risk alerts, investor bulletins, and the task force. â Support this podcast â | |||
28 Dec 2022 | Ocean Circulation, Science Communication, and Climate Policy â A Conversation with John M. Doherty | 00:14:58 | |
As the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change predicts future warming, climate scientists play a crucial role in understanding what ecosystem functions and services are impacted by climate change. Without effective climate science communication, coordination and collaboration among federal agencies, NGOs, scientists, and legislators, environmental policymaking processes will be incredibly difficult. In this episode, ELIâs Georgia Ray speaks with ELI Science Fellow John Doherty about his paleoclimatology research, current climate change policy discussions, and barriers associated with making climate science education accessible. â Support this podcast â | |||
08 Jul 2020 | What Can Animal Law Learn From Environmental Law? | 00:27:05 | |
What tried and true environmental law strategies are animal rights and welfare advocates using in their efforts to protect animals? How does the exploitation of meatpacking and slaughterhouse workers in the age of COVID-19 highlight the interconnectedness between animal, environmental, and human rights issues? In this episode, we talk to Prof. Randall S. Abate about his forthcoming book, What Can Animal Law Learn from Environmental Law? (2d ed. ELI Press 2020). Tune in to learn about what animal law can learn from environmental law and how the two movements can better coordinate their common objectives. â Support this podcast â | |||
19 Nov 2020 | Integrating Climate Change into the Law School Curriculum: A Conversation with Prof. Warren G. Lavey | 00:48:58 | |
No matter their practice area, todayâs lawyers should have a basic understanding of climate change. Yet, most law courses do not include climate-related cases and other materials, even when such resources would be useful in teaching fundamental competencies and skills. In this episode, we hear from Prof. Warren G. Lavey about his article, Toolkit for Integrating Climate Change into Ten High-Enrollment Law School Courses (2019). Tune in to learn why an understanding of climate change needs to be integrated into the law school curriculum and how we might overcome the climate competency shortfall in legal education. â Support this podcast â | |||
29 Jul 2020 | Toward A Global Pact for the Environment | 00:39:20 | |
International environmental law is often characterized as fragmented and heterogeneous; there is currently no single, overarching framework that outlines a set of rules and criteria of general application in international environmental law. In the latest episode of People Places Planet Podcast, we explore the recent push for a set of globally recognized principles on environmental lawâcalled the Global Pact for the Environmentâunder the United Nations. In this podcast, Dominic Scicchitano, a Research Associate at ELI, talks to two individuals who have been following the issue closely: Prof. Nicholas A. Robinson and Maria Antonia Tigre. Together, they discuss the Pactâs history, its present status and future outlook, as well as its broader implications for international environmental law. â Support this podcast â | |||
10 Apr 2025 | Food Waste Prevention Week: Highlighting Changemakers in Nashville | 00:59:25 | |
In this special episode of People Places Planet, host Dara Albrecht and ELI Senior Attorney Linda Breggin take us to Nashville for Food Waste Prevention Week, where local leaders across sectors are driving innovative efforts to reduce food waste. With nearly one-third of U.S. food going uneaten each yearâimpacting the environment, economy, and communitiesâthis conversation showcases how one city is tackling the challenge head-on. Linda speaks with four inspiring guests whose work spans K-12 education, higher ed, hospitality, and professional sports:
From teaching tools to technology to teamwork, this episode explores scalable strategies for reducing food waste and building more resilient communities. Whether you're in a school, university, restaurant, or stadium, there's something here for everyone. Â Related Links:
| |||
13 Jun 2024 | Chevron Deference in the Dock: SCOTUS and the Future of Environmental Protection | 00:23:43 | |
Good environmental governance has long relied on sound, science-based agency decisionmaking. That fundamental premise may be eroding as a landscape that was stable for decades continues to shiftâwith more perhaps yet to come. Host Sarah Backer and Jarryd Page, co-author of a new ELI research report, discuss the findings of the report which includes landmark SCOTUS cases and what the future of environmental protection might look like in the wake of Chevron's demise. â Support this podcast â | |||
15 Apr 2021 | The Enforcement Angle: TCEQâs Toby Baker | 00:52:44 | |
For over 60 years, the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) and its predecessor agencies have been a national and global leader on a wide range of environmental issues, from air quality to water quality to remediation. In this episode, Heather Palmer, a Partner at Sidley Austin LLP, talks with Toby Baker, Executive Director of the TCEQ. The two discuss a wide range of issues, including COVID-19, severe weather and power outages, and the Biden Administration. â Support this podcast â | |||
23 May 2023 | 2023 National Wetlands Awards: Adam Davis, Business Leadership Award Winner | 00:15:01 | |
Philanthropic and government resources alone canât afford to restore all our wetlands. Over the past two decades, Adam Davisâ thought leadership has increased private capital available for large-scale, multi-benefit wetland restoration projects nationally. In this miniseries, ELIâs Georgia Ray sits down with each of the 2023 National Wetlands Awardees.  â Support this podcast â | |||
30 Nov 2022 | Artificial Intelligence for Environmental Compliance | 00:20:33 | |
Once the subject of science fiction, artificial Intelligence (AI) is here to stay. From self-driving cars to âsmartâ appliances to movie recommendations from your favorite streaming service, AI pervades so many aspects of modern daily life. And while the conveniences AI offers are not without their environmental costs, it can hold great promise for protecting the planet. In this episode, ELIâs Georgia Ray speaks with Jed Anderson, the founder of EnviroAI, to discuss the role of AI in environmental compliance. Jed shares how we can leverage the sophisticated pattern-recognition capabilities implicit in AI technology to better monitor emissions and takes Georgia on a virtual tour of a Texas oil refinery. â Support this podcast â | |||
