Good News from Planet Earth – Details, episodes & analysis
Podcast details
Technical and general information from the podcast's RSS feed.

Good News from Planet Earth
Voiceover for the Planet
Frequency: 1 episode/7d. Total Eps: 6

Snack size doses of Good News from Planet Earth. Real stories from around the world - the most heartwarming, unexpected, and downright delightful nuggets!
Recent rankings
Latest chart positions across Apple Podcasts and Spotify rankings.
Apple Podcasts
🇺🇸 USA - nature
07/01/2026#90🇺🇸 USA - nature
06/01/2026#91🇺🇸 USA - nature
04/01/2026#86🇨🇦 Canada - nature
03/01/2026#95🇨🇦 Canada - nature
02/01/2026#68🇺🇸 USA - nature
02/01/2026#91🇨🇦 Canada - nature
01/01/2026#53🇨🇦 Canada - nature
30/12/2025#40🇨🇦 Canada - nature
19/12/2025#96🇨🇦 Canada - nature
18/12/2025#76
Spotify
No recent rankings available
Shared links between episodes and podcasts
Links found in episode descriptions and other podcasts that share them.
See all- https://www.onepercentfortheplanet.org/
178 shares
- https://www.allymurphy.co.uk/
27 shares
- https://annecloudvoiceover.com/
26 shares
RSS feed quality and score
Technical evaluation of the podcast's RSS feed quality and structure.
See allScore global : 72%
Publication history
Monthly episode publishing history over the past years.
Good News From Planet Earth Trailer
Season 1
jeudi 19 juin 2025 • Duration 02:02
A little mini episode to let you know what we're all about! Which is telling all the good news from Planet Earth!
From fire fighting goats, to grandmas becoming solar powered superheroes! This podcast will give you snack sized episodes of joy every month, packaged up into seasons.
We're shining a light on stories from around the world, of people, communities and creatures who are helping fight climate change, make a difference to their world and make an impact to the environment. Celebrating all the happy moments that are still happening on this planet, right now!
Get ready for our first season - Caring Critters - coming July 7th - July 11th 2025!
Hosted by Anne Cloud & Ally Murphy
Good News from Planet Earth is brought to you by Voiceover for the Planet, proud members of 1% for the Planet.
Produced by Ally Murphy and Anne Cloud
Sound Designed and Mixed by Brandon Perry at Sound Nectar Studios
If you'd like a member of Voiceover for the Planet to narrate your project, email casting@voiceoverfortheplanet.com
The Beavers Who Beat the Bureaucracy
Season 1 · Episode 1
lundi 7 juillet 2025 • Duration 04:32
How Beavers Saved a Wetland (and $1.2 Million)!
This week on Good News from Planet Earth, we’re heading to the Czech Republic to meet the world’s furriest engineers, Eurasian beavers - who stepped in when a government dam project stalled and saved an entire ecosystem.
With no permits, no budget, and a lot of mud, these beavers rehydrated dried-up wetlands, restored biodiversity, and brought back frogs, birds, and even the rare stone crayfish!
This is a story about natural habitat restoration, rewilding, and what happens when we get out of nature’s way.
💚 Wetland conservation
🦫 Beavers as ecosystem engineers
🌍 Feel-good environmental news
If you love climate optimism, wildlife wins, and animal-led restoration, hit play! And share it with your favorite nature nerd, or someone who needs a lift in their day with some good news.
This episode is narrated by Anne Cloud from Voiceover for the Planet.
Resources:
Radio Prague International – Beavers to the Rescue in Brdy Wetlands
Euronews Green – How Beavers Saved a Czech Wetland and a Million Euros
Czech University of Life Sciences – Research on Wetland Restoration and Beaver Impact
Good News from Planet Earth is brought to you by Voiceover for the Planet, proud members of 1% for the Planet.
Produced by Ally Murphy and Anne Cloud
Sound Designed and Mixed by Brandon Perry at Sound Nectar Studios
If you'd like a member of Voiceover for the Planet to narrate your project, email casting@voiceoverfortheplanet.com
The Wombats Who Dug Climate Shelters
Season 1 · Episode 2
mardi 8 juillet 2025 • Duration 05:26
On today’s episode of Good News from Planet Earth, we’re going underground, literally - to meet the wombat: a chunky, cube-pooping marsupial with a surprising role in climate resilience.
