Terra Informa

Informações:

Synopsis

Weekly environmental news on Canadian community radio

Episodes

  • Investigating in Alberta

    21/01/2019 Duration: 29min

    This week we present a single interview, between Terra Informer Sofia Osborne and Sharon Riley, an investigative journalist covering energy and the environment in Alberta for The Narwhal, an independent online magazine that reports on the basis that climate change is a real and happening issue.★ Support this podcast ★

  • De-Extinction: Should We Resurrect Extinct Animal Species?

    14/01/2019 Duration: 28min

    What if we could bring extinct animal species back from the dead? This week, Terra Informer Sofia Osborne brings us a story about de-extinction: the use of selective breeding, cloning, and genetic engineering to “resurrect” extinct species. This technology poses a lot of moral and ethical questions—would these “de-extincted” animal species be authentic? Could they ever be wild? Do we owe it to the species we’ve driven to extinction to bring them back? And who should decide whether we use this technology? Listen now to dive into these questions and more.★ Support this podcast ★

  • Myrtle and Charlie Ed, Revisited

    07/01/2019 Duration: 29min

    This week on Terra Informa, we return to The Ballad of Myrtle and Charlie Ed, a documentary from our archives, presented by Anthony Goertz. This is story about discovering a story - one filled with charm, heart, and a great elephant escape! Headlines cover Canada's reception at COP24, Chinese internment of Uyghurs and Muslims in East Turkistan, and new research on cooperative bat behaviour.★ Support this podcast ★

  • Sponge Reefs of the Pacific Canadian Deep

    17/12/2018 Duration: 29min

    Terra Informer Jeremie Mahaux speaks with Nathan Grant, a graduate student at the University of Alberta.★ Support this podcast ★

  • Winter Cycling & Christmas Tree Debacles

    10/12/2018 Duration: 28min

    This week we bring you two wintry archives! First a debate: which is "greener"? An artificial or a real Christmas tree? Carson Fong finds out! Then winter cycling - sounds scary? Turns out it might not be as awful as it sounds.★ Support this podcast ★

  • Camping, climbing and COP24

    03/12/2018 Duration: 29min

    This week on Terra Informa, we dig in to COP24 and follow a conversation between new Terra Informer Kesia and outdoor enthusiast Yuliya Fakhr. Kesia and Yuliya explore the independence and liberation experienced in the Great Outdoors, the connection between spirituality and nature, and what it's like to be a first-time rock climber. ★ Support this podcast ★

  • Talking Indigenous-led Environmental Assessment with The Firelight Group

    26/11/2018 Duration: 29min

    This week on Terra Informa, we have an interview with Dr. Ginger Gibson, one of the directors and founders of the Firelight Group, an organization that works to support Indigenous peoples and governments defending their rights and their land. Terra Informer Dylan Hall spoke with Ginger about the Firelight Group and the successes they’ve seen, […]★ Support this podcast ★

  • Pinhole Cameras and Changing Oceans

    19/11/2018 Duration: 28min

    This week we dive into an interview with Natalie Baird, a Masters student using participatory art methods to document Inuit knowledge in Canada’s north, and explore how this knowledge can be applied to climate change. Natalie’s work takes place in Pangnirtung - an Inuit community in Nunavut, located on Baffin Island. In the interview, Hannah and Natalie talk about sharing local knowledge, the accessibility of climate change science, how to make a pinhole camera, and much more. Headlines include the launch of the brand new Energy Efficiency Canada program, and the announcement of new (and much-needed) funding for conservation of Species at Risk.★ Support this podcast ★

  • Thinking Like A Plant

    12/11/2018 Duration: 29min

    What is it like to be a plant? Do plants make choices? Do they...think? This week on Terra Informa, we turn to Charly Blais' interview with Megan Ljubotina, a graduate student at the University of Alberta to find out about the ways plants make decisions to improve their vitality, survival and fitness.★ Support this podcast ★

  • The Most Terra-fying FunDrive Yet!