27 Apr 2022 | Groundtruth: 17 Principles of Environmental Justiceâ30 Years Later | 00:50:04 | |
More than 30 years ago, roughly 1,100 people attended the First National People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit in Washington, D.C., to discuss the environmental injustices they were experiencing in their communities. Considered by many as the birth of the environmental justice movement, the four-day summit concluded with the adoption of the 17 Principles of Environmental Justice, still relevant today. In this episode, ELIâs Arielle King meets with key organizers and leaders of the historical summit: Vernice Miller-Travis and Charles Lee. The episode is part of the Groundtruth series created in partnership with Beveridge & Diamond, one of the nationâs leading environmental law firms. â Support this podcast â | |||
29 Feb 2024 | How Can Business Help Solve the Freshwater Crisis? | 00:36:39 | |
Billions of people around the globe lack adequate access to clean water. This freshwater crisis will be exacerbated by climate change. Liquid Asset: How Business and Government Can Partner to Solve the Freshwater Crisis explores the rapidly expanding role of private businesses and markets in ensuring supply of clean, safe, reliable, and affordable water. In this weekâs episode of People Places Planet, Phillip Womble, postdoctoral scholar at the Woods Institute for the Environment at Stanford University, sits down with author Buzz Thompson. Thompson is a Robert E. Paradise Professor of Natural Resources Law at Stanford Law School and a Senior Fellow at the Woods Institute for the Environment. Tune in to learn more about how collaboration between business and government can help bring innovation to the water sector, from California to Cape Town. Â â Support this podcast â | |||
25 Jan 2024 | From Dubai with Dedication: Navigating COP28 Climate Commitments | 00:28:36 | |
A lot has been said about COP28. It has been described as a success, failure, and everything in between, but what actually happened? This week, host Sarah Backer is joined by Jennifer Huang, Associate Director of International Strategies at the Center for Climate and Energy Solutions (C2ES) and Kaveh Guilanpour, Vice President of International Strategies at C2ES. Jennifer and Kaveh discuss their experiences at COP28 in Dubai and evaluate the success of COP28 and the global stocktake in galvanizing climate action and adaptation. Â â Support this podcast â | |||
31 May 2023 | 2023 National Wetlands Awards: Bingqing Liu, Scientific Research Award Winner | 00:12:32 | |
From remote sensing to carbon sequestration, Bingqing Liu has the research to back it up. Dr. Liuâs work at The Water Institute is taking a deep look at how coastal restoration projects along Louisiana's coast can mitigate climate events and the carbon capturing potential of local ecosystems.  In this miniseries, ELIâs Georgia Ray sits down with each of the 2023 National Wetlands Awardees.  â Support this podcast â | |||
01 Jun 2022 | Youth Activism in Puerto Rico | 00:16:14 | |
The MartĂn Peña channel is an urban tidal channel connected to the San Juan Bay Estuary, located in Puerto Ricoâs capital of San Juan. According to the 2020 Census, nearly 11,000 people live in the Martin Peña channel area. Sadly, flooding is a constant threat. In this episode, Elissa Torres-Soto, a Staff Attorney at ELI, speaks with three young activists from the area: Krystal GĂ©igel, Mayrita Rosario, and Jeymi BenĂtez. The trio are members of LĂderes JĂłvenes en AcciĂłn (LIJAC), which in English translates to Young Leaders in Action. â Support this podcast â | |||
18 Dec 2019 | The General Counsels' Opinions: Conversations With the Attorneys Who Have Led EPA's Office of General Counsel â Roger Martella | 00:32:18 | |
EPAâs Office of General Counsel (OGC) is the Agencyâs chief legal advisor, providing counsel to EPA policymakers and providing critical input to Agency rules, regulations, and guidance documents. In this episodeâthe third in a series of podcasts in which we talk to former EPA General CounselsâKevin Minoli, a partner at Alston & Bird who worked within EPAâs OGC for 18 years, talks to former EPA General Counsel Roger Martella, who now serves as Director and General Counsel for General Electricâs Environment, Health and Safety operations worldwide. â Support this podcast â | |||
19 Jul 2023 | Sensing a Change in the Air: How Local Governments Can Respond and Adapt to Shifts in Air Quality Monitoring Technology | 00:39:34 | |
Recent wildfire smoke events have highlighted the value of air quality measurement. But how does it really work, anyways? From the latest technologies and regulations to the unique challenges faced by local governments and tribes, this week's guests discuss the transforming landscape of air quality monitoring. Join hosts Georgia Ray and Ella Stack; and guests Chet Wayland from the EPA, Christopher Lee from Tribal Air Monitoring Support Center, and Miles Keogh from the National Association of Clean Air Agencies for the discussion. This episode is part of ELI's Local Government Environmental Assistance Network (LGEAN). â Support this podcast â | |||
14 Nov 2023 | Groundtruth: Valuing Lived Experience and Fostering Meaningful Community Engagement | 00:21:24 | |
The Biden-Harris administration has placed an unprecedented federal focus on environmental justice using a whole of government approach, including issuing executive orders demanding accountability and action from a broad list of federal agencies and requiring input from impacted communities. In this weekâs episode of Groundtruth, Beveridge & Diamond Associate Hilary Jacobs meets with Ebony Griffin of Earthjustice for a focused conversation about environmental justice and community engagement. They also discuss how regulators and companies can meaningfully engage with impacted communities to address environmental justice concerns. â Support this podcast â | |||
30 Aug 2023 | From Trash to Triumph: The Mount Growmore Initiative | 00:43:13 | |
