The following podcasts were recorded at UBC Events, or created by current and past members of the UBC community. Many podcasts can be found through Alumni UBC's Podcasts Archive.
UBC iSchool students interview 9 experts about the interesting, funny, and sometimes sad, futures for their favourite organisms and the big question, "How might we preserve stories about organisms for future generations?"
Produced by Indigenous Climate Action and featuring a variety of speakers, this podcast explores topics and teachings from moose to healing, and pipelines to wild rice.
This is the fascinating story of a 20-year battle to save Canada’s wild salmon. The Salmon People is a co-production between journalist Sandra Bartlett and Canada's National Observer.
"Co-hosts meteorologist and climate reporter Johanna Wagstaffe and broadcaster Rohit Joseph work through the UN’s 10 actions for a healthy planet, but in a way that won’t shame, overwhelm or bore you."
Join journalist Alex Blumberg and scientist and policy nerd Dr. Ayana Elizabeth Johnson, as they scour the Earth for solutions, talk to people who are making a difference, ask hard questions, crack dumb jokes and — episode by episode — figure out how to build the future we want.
"A holistic, irreverent, no-bullshit look at the climate crisis and all the ways we’re talking—and not talking—about it. We take a feminist, race-forward lens to the biggest story of our time. Some people might call it intersectional, we call it honest. Co-hosted by Mary Annaïse Heglar and Amy Westervelt."
A narrative, true-crime podcast about climate change from journalist Amy Westervelt that investigates the climate research conducted by oil companies, the story of a community of crab fishermen who became the first industry to sue Big Oil, the 100-year history of fossil fuel P.R. campaigns and the propaganda we still see today.
The HEATED podcast is a limited run series that demonstrates that COVID-19 and the climate crisis cannot be separated. In a series of up-to-the-minute interviews, HEATED's Emily Atkin connects the dots on how two of the most pressing conversations of our time are really one and the same.
From host and researcher, Jessica Hum, "An experimental project to look at decolonizing research through podcast as storytelling" in order to prepare for climate change.
This Canada National Observer podcast seeks to spur listeners out of climate paralysis and into climate action through interviews with experts and innovative solutions. Hosted by Shaghayegh Tajvidi, Polly Leger, and Linda Solomon Wood.
From the creators of "Drilled", this courtroom drama podcast examines more than 200 climate-related lawsuits that are happening around the world. It combines explanation, deep-dives, and narrative to shed light on global climate justice.
Created by the Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS), this podcast offers accounts of the challenges that small island states face due to climate change and explores the harm that this crisis inflicts on Indigenous life. This podcast features interviews with climate experts from small island states who propose innovative solutions and urge us all into collective, rapid action.
CBC Meteorologist Johanna Wagstaffe guides a journey to our future in a CBC Vancouver original podcast that explores how our world and lives will adapt to climate change within a few decades. Spoiler: there's masks and smoke.