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    drawdown

    Explore "drawdown" with insightful episodes like "Earth911 Podcast: Project Drawdown Maps a Path to Sustainable Gaming", "Army Today - Feb. 13", "053 Drawdown Hemp w/ Bruce Dietzen", "Playing For Answers" and "Episode 137. BEST IN CLIMATE: How Can the Education of Girls Help Solve the Climate Crisis? An Excerpt from DRAWDOWN" from podcasts like ""Earth911.com's Sustainability In Your Ear", "Army Today", "Sustainability Now - exploring technologies and paradigms to shape a world that works", "Cool Solutions: Stories of climate action from the bottom up" and "Eaarth Feels"" and more!

    Episodes (8)

    Earth911 Podcast: Project Drawdown Maps a Path to Sustainable Gaming

    Earth911 Podcast: Project Drawdown Maps a Path to Sustainable Gaming
    U.S. gamers generate 24 million tons of CO2 into the atmosphere annually, according to a 2019 study by the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. That’s about the same greenhouse gas impact as the annual emissions from five million cars. And with more than 3 billion gamers worldwide, game developers and the datacenters they rely on need to make rapid changes to reduce their footprint. Drawdown Labs recently released “A drawdown-aligned framework for the Gaming industry,” a set of recommendations on how gaming companies help solve climate change through not just actions to reduce their emissions but by encouraging gamers to embrace environmental responsibility during gameplay. Two contributors to the guide, Aiyana Bodi, Sr. Associate at Drawdown Labs, and Paula Escuardra, a Sr. UX Strategist for Cloud Gaming at Microsoft’s Xbox Game Studios, join the conversation to discuss the new recommendations.

    Even if the gaming industry accounts for only a fraction of one percent of total annual emissions, every slight improvement in efficiency will contribute to progress. More importantly, the example set by the tech industry can inspire changes in other companies that want to remain competitive and attractive to climate-concerned customers. The lessons learned from gaming’s transition can inspire changes in renewable energy, inform the development of a comprehensive approach to measuring Scope 3 emissions in other industries, and demonstrate the financial and brand benefits of becoming environmentally responsible. Read the report at https://drawdown.org/publications/a-drawdown-aligned-framework-for-the-gaming-industry, and learn more about Project Drawdown, which was founded by environmentalist Paul Hawken, at https://drawdown.org

    053 Drawdown Hemp w/ Bruce Dietzen

    053 Drawdown Hemp w/ Bruce Dietzen

    As Jack Herrera once said, “I don’t know if hemp is going to save the world, but it’s the only thing that can.” Bruce Dietzen, creator of the Renew Sports Car, Founder of Carbon Negative Fiber is about to quantify that with his Drawdown Hemp Project.

    In a bid to win the Musk Foundation’s $100 Million X Prize for Carbon Removal, Bruce has built a coalition of entrepreneurs from all disciplines of the hemp industry to develop a consensus on the carbon sequestering power of hemp.

    An acre of hemp can sequester tons of carbon. Couple that with the carbon being avoided by not producing materials with conventional methods and the potential for drawdown is huge.

    Playing For Answers

    Playing For Answers

    Most folks don't want to get down and nerdy about climate solutions, but what if we could make it fun? Co host Wendy Ring decides to make a game. She talks with a climate scientist, a professional game designer and a mechanical engineer who are each designing other climate games, to get previews and explore  how games could mobilize players into action. Co host Brian Curtis joins a group playing Wendy's game and hilarity ensues. 

    05: Brian on drawdown and life after the Marines

    05: Brian on drawdown and life after the Marines

    During President Obama's second term, the military was scaled back.  Brian talks about being impacted by the drawdown and what life is like after serving twelve and a half years in the Marines.

     

    Additional resources

    Center for Strategic & International Studies, "What Has the Budget Control Act of 2011 Meant for Defense?"

    The Washington Post, "Obama announces new, leaner military approach"
    The New York Times, "Is It Wise to Cut Military Spending?"

    PBS News Hour, "Fact-checking GOP candidate claims on Obama’s military spending"
    PoliFact, "PolitiFact Sheet: Military spending under Obama and Congress"

    The Washington Post, "U.S. military budget inches closer to $1 trillion mark, as concerns over federal deficit grow"