In this week's episode of the People Places Planet Podcast, host Georgia Ray dives deep into an incredible transformation journey with her guests Debbie Sims, Suzi Ruhl, David Cash, and Bill Coleman. Together, they discuss the evolution of Bridgeport, Connecticut's once-neglected Mount Trashmore into the thriving Mount Growmore agricultural, wellness, and learning campus. Tune in to explore the significance of community-driven solutions, the power of inter-sectoral government collaboration, the importance of trusted relationships with academia, and the essential steps that other communities can take to replicate such transformative projects. This episode promises a compelling narrative of turning environmental challenges into community triumphs. Referenced materials can be found on our accompanying blog here. â Support this podcast â | |||
05 Feb 2020 | The General Counsels' Opinions: Conversations with the Attorneys who have Led EPA's Office of General Counsel â Ann Klee | 00:35:30 | |
EPAâs Office of General Counsel (OGC) is the Agencyâs chief legal advisor, providing counsel to EPA policymakers and providing critical input to Agency rules, regulations, and guidance documents. In this episode, Kevin Minoli, a partner at Alston & Bird who worked within EPAâs OGC for 18 years, talks to former EPA General Counsel Ann Klee, who served as General Counsel from June 2004 to July 2006. This episode is part of a year-long series of conversations with former EPA General Counsels, allowing listeners to hear first-hand accounts of their experiences at EPA. â Support this podcast â | |||
19 Feb 2020 | The Proposed NEPA Regulations: A Conversation With NEPA Regulations Expert Nick Yost | 00:30:37 | |
On January 10, 2020, CEQ proposed a comprehensive rewrite of the NEPA regulations that govern how federal agencies identify, analyze, and mitigate for the anticipated environmental impacts of proposed major federal actions. To help listeners better understand the proposal, ELI Senior Attorney Jim McElfish talks to Nick Yost, one of the nationâs most experienced NEPA lawyers and the primary drafter of the original 1978 regulations. For more on the proposal, check out Practitionersâ Guide to the Proposed NEPA Regulations. â Support this podcast â | |||
29 Apr 2021 | Engage the Experts: Offshore Wind Development | 00:46:40 | |
There are many benefits to offshore wind, but what about its impacts on birds, bats, and other wildlife? In this episode, we "engage the expertsâ and listen in on a conversation between two experts in the field of environmental law and policy, Brooke Marcus Wahlberg, a Partner at Nossaman LLP, and Ed Roggenkamp, an associate. The two offer background on offshore wind, discuss obstacles and opportunities, and share recent developments, including what we might expect under the Biden Administration. â Support this podcast â | |||
14 Mar 2024 | Unleash the Green: Legal and Policy Solutions for Green Startups | 00:24:43 | |
Green startups are imagining solutions to the climate crisis and leading the transition to a sustainable economy. Yet sustainable entrepreneurship remains incredibly daunting given market challenges, long pathways to commercial viability, and an ill-suited investor landscape. In this episode, host Sarah Backer sits down with Jesse Lazarus, Associate Attorney with the Energy and Climate Solutions practice of Wilson Sonsini, to discuss the legal and policy solutions that could enable green startups to thrive to in turn help accelerate the transition to a sustainable economy. | |||
28 Jul 2021 | Environmental Law and Policy Annual Review | 00:34:47 | |
For more than a decade, ELI and Vanderbilt University Law School have featured some of the yearâs best academic thinking on legal and policy solutions to pressing environmental problems via the Environmental Law and Policy Annual Review (ELPAR). This episode gives listeners a preview to this yearâs issue, which hits the streets in August and features articles and commentary on climate change litigation, corporate ESG, environmental justice, and energy regulation. â Support this podcast â | |||
25 Aug 2021 | Toxic Beauty Products and Environmental Justice | 00:32:04 | |
The United States has enacted hundreds of environmental laws and regulations to keep our communities and the people who live in them healthy and safe. But what should be done when these legal safety nets fail, as is too often the case with environmental justice concerns and racial environmental health inequalities? In this episode, ELIâs Caitlin McCarthy talks to Dr. Neha Pathak, a Medical Editor and writer with WebMD, about disproportionate exposure from toxic beauty products, environmental justice, and more. â Support this podcast â | |||
20 Feb 2019 | Environmental Disruptors: Workin' At The (Waterless) Car Wash | 00:15:29 | |
Only 3% of the worldâs water resource is freshwater, yet the demands on this constrained and non-renewable resource is extraordinary and will continue to be for generations to come. Water scarcity and quality is just as much a problem in our own backyards as it is everywhere else. In todayâs episode we will be exploring just one way to stop using water!  We will be talking to DJ Patterson, a local water steward who founded Oklahomaâs first and only waterless car wash service, EcoGreen Mobile Detailing. A carwash is estimated to use between 80 to 140 gallons of water per wash. EcoGreen is not just avoiding the use, but is also preventing the release of harmful chemicals into waterways or the sewer system. | |||
01 Mar 2023 | The Enforcement Angle: DOJâs Environment & Natural Resources Division | 00:39:42 | |
The U.S. Department of Justiceâs Environment & Natural Resources Division is tasked with enforcing the United Statesâ civil and criminal environmental laws. In this episode, Justin Savage and Nicole Noelliste of Sidley Austin LLP talk with Todd Kim, the Assistant Attorney General of the DOJ ENRD, and Kate Konschnik, Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General of ENRD. The episode is part of The Enforcement Angle series, featuring conversations about state and federal enforcement of environmental laws and regulations with senior enforcement officials and thought leaders on environmental enforcement in the United States and globally. â Support this podcast â | |||
09 Oct 2019 | Combating Deforestation in the Amazon | 00:27:10 | |
The Amazon Rainforest is a hotbed of biodiversity andâperhaps most crucial to our current climate crisisâstores approximately 120 billion tons of carbon. But deforestation is threatening the Amazon at an alarming rate. Given the vast size and numerous stakeholders that rely on the rainforest, innovative and cooperative methods are needed to combat deforestation. In this episode, we talk to Professor Mark Ungar to learn more. â Support this podcast â | |||