    05/11/2018 Duration: 29min

    This week we're bringing you a ~ spooky ~ recap of our FunDrive episode that aired LIVE in Edmonton last week. FunDrive is CJSR 88.5fm's annual fundraiser and thanks to you we surpassed our goal! For this show, we summoned the ghosts of past terra informers and reminisced with these apparitions about the best parts of community radio and podcasting!★ Support this podcast ★

  • Sassy Bats and Boss Moss

    29/10/2018 Duration: 29min

    This week on Terra Informa, we get batty for Calgary Bat Week with an archive discussing the challenges faced by our flying furry friends, plus we re-air an interview with Edmonton’s resident Moss Man, Dr. René Bellend, about the boss that is moss!★ Support this podcast ★

  • Inside the IPCC with Debra Robertson

    22/10/2018 Duration: 29min

    This week on Terra Informa, we look back at the past two weeks of climate change news with the release of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change ’s most recent “Special Report,” which discusses the impacts of an increased mean global temperature of 1.5 degrees Celsius. We follow this with an archived interview with an IPCC working group co-chair from last March when we covered the panel’s cities and climate change conference here in Edmonton.★ Support this podcast ★

  • Advice from Buffy Sainte-Marie

    15/10/2018 Duration: 29min

    This week on Terra Informa, we hear some of Buffy Sainte-Marie's advice for young people: words of wisdom for young activists, how music can be an expression of play, and how creativity is a connection to the Creator. Terra Informer Sydney Karbonik and three of her friends get to choose one question each to ask Sainte-Marie at the Edmonton Folk Fest this past summer.  Then we get to dig into the archives and hear from Eriel Derange, an indigenous rights advocate and a member of the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation. Deranger highlights the climate crises faced by Indigenous peoples of Alberta and the moral and legal obligation of governments to work with Indigenous peoples in building progressive and aggressive climate change solutions.★ Support this podcast ★

  • Exploring the Strange and Wonderful

    08/10/2018 Duration: 29min

    This week on Terra Informa we explore the relationship between place and language with Nicholas Bradley, a Victoria based poet and educator. Bradley’s collection of poetry encourages readers to consider the  strange, wonderful and concerning ways that humans across Western Canada and the pacific Northwest relate to the places we travel and inhabit.★ Support this podcast ★

  • Stephen Jenkinson on Death, Grief, and the Withering World Tree

    01/10/2018 Duration: 29min

    In this episode, listen to culture worker Stephen Jenkinson speaking about death, age, and grief, particularly in relation to this time of environmental loss and trouble. Download episode What happens when we live in a culture that rejects aging, death, and any kind of frailty or limit? Why is grief largely absent, at least publicly, […]★ Support this podcast ★

  • Following in Dad’s Low-Impact Footsteps

    24/09/2018 Duration: 29min

    This week on Terra Informa, we invite you to listen in on a chat between Terra Informer Sophia Osborne and her dad, David Osborne, who leads a low-impact life in the Gulf Islands of British Columbia.★ Support this podcast ★

  • Revisiting Mary Schäffer (plus Alberta Climate Week events)

    17/09/2018 Duration: 29min

    This week, we're revisiting an archive interview about naturalist, photographer, writer, and artist Mary Schäffer. We're also bringing you lots of information about upcoming environmental events in Alberta, including the Alberta Climate Summit and related events across the province.★ Support this podcast ★

  • Sustainability in Classrooms and Constitutions

    10/09/2018 Duration: 29min

    That bite in the September autumn air is a tell-tale sign of back to school. This week, we dug into our archives and uncovered a 2016 piece about sustainability in Alberta schools, as well as another archive that helps us consider the pros and cons of including the environment in national constitutions. ★ Support this podcast ★

  • Putting the ECO in the Economy

    03/09/2018 Duration: 28min

    Catch David Suzuki & Jeff Rubin in our archive this week about The End of Growth, in light of PM Trudeau removing "climate change" from the federal env committee. #growth #climatechange★ Support this podcast ★

  • Revisiting Environmental Activists

    27/08/2018 Duration: 29min

    This 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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