Synopsis
Weekly environmental news on Canadian community radio
Episodes
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Revisiting Environmental Activists
27/08/2018 Duration: 29minThis week, we bring you two interviews from our archive with environmental activists from around the world. First, we pulled a story about activist Tzeporah Berman, who we talked to about bringing together activists and corporate interests. After that, we revisit the time we interviewed another prolific environmental activist, Dr. Vandana Shiva, a physicist, ecologist and author […]★ Support this podcast ★
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Smokey Skies and Gallant Grandmothers
20/08/2018 Duration: 29minThis week, we’re excited to air an interview done by fellow CJSR star Nigel Henri Robinson, host of the CJSR show Acimowin, who spoke with the English Bay Grandmothers about their work fighting against oil extraction and development on the Cold Lake First Nations. While we were preparing for this show we were surrounded by […]★ Support this podcast ★
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Building Greener
15/08/2018 Duration: 29minThis week on Terra Informa we take a visit to the Primed Mosaic Centre, Alberta’s first net-zero and LEED Platinum-certified building. This one-of-a-kind commercial building is located in Edmonton, Alberta and has won awards for building engineering and Innovation. Now formally known as the Primed Mosaic centre due to its recent change in ownership. The Primed company is a local medical products company that put there values to actions when they decided to invest in the LEED building. We hope this story will inspire any and all businesses to look at more sustainable work sites - if not for the solar panels, than for the live plant walls!★ Support this podcast ★
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Provoked by Poems
06/08/2018 Duration: 29minThis week on Terra Informa, amidst news of our earliest ever earth overshoot day, Terra Informers Dylan Hall and Amanda Rooney speak with poet Alice Major about her book entitled "Welcome to the Anthropocene".★ Support this podcast ★
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Responsible Recreation & Bioremediation
30/07/2018 Duration: 29minThis week on Terra Informa, we're focusing on looking after the world around us. First, Terra Informer Hannah Cunningham speaks with Sheryl Savard, a trail runner turned activist who will tell us how to responsibly recreate in our local natural spaces. Then, we're bringing back an archive piece where Leila Darwish talks about the use of bioremediation. ★ Support this podcast ★
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Infrastructure for the People
23/07/2018 Duration: 29minThis week on Terra Informa we are talking about cycling! In this archive episode, Terra Informers Shelley Jodoin and Amanda Rooney speak with Vice Chair from Paths for People, Conrad Norbert, an Edmonton non-profit organization advocating for the creation of infrastructure with pedestrians and cyclists in mind. In June of 2017, Paths for People released […]★ Support this podcast ★
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Life in Plastic
16/07/2018 Duration: 29minDid you know that July is Plastic-Free Month? This week, we’re bringing back two stories from our archives centred around plastic. One about a BC woman, Taina Uitto, who lived plastic-free for a whole year, and another in which we interview Laura Bamsey and Marnie Olsen from the Elements Society on a school pilot project […]★ Support this podcast ★
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Inspiring Canadian Environmentalists for Canada Day
02/07/2018 Duration: 29minThis week on Terra Informa, we're acknowledging Canada Day by bringing you two interviews from our archives that highlight two powerful female Canadian environmentalists.★ Support this podcast ★
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Metamorphosis – Cinema on Climate and Change
18/06/2018 Duration: 29minTerra Informers watch and discuss Metamorphosis, a new climate change documentary, and also speak with its creators in this week’s episode.★ Support this podcast ★
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Co-Chairing the IPCC Science Process
11/06/2018 Duration: 29minChris Chang-yen Phillips talks to Valerie Masson-Delmotte, the Co-Chair of the IPCC – Working Group I.★ Support this podcast ★
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A Monster is Captured
04/06/2018 Duration: 29minThis week on Terra Informa, Sofia Osborne brings you an interview with Mark Leiren-Young, who is the author of a book about "The Killer Whale Who Changed the World". This book explores the story of Moby Doll, the first orca ever captured and put on display, right on the west coast. In this show, find out how the accidental capture of Moby Doll actually changed the world.★ Support this podcast ★
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The Ballad of Myrtle & Charlie Ed
28/05/2018 Duration: 29minThis week on Terra Informa, Anthony Goertz brings you an exclusive story about the great elephant escape of 1926. This true story entails an elephant stomping around Jasper Avenue in Edmonton's downtown core, and again on Calgary's stampede grounds. Listen on to find out how Canadians dealt with an elephant escape, and then decide for yourself whether or not this was the original Bonnie & Clyde for elephants.★ Support this podcast ★
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Living Outside the Box
07/05/2018 Duration: 29minThe recent IPCC Cities and Climate Conference in Edmonton gave David Draper the opportunity to finally answer his burning questions. Curious about urban development and the future of urban design, this show talks to Julian Daly (Executive Director of Boyle Street Community Services), David Miller (North American Regional Director, C40 Cities), and Don Iveson (Mayor of Edmonton). This show attempts to challenge your conception of why our cities exist as they do and get you to think, and live outside the box.★ Support this podcast ★
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Youth Voices on Climate Change
30/04/2018 Duration: 29minIn this week’s radio documentary, reporter Andrea Wiebe follows the experiences of youth from around the world as they collaboratively prepare and present a paper on climate change at the International Panel on Climate Change conference held in Edmonton in March. The group of students collaborated via video chat in the months leading up to […]★ Support this podcast ★
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Farming in Canada’s North
23/04/2018 Duration: 29minThis week on Terra Informa we discuss sustainable agriculture and what its like farming in the north. How much sun do they get?! Download episode now. Download program log here. Photo by: Le Refuge Farms★ Support this podcast ★
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IPCC Climate Talks: Indigenous Perspectives
16/04/2018 Duration: 28minThis week we are bringing you more stories from the conference on Cities and Climate Change that was held in Edmonton by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) from March 5th to 7th, 2018. In this episode, we have a conversation about renewable energy projects in the Beaver Lake Cree First Nation with Crystal Lameman, and talk with Laura Lynes of the Rockies Institute, a non-profit based in Canmore, Alberta.★ Support this podcast ★
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Public Participation and the Environment
09/04/2018 Duration: 29minThis week, we bring you a documentary by Terra Informer Caitlin Macnab on the new environmental impact assessment and what public participation means in the environmental sphere. Tune in for a deep dive on just one part of the recent federal environmental legislation changes.★ Support this podcast ★
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Terra Misinforma 2018
02/04/2018 Duration: 29minhis April fools tune in to be misinformed about solutions to cow farts, the revocation of your 'environmentalist' card, and other solutions to climate change.★ Support this podcast ★
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IPCC Climate Talks: Tech and Limits to Growth
26/03/2018 Duration: 29minIs sustainable development a contradiction? Is capitalism sustainable? Are their limits to economic growth? Will technology save us? Do individual actions matter at all? This week on Terra Informa, we have two very different perspectives on these questions. At the Edmonton IPCC climate talks we spoke with Hoesung Lee, the Chair of the IPCC, and […]★ Support this podcast ★
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The bridge from science to practice
19/03/2018 Duration: 29minThis week on Terra Informa, we’re diving into another great interview from the conference on Cities and Climate Change that was held in Edmonton by the intergovernmental panel on climate change. Terra Informer Dylan Hall sat down with Debra Roberts, Co-Chair of the IPCC working group titled ‘Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability.’ Listen on to learn about bridging science and practice, the importance of informality, and encouraging activism.★ Support this podcast ★