02 Jul 2021 | Migration With Dignity | 00:36:20 | |
Migrationâthe temporary or permanent movement of people from one place of residence to another, within a country or across an international borderâoccurs for myriad reasons. It also involves a host of dangers, complications, and risks. âMigration with Dignityâ is a new concept increasingly being used to promote voluntary migration in the pursuit of life with dignity. In this episode, we hear from Carl Bruch, ELIâs Director of International Programs, and Dr. Shanna McClain, Visiting Scientist at ELI and Global Partnerships Manager for NASAâs Earth Sciences Division. The two speak with ELI Staff Attorney Kristine Perry about the legal and policy framework they have been developing to help people migrate with dignity. â Support this podcast â | |||
09 Feb 2022 | Groundtruth: Meet EJ Leader & Advocate, Ben Wilson | 00:39:22 | |
Environmental Justice (EJ) has gained new momentum in recent years, amplified by a global focus on social justice, climate, and equity. Yet this new-found energy and focus on environmental is best understood through the lens of those who have been working toward EJ for decades. In this episode, John Cruden, a Principal at Beveridge & Diamond, talks to renowned EJ leader and advocate Benjamin F. Wilson. Ben, who recently retired after serving years as Chairman of Beveridge & Diamond, has deep experience with EJ representations and is a recognized leader on diversity, equity and inclusion issues in the legal profession. â Support this podcast â | |||
02 Jun 2023 | 2023 National Wetlands Awards: Scott Fisher, Local Stewardship Award Winner | 00:14:54 | |
Language changes how we perceive the world around us, and Scott Fisher is no stranger to that concept. Conversant in the Hawaiin language, Scottâs work centers community involvement with the intention of cultivating a loving and caring relationship of the land. His work at the HawaiÊ»i Land Trust (HILT) combines sustainable indigineous land management techniques and research on natural bioshields.  In this miniseries, ELIâs Georgia Ray sits down with each of the 2023 National Wetlands Awardees.  â Support this podcast â | |||
25 May 2021 | National Wetlands Awards 2021 | 00:29:21 | |
Since 1989, ELI has honored over 200 champions of wetlands protection through the National Wetlands Awards program, which recognizes individuals who have demonstrated exceptional effort, innovation, and excellence in protecting these critical ecosystems. In this episode, hear from our five 2021 awardees, who share their perspectives and insight on a variety of wetlands-related matters. â Support this podcast â | |||
15 Apr 2020 | Turning a Blind Eye to Small Drinking Water Systems | 00:26:03 | |
Drinking water contamination in Flint, Michigan, has garnered nationwide attention, but it is neither isolated, nor a primarily urban problem. As Madeline Kane explains in the April issue of ELRâThe Environmental Law Reporter, a hidden water crisis is straining thousands of smaller communities that share Flintâs risk factorsâshrinking populations, social marginalization, and deficient funds. In this episode, ELRâs Hunter Jones talk to Madeline Kane, a J.D. candidate at Harvard Law School, to learn more about the problem, its causes, and potential solutions. â Support this podcast â | |||
08 Mar 2023 | Women & Water | 00:27:51 | |
International Womenâs Day is a global holiday celebrated annually on March 8 to bring attention to issues such as gender equality, reproductive rights, and violence and abuse against women. One womenâs issue that is often overlooked is access to clean water. In this episode, ELIâs Georgia Ray speaks with Elizabeth Koch, ELIâs Senior Manager of International Programs, and Jessica Troell, Director of ELIâs International Water Program, about two ELI initiatives pertaining to women and water: strengthening the recognition and protection of water tenure of the worldâs most vulnerable populations; and the importance of inclusive decisionmaking in water diplomacy processes and the resultant positive implications for regional peace and human security. â Support this podcast â | |||
14 Jun 2023 | Discussions with ELIâs Spring Interns: The Nagoya Protocol and Indiaâs Green Hydrogen Investments | 00:31:12 | |
At the Environmental Law Institute, interns have the opportunity to develop independent research projects based off their interests. In this episode of the People Places Planet Podcast, ELIâs spring interns, Jenny Tseng and Abhi Vishwanath, join host Georgia Ray to share more about who they are, their independent research work on The Nagoya Protocol and India's Green Hydrogen Investments, and broader projects that they have worked on at the organization. â Support this podcast â | |||
13 Dec 2023 | The Enforcement Angle: David Uhlmann and OECA | 00:44:38 | |
 The EPAâs Office of Enforcement and Compliance Assurance (OECA) develops the Agencyâs national strategy to enforce compliance with federal environmental statutes. Led by Assistant Administrator, David M. Uhlmann, OECA sets national enforcement priorities, and coordinates with EPA regions and the U.S. Department of Justice to address environmental noncompliance, which can include civil and criminal actions. In this episode, Mr. Uhlmann joins Justin Savage to discuss OECAâs national and enforcement compliance initiatives for fiscal years 2024-2027, environmental justice, PFAS and climate enforcement goals.  â Support this podcast â | |||
28 May 2024 | Science to the People: Engaging Communities in Wetlands Restoration | 00:13:00 | |
What role can communities play in wetlands restoration? Jess Hua, Associate Professor and Principal Investigator of the Hua Lab at the University of Wisconsin-Madison is leading research that looks into ecological interactions of wetlands and how citizen science shapes community perceptions of these natural environments. In this episode, the 2022 National Wetlands Awardee discusses how diverse communication strategies can lead to a greater understanding of wetlands restoration and why it is important to center community perspectives in wetlands education.  In honor of American Wetlands Month, ELI is celebrating the National Wetlands Awards (NWA). Since 1989, the NWAs have been presented annually to individuals who have excelled in wetlands protection, restoration, and education. On this special miniseries of People Places Planet, Research Associate Isabella Blanco sit downs with past NWA winners to hear their stories. â Support this podcast â | |||
