Logo

    palm oil

    Explore " palm oil" with insightful episodes like "The Palm Oil Dilemma", "The biggest butterfly of all", "Green News Report 10/27/2015" and "Palm oil plantations, charcoal, and a flea circus - Planet Earth Podcast - 10.11.23" from podcasts like ""WAKEcup and smell the coffee", "Science Friction - Hello AI Overlords", "Green News Report w/ Brad Friedman & Desi Doyen" and "Planet Earth"" and more!

    Episodes (24)

    The Palm Oil Dilemma

    The Palm Oil Dilemma

    Do you eat chocolate, clean your teeth after with toothpaste or perhaps put a bit of lipstick on for a night out? If so you’re part of the great palm oil debate, as this widespread ingredient is in all those products and thousands more.,
    A WWF report described the palm oil industry as a disaster for global biodiversity and found that 193 species on the endangered list including orang-utans, gibbons and tigers were suffering severe harm by deforestation and habitat loss caused directly by the Palm Oil Industry. Tom and Lizzie delve into the murky world of oil production in South East Asia and discover things aren’t as clear cut as you may think, revealing how the alternatives would use up to 10 time more land to product the same oil yield and how the industry raises 100’s of thousands of people out of extreme poverty each year . Sustainable Palm Oil initiatives such as those in the Gabon could be the answer to an issue that affects everyone, whilst acknowledging there’s no magic bullet as yet.

    From Global WakeCup and produced by Events in Sound

    Palm oil plantations, charcoal, and a flea circus - Planet Earth Podcast - 10.11.23

    Palm oil plantations, charcoal, and a flea circus - Planet Earth Podcast - 10.11.23
    Does your shopping basket contain chocolate, biscuits and shampoo? If it does, you may be unwittingly contributing to the destruction of the some of the world's pristine rainforests. Manufacturers now use palm oil in a huge range of products, because it's so cheap. But virgin rainforest in some of the planet's last wildernesses is being destroyed at a dizzying pace to make way for palm oil plantations to keep up with our voracious appetites for the products the stuff is in. Richard Hollingham meets Tim Cockerill, who's just come back from Borneo, to find out how the plantations affect the animals and plants that live in the rainforests there. We also hear why charcoal is such an incredible material. Not only can it tell us there was a fire, but it can also provide a previously unseen glimpse into our past. Sue Nelson goes to Frensham Common in Surrey to find out more. Finally, Tim Cockerill shows Richard Hollingham his very own working flea circus.