Plastisphere: A podcast on plastic pollution in the environment
The podcast on plastic, people, and the planet by @anjakrieger.
Plastics have become the basis for our modern lives, but they also pollute the planet. Will we be able to develop a healthy relationship with these materials we’ve created?
Follow Anja on a journey into the world of synthetic polymers, their impacts on nature and ourselves, and the global quest to tackle plastic pollution. Each episode explores the issue from a different angle, featuring a diverse set of voices and viewpoints.
Guest Episode: Why didn't the plastic pollution talks in South Korea yield a treaty? (In Focus)
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In this guest episode, G. Sampath and Satyarupa Shekhar discuss the fifth meeting of the UN’s Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee (INC-5) and why it ended without delivering a legally binding treaty to address global plastic pollution.
Continue listening to the full episode here: https://www.thehindu.com/podcast/plastic-pollution-treaty-collapse/article68946877.ece
Published 01/22
Plastics in the Media - A Review with Nanoplastics Researcher Denise Mitrano
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In recent years, a lot of new research on micro- and nanoplastics has come out. Reporting in the media sounds pretty scary, with nanoplastics found in the human body. What's does the science know for sure at this point, and what is still open and under investigation? Anja speaks with Denise Mitrano, a professor at the Department of Environmental Systems Science at ETH Zurich, the Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich, Switzerland, about media reports, journalism, the state of the science, and Denise's own research.
Music: Dorian Roy and Blue Dot Sessions
Published 12/12
Fact-check your assumptions: Become a plastic mythbuster!
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The Plastic Mythbusters project is a collaboration between the Helmholtz Centre Hereon and the University of Strathclyde. Try our quiz and learn more in our detailed answers. You can also send us new claims to check or comments on our answers via the feedback form at the end of the quiz. We’d love to hear from you – to tackle the most persistent plastic myths!
Links
- Quiz: https://hub.hereon.de/portal/apps/experiencebuilder/experience/?id=07c344c64d1c42f89807351b9ad4a219
- About the project: https://www.coastalpollutiontoolbox.org/112001/index.php.en
- Coastal Pollution Toolbox https://www.coastalpollutiontoolbox.org/
Music by Blue Dot Sessions.
Published 12/05
How (Not) to Make a Plastics Treaty - Part V.2: Midnight Update from #INC5 in Busan
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How (Not) to Make a Plastics Treaty - Part V.2: Midnight Update from #INC5 in Busan by Anja Krieger
Published 12/01
Why production reduction and a fair transition are so important (with GAIA and Grid Arendal)
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Why production reduction and a fair transition are so important (with GAIA and Grid Arendal) by Anja Krieger
Published 12/01
Meeting the Business Coalition for a Global Plastics Treaty at #INC5
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Meeting the Business Coalition for a Global Plastics Treaty at #INC5 by Anja Krieger
Published 12/01
Event Recording: How governments subsidize plastic production - QUNO/Eunomia/IUCN at INC5
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Event Recording: How governments subsidize plastic production - QUNO/Eunomia/IUCN at INC5 by Anja Krieger
Published 12/01
Event Recording: The Scientists' Coalition for an Effective Plastics Treaty at #INC5
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Event Recording: The Scientists' Coalition for an Effective Plastics Treaty at #INC5 by Anja Krieger
Published 11/30
How (Not) to Make a Plastics Treaty - Part V: Things Get Circular
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The saga continues: Anja and Magnus meet in Busan, South Korea, to discuss the unfolding treaty negotiations on Day 4 of the INC5.
Thanks to Grid Arendal for the travel grant!
Published 11/28
#PlasticsTreaty Shorts - Brackets Busan Style
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Anja is at INC5, the final round of negotiations for the global plastics treaty. On the opening day, she asked people about their expectations - and witnessed the magic of diplomacy: Break free from brackets!
With input from (in order of appearance):
- Smail Alhilali (UNIDO)
- Anjeli Debaraja
- Jose Lopez Reyes (Dominican Republic Delegation)
- Angelica C. Pago (Greenpeace East Asia)
- Doe Johnson (International Alliance of Waste Pickers)
- Indumathi, translated by Akbar Allahbakash (Hasiru Dala)
- Shanti Tamang, translated by Janu Dangol (Trash for Peace)
- Maria Angelica Ikeda (Representative of Brasil)
- Winni Lau (Pew)
Thanks to Grid Arendal for supporting Anja's travels to South Korea with a grant!
Published 11/26
Guest Episode: Will we get a viable Global Plastics Treaty or will compromise water it down?
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---Guest episode by Environmental Investigation Agency's "What on Earth?" podcast series---
The fifth round of talks in pursuit of a legally binding Global Plastics Treaty kicks off in Busan, South Korea shortly – but will we emerge with an agreement capable of tackling the world’s plastic crisis or will vested interests compromise the final vision? In this excellent episode, of the "What on Earth" podcast, EIA Ocean Campaign Leader Christina Dixon and Ocean Campaigner Jacob Kean-Hammerson join Senior Press & Communications Officer Paul Newman for an update on the progress so far and a look ahead to the challenges remaining for negotiators in Busan.
Published: 19 Nov 2024
Subscribe and listen to more "What on Earth?" episodes: https://eia-international.org/podcast/
Published 11/22
REPOST: The scientists who discovered plastic pollution over 50 years ago (2020 episode)
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---Repost of the 2020 episode, originally titled "The Discovery of Plastic Pollution"---
As we head into the final round of negotiations towards a global plastics treaty, it's important to remember how long it took for the international community to get here. While plastic pollution has only risen to attention in the past few years, the problem really isn’t all that new. Some scientists have been aware of plastic in the ocean for over half a century. So, how was plastic pollution first discovered? And why didn’t we hear about it earlier? For this 2020 episode, Anja took a deep dive into the history of science, and spoke to the scientists who called attention to the problem long before it was widely discussed. What happened back then, and how did we get to where we are now? Ed Carpenter, Steve Rothstein, Elizabeth Venrick, Arne Holmström, Hans van Weenen and Peter Ryan share their stories.
Share the LinkedIn post: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/meet-scientists-who-discovered-plastic-pollution-over-50-6kw5e/
Transcript and credits: https://anjakrieger.com/plastisphere/2020/07/17/ep-9-transcript/