17 May 2021 | Greening the U.S. Constitution | 00:28:21 | |
On May 18, 1971, Pennsylvaniaâs voters ratified an Environmental Rights Amendment to its state constitution. Fifty years later, with climate change now the overriding threat to the health of the planet, the architect of that amendment makes the case for an environmental amendment to the U.S. Constitution. In this episode, we talk to Franklin L. Kury, who served in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives from 1966 to 1972 and the Pennsylvania Senate from 1972 to 1980, about his new book, The Constitutional Question to Save the Planet: The Peoples' Right to a Healthy Environment. â Support this podcast â | |||
13 Sep 2023 | Not All Environmental Rights Amendments Are Created Equally: The Climate Science Behind Held v. Montana | 00:22:26 | |
In this weekâs 'court watch' episode of the People, Places, and Planet podcast, Host Sarah Backer and guests ELI Staff Attorney Jarryd Page and Science Fellow John Doherty, dive into how the youth-led constitutional climate case of Held v. State of Montana incorporated climate science and the implications that Judge Kathy Seeleyâs decision might have for future climate litigation. Jarryd and John both work for ELIâs Climate Judiciary Project (CJP). CJP collaborates with leading national judicial education institutions to provide neutral, objective information to the judiciary about climate science and how it interacts with the law.  You can read the accompanying blog here, which includes more analysis and direct quotes from the Held decision. â Support this podcast â | |||
30 Oct 2024 | Here's To New Adventures: Farewell to Our 2022 Research Associates | 00:18:55 | |
In this weekâs episode of People Places Planet Podcast, three of ELI's four outgoing Research Associates (Sarah Backer, Ella Stack, and Tori Rickman) sit down with host Dara Albrecht to reflect on their experiences as Research Associates. The three share who they are, what brought them to ELI, the research projects they worked on, and the lessons they will take with them moving forward. â Support this podcast â | |||
01 Feb 2023 | National Wetlands Award Feature: Wetlands Watch | 00:32:16 | |
February 2 is World Wetlands Day! Wetlands are critically important ecosystems contributing to biodiversity, climate mitigation and adaptation, freshwater availability, and world economies. Sadly, nearly 90% of the worldâs wetlands have been degraded since the 1700s, and we are losing wetlands three times faster than forests. Urgent action is therefore needed to reverse wetland loss and protect existing wetlands. In this episode, we speak with Ross Weaver, the Program Assistant Director for Wetlands Watch. This podcast is the first in a series of episodes dedicated to highlighting the incredible work done by wetland heroes throughout the country. Some of the project discussed in this podcast include the Community Rating System Workgroup, the Design Collaboratory, the Chesapeake Bay Landscape Professional Program, and the Fight the Flood Program. â Support this podcast â | |||
10 Feb 2021 | The Enforcement Angle: Earthjustice | 00:44:33 | |
Earthjustice is the nationâs largest environmental nonprofit dedicated to litigation, employing more environmental litigators than any organization in the United States except for the U.S. Department of Justice. Earthjustice uses the power of law and the strength of partnership to protect people's health, to preserve places and wildlife, to advance clean energy, and to combat climate change. In this episode, Justin Savage, a Partner at Sidley Austin LLP, speaks with Earthjusticeâs Sam Sankar, the Senior Vice President for Programs, and Stacey Geis, Managing Attorney for Earthjusticeâs California Regional Office, on a wide range of topics including environmental justice, the future of climate change litigation, and prioritization of environmental enforcement in the new administration. â Support this podcast â | |||
22 Jun 2022 | The Enforcement Angle: The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission | 00:40:31 | |
As the agency responsible for regulating the interstate transmission of natural gas, oil, and electricity, in addition to natural gas and hydropower projects, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) plays an integral role when it comes to U.S. environmental law and policy. In the latest episode of People Places Planet Podcast, Emily Mallen, a partner at Sidley Austin LLP in Washington, D.C, talks to Matt Christiansen, FERCâs General Counsel. Emily and Matt discuss a variety of topics, including climate change, renewable energy, the grid, and energy justice. To listen, visit www.eli.org/podcasts or find us on your favorite podcast app. â Support this podcast â | |||
01 Dec 2023 | COP28 Special: The Global Stocktake and Climate Equity | 00:25:14 | |
Today is the first day of COP28, where participants will discuss the first-ever global stocktake, an assessment of global action on climate change to date. The global stocktake report includes an inventory of climate-related data which evaluates whether the world is on track to achieve the goals set out in the Paris Agreement. The goal is for countries and other actors to use these technical findings to step up political actions and set more ambitious national targets and actions, to accelerate global climate action. In this weekâs episode, host Sarah Backer dives into the equity and environmental justice considerations of the global stocktake with Angela Barranco, the Director for North America at the Climate Group and Charles Di Leva, Partner at Sustainability Frameworks, LLP and Former Chief Officer of Environmental and Social Standards at the World Bank.   Relevant Resources:  Financial Times, UK, Canada and Germany lead fresh push against coal power at COP28 Reuters, COP28 kicks off with climate disaster fund victory Glasglow Financial Alliance for Net Zero, Amount of finance committed to achieving 1.5°C now at scale needed to deliver the transition International Energy Agency, For the first time in decades, the number of people without access to electricity is set to increase in 2022 The World Bank, Detox Development: Repurposing Environmentally Harmful Subsidies â Support this podcast â | |||
06 Feb 2019 | Environmental Disruptors: Fly Grub, the Future of Animal Feed? | 00:24:45 | |