During Australia’s devastating Black Summer bushfires, wombat burrows became unexpected wildlife shelters, giving refuge to wallabies, echidnas, reptiles—even birds. But that’s just the beginning.
These furry diggers are quietly helping restore soil health, support native plant growth, and even inspire robotics design with their famously cube-shaped poop. (Yes, really!)
This is a story about natural climate adaptation, underground ecosystems, and the overlooked brilliance of animals doing their thing, and saving lives in the process.
Wildfire survival and wombat burrows
Soil restoration and seed dispersal
Cube-shaped poop meets soft robotics
Australian wildlife and climate resilience
If you love quirky science, animal allies, or just a really solid poop fact, this episode is for you!
This episode is narrated by Ally Murphy from Voiceover for the Planet.
Resources:
The Conversation – Animals Took Refuge in Wombat Burrows During the Bushfires
Good Things Guy - Wombats Save Others from Fire
Australian Wildlife Conservancy – Digging Mammals Project
Smithsonian Magazine – How Do Wombats Make Cube-Shaped Poop?
National Geographic – Scientists Solved the Mystery of Wombats’ Cube-Shaped Poop
Good News from Planet Earth is brought to you by Voiceover for the Planet, proud members of 1% for the Planet.
Produced by Ally Murphy and Anne Cloud
Sound Designed and Mixed by Brandon Perry at Sound Nectar Studios
If you'd like a member of Voiceover for the Planet to narrate your project, email casting@voiceoverfortheplanet.com
The Goats Who Fight Fire with Lunch
Season 1 · Episode 4
jeudi 10 juillet 2025 • Duration 04:53
This week on Good News from Planet Earth, we’re spotlighting some of the hungriest climate heroes around: firefighting goats.
Across California, Oregon, Colorado, and more, goats are being deployed to munch through dry brush, reduce wildfire risk, and create natural firebreaks - no bulldozers or fuel required! These four-legged landscapers climb steep hillsides, devour invasive plants (even poison oak!), and leave healthier soil behind.
This is climate adaptation at its finest: low-tech, low-carbon, and undeniably effective. From urban grazing programs to biodiversity boosts, goats are showing us that sometimes the best solutions come with horns and hooves.
Wildfire prevention with goats
Targeted grazing for climate resilience
Soil health and ecosystem restoration
Urban grazing in U.S. cities
If you love practical climate solutions, land management wins, or just adorable animals doing useful things, this episode’s for you.
This episode is narrated by Anne Cloud from Voiceover for the Planet
Resources:
The Washington Post – Goats Are Being Deployed to Prevent Wildfires
NPR – Why Goats Are Being Used to Fight Fires
Scientific American – Goats Could Help Mitigate Wildfires
CAL FIRE – Vegetation Management and Grazing
The Guardian – Goats Used to Clear Brush and Prevent Fires
Good News from Planet Earth is brought to you by Voiceover for the Planet, proud members of 1% for the Planet.
Produced by Ally Murphy and Anne Cloud
Sound Designed and Mixed by Brandon Perry at Sound Nectar Studios
If you'd like a member of Voiceover for the Planet to narrate your project, email casting@voiceoverfortheplanet.com
The Octopus Who Saves Seagrass (and Inspires Soft Robots)
Season 1 · Episode 3
mercredi 9 juillet 2025 • Duration 05:03
Octopuses & Ocean Climate Wins: The Soft-Bodied Heroes of Blue Carbon
In this Caring Critters episode of Good News from Planet Earth, we dive deep into the surprising role octopuses play in the fight against climate change.
These eight-armed ocean dwellers aren't just camouflage pros and escape artists, they're keystone predators helping to protect fragile blue carbon ecosystems like seagrass meadows and kelp forests. By keeping crab populations in check, octopuses help seagrass thrive, and that means more coastal carbon capture.
But it doesn’t stop underwater. Octopuses are also inspiring breakthroughs in soft robotics, from gentle plastic-collecting machines to reef-safe sensors that monitor marine health and climate data.
Octopus climate impact
Blue carbon & seagrass ecosystems
Biomimicry and ocean-inspired robotics
Coastal conservation success stories
If you love marine science, unexpected climate heroes, or mind-blowing animal intelligence, this one’s for you!
