The Communicating Climate Change Podcast
Exploring practical insights from across diverse disciplines to help climate communicators make a positive impact
By digging deep into the best practices, the worst offenses, we'll be looking for ways to help you – and me - improve our abilities to engage, empower, and ultimately, activate audiences on climate-related issues.
We’ll hear from experts producing the latest science, activists working at the front lines of the crisis, artists, influencers, NGOs, players from the private sector, and many more, bringing together a wide range of perspectives to help us be more impactful in the ways that we communicate climate change.
Each and every episode is an attempt to add to our toolkits, to help us develop the skills we’ll need for this vital task. So, if you want to start communicating climate change more effectively - tune in, subscribe, and tell your friends and colleagues about Communicating Climate Change.
Discover 50+ episodes wherever you get your podcasts!
Or explore the latest expert interviews below.
The Cognitive Challenges of Climate Change With Hugo Mercier
Talking to cognitive scientist, Hugo Mercier, about the reasons that climate change is so hard for humans to grasp, how we assess messages we’re exposed to as credible - or not - and what happens when we encounter information that doesn’t align with our existing beliefs.
Exercising Narrative Intuition With Randy Olson
Talking to scientist turned filmmaker and author, Randy Olson, about his new book, The Narrative Gym, and some key tools it brings to the table to help connect communicators to a greater sense of narrative intuition.
Telling Stories is Better Than Just Presenting the Facts With Michael D. Jones
Talking to narrative scholar, Michael D. Jones, about all things narrative, including why stories are better than just the facts and some aspects of narrative design that we ought to pay attention to when communicating climate change.
Creating a Climate for Change With Susanne Moser
Talking to Susanne Moser about what’s still missing in a lot of communication around climate change, what communicators could do differently, and how technology has changed the game.