An estimated 25 million tons of fish is used in animal feed per year. Is there an alternative to feeding livestock from limited marine resources? In this inaugural episode of Environmental Disruptors, Kasantha Moodley, ELIâs Manager of Innovation and Governance, interviews the co-founders of Grubbly Farms, Patrick Pittaluga and Sean Warner. They discuss the beginnings of Grubby Farms, a fly farming operation, an idea that if scaled, could avoid exploiting the oceanâs limited resources, to feed livestock. â Support this podcast â | |||
24 Aug 2022 | Independent Research, Aquaculture and Brown Bag Lunches: Insights from ELI's Summer Interns | 00:25:55 | |
In this episode of the People Places Planet Podcast, ELIâs six summer interns (Jesse Ferraoili, Rebecca Huang, Fatima Lawan, Priyanka Mahat, Raf Rodriguez, and Jeremy Rubin) join host Georgia Ray to reflect on their time as summer interns, talk a little more about who they are, what they are interested in, and what brought them to ELI. They discuss their independent research work, work done on broader projects at the organization, and things they have learned throughout the summer. A Tufts rising senior will tell you about her fight for maternal health in the Black community, especially as it pertains to air quality. Another will dive into uranium contamination in Americaâs southwest. A third will talk about his work with prison populations and the heat related illnesses that can occur inside the system. All of them will discuss what it was like to work at ELI, how they hope to continue in the environmental space, and the lessons they have learned spending the summer in D.C. You can find Raf and Priyanka on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rafjrodriguez & https://www.linkedin.com/in/priyanka-mahat-b16642151/
| |||
24 Jan 2019 | Checks and Balances on Environmental Policymaking in the Trump Era | 00:27:36 | |
In this podcast, Ethan Shenkman, former Deputy General Counsel of EPA and current partner of Arnold & Porter, and Stacey Sublett, a shareholder with Beveridge & Diamond, discuss environmental law and policy in the Trump era and, more specifically, the limits of executive branch authority. The episode was brought to you in partnership with the American Bar Association Section on Civil Rights and Social Justice . â Support this podcast â | |||
01 Oct 2020 | 2020 Hurricane Season & Implications for Coastal Communities | 00:07:47 | |
Hurricane season is in full swing, and this year is unlike any before. What is driving this yearâs record-breaking Atlantic hurricane season? And what implications is it having on coastal communities in the Gulf of Mexico states of Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida? In this podcast, we talk to Amy Reed, Director of ELIâs Gulf of Mexico program, to discuss the 2020 hurricane season and what it means for those who call the Gulf home. â Support this podcast â | |||
16 Feb 2022 | ELIâs Pro Bono Clearinghouse | 00:37:52 | |
On February 14, ELI launched the Pro Bono Clearinghouse to ensure that communities with viable environmental legal matters get the representation they need, whether that be in a courtroom, in front of an agency, or in a more facilitative or consultative fashion. In this episode, Kristine Perry, a staff attorney at ELI, is joined by Scott Wilson Badenoch Jr., a Visiting Attorney at ELI, and Arielle King, ELIâs Environmental Justice Staff Attorney, to talk about ELIâs newest environmental justice initiative and how it works. â Support this podcast â | |||
11 Sep 2024 | Planted! How Local Governments Can Measure and Tackle Food-Related Emissions | 00:36:07 | |
Very few municipal sustainability initiatives to date have focused on food-related emissions and specifically the relatively low carbon footprint of plant-based proteins, despite the fact that food accounts for over 25% of the average American householdâs carbon footprint. And research indicates that without lowering the emissions associated with food consumption, we will be unable to meet global climate targets. In this episode, hosts Sarah Backer and Linda Breggin seek to understand why localities have been slow to move on reducing carbon emissions related to food consumption and speak to local governments that are leading the way on measuring, tracking, and reducing those emissions. Tune in to learn more about consumption-based emissions inventories from Angie Fyfe at ICLEI; DCâs approach to measuring emissions from municipal food purchasing from Alyssa Wooden; and Carrboro, North Carolinaâs goal to reduce emissions from diets by 80% by 2030 from Laura Janway. This podcast was created in conjunction with ELIâs Toolkit for Incorporating Plant-Based Protein Measures in Municipal Climate Action Plans. â Support this podcast â | |||
05 Apr 2023 | The Youth Review: Government-to-Government Consultation with Tribal Nations During Constant Environmental Change | 00:34:07 | |
As sovereign nations, a unique relationship exists between Tribal Nations and the U.S. federal government, which is grounded in the U.S. Constitution. An integral component of this relationship is a process known as âgovernment-to-government consultation,â or, colloquially, a âG2G.â In this episode, ELIâs Georgia Ray speaks with Meghan Gavin, a lawyer and partner at Cascadia Law Group, to learn about G2G consultation with Tribes in Washington state, the power dynamic surrounding government relations with Tribal Nations, and how changing environmental conditions impact future consultations. She will also weigh in on how the Biden-Harris Administrationâs new policies on consultation impact her work. The episode is part of The Youth Review podcast series. â Support this podcast â | |||
26 Mar 2025 | Healthy Schools, Healthy Futures: Transforming School Meals for Student Wellness and Sustainability | 00:42:47 | |
Nutritious food in schools is essential for student health, academic success, and a more sustainable future. In this episode of People Places Planet, host Dara Albrecht is joined by Linda Breggin, Senior Attorney at the Environmental Law Institute, along with Nancy Weiss, a chef and former Director of Food Services at Santa Barbara Unified School District, and Audrey Sanchez, Executive Director of Balanced, a nonprofit working to improve public health through healthier food environments. Together, they explore how thoughtful school food policies and plant-based menu innovations can improve student wellness while supporting environmental goals. The episode highlights local success stories, including how Santa Barbara became a national leader in integrating plant-based proteins, and discusses practical strategiesâfrom menu analysis to procurement planning and student engagementâthat schools can use to create healthier, more inclusive food programs. The conversation also touches on the importance of leadership, community involvement, and systemic support in advancing nutrition equity and sustainability in public schools. â Support this podcast â | |||