Narrated by Ally Murphy from Voiceover for the Planet
Resources:
National Geographic – Octopuses Inspire Soft Robotics
Nature Communications – Blue Carbon Sequestration by Seagrasses
Science Advances (2020) – Octopus Role in Benthic Ecosystems
Smithsonian Ocean – What Is Blue Carbon?
Wired – Why Soft Robotics Is the Future (Thanks, Octopuses)
Good News from Planet Earth is brought to you by Voiceover for the Planet, proud members of 1% for the Planet.
Produced by Ally Murphy and Anne Cloud
Sound Designed and Mixed by Brandon Perry at Sound Nectar Studios
If you'd like a member of Voiceover for the Planet to narrate your project, email casting@voiceoverfortheplanet.com
The Bees Who Sniff Out Landmines (and Help Heal the Land)
Season 1 · Episode 5
vendredi 11 juillet 2025 • Duration 04:26
In this buzz-worthy finale of our Caring Critters series, we're spotlighting one of the planet's most unexpected environmental heroes: honey bees trained to detect landmines.
Yes - real bees. Real landmines. Real hope.
After the Balkan Wars, Croatia was left with over 90,000 unexploded landmines, making vast landscapes too dangerous for farming, wildlife, or reforestation. But thanks to the sharp sense of smell in these fuzzy pollinators, scientists at the University of Zagreb are helping clear former war zones using nature itself.
This story is a mix of:
- Wildlife restoration
- Landmine detection using bees
- Eco-innovation
- Post-conflict land healing
- ...and good old-fashioned bee bravery
We’ll explore how trained bees use their noses (which can detect TNT at the parts-per-trillion level) to identify minefields, how their flight paths are monitored with thermal imaging, and how their work is reviving ecosystems once lost to war.
No digging. No drones. No drama. Just bees.
Tune in for a fascinating, hopeful story about climate resilience, land restoration, and the astonishing ways animals are helping us heal the planet - one wingbeat at a time.
If you enjoy feel-good environmental stories, climate optimism, and surprising science, this one’s for you.
This episode is narrated by Ally Murphy from Voiceover for the Planet
Resources:
Wired - Honey bees trained to sniff out landmines in Croatia
BBC – Mine-Sniffing Bees in Croatia
National Geographic – Honeybees Used to Sniff Out Landmines
Croatian Mine Action Centre – Environmental Solutions
Good News from Planet Earth is brought to you by Voiceover for the Planet, proud members of 1% for the Planet.
Produced by Ally Murphy and Anne Cloud
Sound Designed and Mixed by Brandon Perry at Sound Nectar Studios
If you'd like a member of Voiceover for the Planet to narrate your project, email casting@voiceoverfortheplanet.com
The Teen Who Turned Trash Into a Playground
Season 2 · Episode 5
vendredi 8 août 2025 • Duration 07:05
How a Teen in Nigeria Turned a Dump into a Climate-Resilient Playground.
Today on Good News from Planet Earth, we meet Amara Nwuneli - a 17-year-old climate innovator from Lagos, Nigeria, who looked at a trash heap… and saw a playground.
Armed with imagination, recycled tires, and a bold vision for climate resilience, Amara transformed a flood-prone dump site into a vibrant community space that absorbs stormwater, prevents erosion, and gives local kids a safe place to play and learn.
Her project won The Earth Prize, sparked a movement for more green public spaces, and shows what’s possible when we turn waste into wonder.
Youth-led climate innovation
Flood-resilient urban design
Upcycled playgrounds & community gardens
Environmental leadership in Nigeria
If you’ve ever doubted that one bold idea can reshape a community - and the climate future - this episode will change your mind.
This episode is narrated by Susie Valerio for Voiceover for the Planet.
Sources:
Good News from Planet Earth is brought to you by Voiceover for the Planet, proud members of 1% for the Planet.
Produced by Ally Murphy and Anne Cloud
Sound Designed and Mixed by Brandon Perry at Sound Nectar Studios
If you'd like a member of Voiceover for the Planet to narrate your project, email casting@voiceoverfortheplanet.com
Teen Siblings Who Are Saving the World from Microplastics
Season 2 · Episode 4
jeudi 7 août 2025 • Duration 04:27
How Victoria & Justin Invented a Laundry Filter That Could Save the Planet.