26 Jun 2024 | Law of the Land: Towards a More Sustainable Food System | 00:20:36 | |
From producing food deserts and food swamps to negatively impacting biodiversity and ecosystem health, land use laws have shaped Americaâs food system for decades. Unfortunately, the shape the food system has taken perpetuates serious inequities. In this episode, Jonathan Rosenbloom, law professor and author of Remarkable Cities and the Security and Sovereignty of Food and Nutrition, explains how changes to local development codes and zoning laws can promote food and nutrition security and sovereignty across the country. In conversation with host Sarah Backer, Rosenbloom shares recommendations and paths forward for creating a more equitable and sustainable food system. â Support this podcast â | |||
17 Apr 2019 | Environmental Disruptors: Brewing Cannabis with Beer Yeast | 00:11:18 | |
Traditional cannabis cultivation comes with numerous environmental impacts on air, water, waste, and more, posing increasing concern about the sustainability of this fast-growing industry. But what if you didnât need the cannabis plant to extract the THC and CBD needed to create cannabis products? In this episode, Dave Rejeski, Director of ELIâs Technology, Innovation, and the Environment Program, talks with Jay Keasling, UC Berkeley professor and synthetic biologist, about his game-changing innovation in cannabis cultivation. Keasling and his teams engineered yeast â yes, the same yeast used to brew beer â to produce high-quality, low-cost THC and CBD at a much lower environmental impact. â Support this podcast â | |||
06 Dec 2023 | Governing for Sustainability: A Conversation with Scott Schang and John Dernbach | 00:29:00 | |
The United Nationâs Sustainability Development Goals (SDGs) are 17 integrated goals that address global challenges, including those related to poverty, inequality, climate change, the environment, peace and justice. Advancing the SDGs in the US would help to make the US a better place for all. In this episode, host Sarah Backer is joined by editors John Dernbach and Scott Schang to discuss their ELI Press-published book, Governing for Sustainability. The book provides a detailed set of recommendations for federal, state, tribal, territorial, and local governments, as well as the private sector and civil society organized around the SDGs. Scott and John also discuss how the SDGs offer the US a comprehensive framework to build a more prosperous, equitable, resilient, healthy â in other words, sustainable â society. Relevant Resources: Goldman Sachs, The Us Inflation Reduction Act Is Driving Clean-energy Investment One Year In The Nature Conservancy, Family Forest Carbon Program The Washington Post, âGreenhushingâ: Why some companies quietly hide their climate pledges Harper Collins Publishers, Zen and the Art of Saving the Planet â Support this podcast â | |||
29 Dec 2021 | Glasgow to Dane County: Student Led Climate Action | 00:24:26 | |
Last November, as the world focused its attention on the COP26 climate talks in Glasgow, Scotland, high school students in Dane County, Wisconsin, co-sponsored and moderated a climate action conference of their own that connected COP26 to local climate initiatives and progress. Rebecca Kihslinger, a Senior Science and Policy Analyst at ELI, talks to four of the student organizers â Daphne Wu, Claire Neblett, Kirshna Elwell, and Felicia Zheng â to learn more. â Support this podcast â | |||
15 Sep 2022 | Water Justice and the Constituent Empowerment Model | 00:28:49 | |
Water utilities are tasked with providing clean, affordable water to their constituents, yet, a growing number of utilities are charging high prices for water and/or carrying out policies that decrease, rather than increase, water access. Participatory governance, which aims to enable those who are most closely affected by a problem to influence how policymakers solve that problem, may offer a path to a more just water policy. In âTurning Participation into Power: A Water Justice Case Study,â Prof. Jaime Lee of the University of Baltimore School of Law offers a revamped model of participatory governance she dubs the âConstituent Empowerment Model.â The model, which was recently implemented in Baltimore, Maryland, goes beyond traditional community involvement mechanisms and has the lofty goal of shifting power dynamics. In this episode, Linda Breggin, a Senior Attorney at ELI and Lecturer in Law at Vanderbilt Law School, speaks with Professor Lee to learn more. â Support this podcast â | |||
10 Jun 2024 | Enchanted and Endangered: Wetlands Restoration in New Mexico | 00:16:35 | |
While often overlooked, wetlands in New Mexico are integral to ecological balance, water filtration, and the local flora and fauna. Maryann McGraw, Wetlands Program Coordinator for the New Mexico Environmental Department, has played a pivotal role in developing wetlands monitoring, mapping, assessment, and restoration strategies for the state. In this episode, the 2018 State, Tribal, and Local Program Development Winner discusses the importance of local partnerships in wetlands restoration and the new state programming strategies being considered in the aftermath of Sackett v. EPA. â Support this podcast â | |||
08 Jul 2022 | ELPAR 2022: Spotlight on Environmental Citizen Suits | 00:36:53 | |
For more than a decade, ELI and Vanderbilt University Law School have featured some of the yearâs best academic thinking on legal and policy solutions to pressing environmental problems via the Environmental Law and Policy Annual Review (ELPAR). Linda Breggin, a Senior Attorney at ELI and a Lecturer in Law at Vanderbilt University Law School who co-founded ELPAR, and Kritsen Sarna, a Vanderbilt law student who served as editor-in-chief, talk to Howard Learner, President and Executive Director of the Environmental Law & Policy Center, to find out his thoughts on environmental citizen suits, the subject of one of this yearâs featured articles. â Support this podcast â | |||
11 May 2023 | Youth Leadership for Wetlands Protection | 00:32:19 | |
Wetlands are critical infrastructure for coastal areas and species, but they are also integral to the culture of local communities. This weekâs episode features Louisiana 4-Hâs Wetlands Youth Ambassadors, young leaders working to protect and restore the stateâs wetlands. The ambassadors share their personal experiences growing up near and in coastal wetlands, discuss the challenges and opportunities facing Louisiana's wetlands, and their work to raise awareness about the importance of wetlands. â Support this podcast â | |||
06 May 2024 | The Enforcement Angle: New Generation of Nuclear - Advanced Reactors | 00:37:42 | |
The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (âNRCâ or the âAgencyâ) licenses and regulates the civilian and commercial use of nuclear power and radioactive materials, including traditional and advanced reactors. Advanced reactor technologies are poised to provide a lower-cost option for carbon-free electricity and can power a broad range of applications including existing power grids, small energy grids (remote areas without connectivity to transmission infrastructure), small electrical markets, and industrial facilities. In this episode, Robert Taylor, the Deputy Office Director for New Reactors in the Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation at the NRC, takes listeners behind the scenes and discusses the Agencyâs strides in the licensing of advanced reactors. Mr. Taylor demystifies the world of advanced reactors by discussing key differences between traditional and advanced reactors, the NRCâs existing and anticipated (Part 53) licensing framework for advanced reactor technologies, the status of the NRCâs licensing of applications for advanced reactor designs, and best practices for engaging with the Agency. â Support this podcast â | |||
17 Jun 2020 | Remarkable Cities and the Fight Against Climate Change | 00:30:13 | |
Towns and cities all across America are increasingly finding themselves at the front lines in protecting their citizens from the impacts of climate change. Fortunately, a number of tools just waiting to be used can already be found in many local communitiesâ toolbox. In this episode, we talk to Prof. Jonathan Rosenbloom about his new book, Remarkable Cities and the Fight Against Climate Change: 43 Recommendations to Reduce Greenhouse Gases and the Communities That Adopted Them (ELI Press 2020). Tune in to learn about the range of ways in which local communities can use enacted ordinances to mitigate climate change while increasing their capacity to respond and adapt to its most harmful consequences. â Support this podcast â | |||
01 Apr 2021 | Groundtruth: New Jerseyâs Environmental Justice Law | 00:38:52 | |
In the first few weeks of the Biden-Harris Administration, weâve seen an unprecedented environmental justice (EJ) campaign platform develop into far-reaching executive actions. But even before the Biden-Harris campaign brought EJ to the federal spotlight, states were starting to implement ambitious, history-making EJ-focused legislation, a trend that appears to be continuing into 2021. In this episode, Julius M. Redd, an attorney at Beveridge & Diamond, speaks with New Jersey Senator Troy Singleton and New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection Acting Commissioner Shawn LaTourette, about New Jerseyâs landmark 2020 environmental justice law. This episode is the first of a series, Groundtruth, created in partnership with Beveridge & Diamond. â Support this podcast â | |||
24 Jun 2020 | Engage the Experts: Solar Energy & Wildlife | 00:49:31 | |
There are many benefits to solar energy, but what about its impacts on wildlife? In this episode, we "engage the expertsâ and listen in on a conversation between two experts in the field of environmental law and policy, Brooke Marcus Wahlberg, a Partner at Nossaman LLP, and Dr. Karl Kosciuch, a senior biologist at Western Ecosystems Technology, Inc. Brooke and Karl will discuss their work at the nexus of solar energy development and wildlife conservation. â Support this podcast â | |||
12 Mar 2025 | Clear Skies Ahead: Reducing Bird-Building Collisions | 00:44:31 | |
Each year, around one billion birds die from collisions with buildings in the United Statesâan alarming but preventable crisis driven by modern glass architecture. In this episode of People Places Planet, host Dara Albrecht is joined by Viveca Morris of Yale Law School, Dan Piselli of FXCollaborative Architects, and Christine Sheppard of the American Bird Conservancy to explore the scope of the problem and the innovative solutions taking flight. The conversation highlights how science, design, and public policy are coming together to reduce bird-building collisions, with a focus on local laws in cities like New York and San Francisco that are driving industry change. The episode also touches on practical considerations (including challenges) in implementing these policies and the creative ways architects and policymakers are working to make buildings safer for birdsâwithout compromising aesthetics or functionality. Listeners will gain insight into how legal frameworks, community action, and industry innovation are transforming the built environment to better protect wildlife. â Support this podcast â | |||
20 Dec 2023 | Can Fashion Ever Be Sustainable? Maybe. | 00:25:30 | |
Consumers are seeking out ethically made and climate-friendly apparel to gift this holiday season. But how do they know whether their purchases are truly sustainable or eco-friendly? This weekâs podcast episode explores the rise of greenwashing claims and the role of the Federal Trade Commission in guiding the industry and holding companies accountable for deceptive marketing claims. Host Sarah Backer sits down with Carolyn Kennedy, a 2024 JD Candidate at the Georgetown University Law Center, and Derek Sabori, an apparel industry veteran with more than 26 years of experience to discuss legal and industry perspectives on sustainable fashion. â Support this podcast â | |||
22 Apr 2020 | Climate Science in the Courts | 00:24:47 | |
Climate change and climate science have been the subject of a great deal of discussion and political controversy here in the United States. In this era of information and disinformation, wouldnât it be great if we had a vehicle for separating fact from fiction in this important area? A new report from ELI reveals that we already have a mechanism for crunching truth â the judicial system. In this special Earth Day episode, ELI President Scott Fulton talks to the lead author of the report, Dr. Maria Banda, to learn more. Â â Support this podcast â |