This week on Good News from Planet Earth, we meet Victoria Ou and Justin Huang - teen siblings from Texas who took on one of the tiniest (and sneakiest) climate threats: microplastics.
After learning that plastic fibers from laundry were slipping past water treatment filters and ending up in oceans, and our bodies, they built a solution from scratch. Their invention? A microplastic filter powered by ultrasonic sound waves.
Armed with science, a 3D printer, and serious determination, these two created a device so effective, it won the Gordon E. Moore Award at the Regeneron International Science and Engineering Fair. And they’re just getting started.
Teen-led innovation
Microplastic pollution solutions
Ultrasonic filtration technology
Sustainable laundry practices
If you’ve ever felt overwhelmed by environmental problems, this story is your reminder: the next generation is already making waves - literally.
This episode is narrated by Joe Passaro for Voiceover for the Planet
Sources for Further Exploration:
Good News from Planet Earth is brought to you by Voiceover for the Planet, proud members of 1% for the Planet.
Produced by Ally Murphy and Anne Cloud
Sound Designed and Mixed by Brandon Perry at Sound Nectar Studios
If you'd like a member of Voiceover for the Planet to narrate your project, email casting@voiceoverfortheplanet.com
The Teen Who Helped a Flock Find Its Way Home
Season 2 · Episode 3
mercredi 6 août 2025 • Duration 05:01
A Story of Quiet Conservation in New Zealand
This week on Good News from Planet Earth, we’re heading to the windswept coast of Aotearoa (New Zealand) to meet 16-year-old Nate Wilbourne - a youth activist who helped nearly 200 endangered fluttering shearwater chicks find a new, safer home.
In partnership with Forest & Bird and the New Zealand Department of Conservation, Nate spent weeks feeding, monitoring, and caring for baby seabirds relocated to the Wharariki Ecosanctuary. His goal? Help them imprint on this protected area, so they’ll return to breed, and thrive, for generations to come.
This episode is about youth-led conservation, native species protection, and the kind of hope that grows feather by feather.
Seabird conservation in New Zealand
Fluttering shearwaters (pakahā)
Teen climate leadership
Wildlife relocation & habitat restoration
If you believe that change can start with quiet care and patient action, this one’s for you.
This episode is narrated by Anne Cloud for Voiceover for the Planet
Resources:
Good News from Planet Earth is brought to you by Voiceover for the Planet, proud members of 1% for the Planet.
Produced by Ally Murphy and Anne Cloud
Sound Designed and Mixed by Brandon Perry at Sound Nectar Studios
If you'd like a member of Voiceover for the Planet to narrate your project, email casting@voiceoverfortheplanet.com
The Girl Scouts Who Built a Butterfly Highway
Season 2 · Episode 2
mardi 5 août 2025 • Duration 06:07
This week on Good News from Planet Earth, we’re celebrating the power of young people, and today’s story is buzzing with brilliance!
A troop of Girl Scouts in North Carolina saw that monarch butterflies were disappearing. So they rolled up their sleeves, grabbed their shovels, and launched a Butterfly Highway - a growing network of pollinator gardens designed to help butterflies, bees, and native plants thrive.
With native seeds, community planting days, and pure determination, these girls turned schools, parks, and backyards into vibrant rest stops for migrating monarchs—and they’ve already made a measurable impact.
Monarch butterfly conservation
Pollinator garden projects
Youth-led environmental action
Girl Scout Bronze Award climate leadership
If you believe in grassroots solutions, kid-powered change, and the magic of milkweed, this is the episode for you!
This episode is narrated by Susie Valerio for Voiceover for the Planet.
Sources for Further Exploration:
- NPR: Girl Scouts and the Butterfly Highway
- NC Wildlife Federation's Butterfly Highway Program
- U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service: Monarch Butterfly Conservation
Good News from Planet Earth is brought to you by Voiceover for the Planet, proud members of 1% for the Planet.
Produced by Ally Murphy and Anne Cloud
Sound Designed and Mixed by Brandon Perry at Sound Nectar Studios
If you'd like a member of Voiceover for the Planet to narrate your project, email casting@voiceoverfortheplanet.com









