Explore every episode of the podcast Saving the World From Bad Ideas
| Title | Pub. Date | Duration | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bad Idea #1 "No such thing as progress" with Steven Pinker | 03 Apr 2025 | 00:44:08 | |
🔍 Episode Summary: In the inaugural episode of Saving the World from Bad Ideas, Mark Lynas is joined by renowned psychologist and best-selling author Steven Pinker to challenge the pervasive myth that the world is in terminal decline. Steven makes the case for progress as a measurable, empirical reality, highlighting how improvements in health, literacy, poverty, and safety have transformed human life — even if we rarely hear about them. Together, they explore the psychological biases behind pessimism, the rise of reactionary politics, the dangers of nuclear weapons, and the pitfalls of modern progressive movements. From Enlightenment ideals to eco-modernism, it's a wide-ranging conversation on how to make the world better — rationally. 🧠 Topics Discussed:
👨🏫 Guest Bio:
Steven Pinker is Professor of Psychology at Harvard University and the author of numerous influential books, including: He’s a prominent public intellectual, defender of Enlightenment values, and an optimist — but not the naive kind. 📚 Recommended Reading:
🎵 Tom Lehrer’s song "We Will All Go Together When We Go" 💬 Quote Highlights: “The news by its very nature is bound to oversample bad things and neglect good things.” — Steven Pinker “Not all cultures are going to agree with the latest cause from elite left-wing urban American universities.” — Steven Pinker “Nuclear weapons can end civilization in a matter of hours. It’s astonishing that literally the end of the world is not an issue.” — Steven Pinker “Let's treat environmental problems as challenges to be solved, not moral failings to be punished.” — Mark Lynas
WePlanet is a global movement of citizens and scientists dedicated to defending the science and solutions we need to protect our environment and civilisation. Learn more at weplanet.org. 📥 Join the Conversation: 💬 Got thoughts? Email us: podcast@weplanet.org 📬 Join our podcast mailing list: weplanet.org/podcast | |||
| Bad Idea #2 "Everything is getting worse!" with Hannah Ritchie | 03 Apr 2025 | 01:14:03 | |
🔍 Episode Summary: In this energising and data-packed conversation, Mark Lynas sits down with Hannah Ritchie, lead researcher at Our World in Data and author of Not the End of the World, to confront one of the most pervasive bad ideas out there: that everything is getting worse. Hannah argues that, while environmental challenges are real and urgent, the story of human progress is just as important — and overwhelmingly positive. From reductions in child mortality and extreme poverty to progress on clean energy and air pollution, Hannah lays out the evidence that things are getting better, and explains why excessive doomerism and moralising can get in the way of real climate action. They tackle controversial topics like degrowth, depopulation, meat consumption, nuclear and renewables, and more — all with the goal of defending optimism grounded in facts. 🧠 Topics Discussed:
👩🔬 Guest Bio: Hannah Ritchie is Deputy Editor and Lead Researcher at Our World in Data and author of the best-selling book Not the End of the World: How We Can Be the First Generation to Build a Sustainable Planet. Her work focuses on using data to understand and solve the world’s biggest problems — from climate change to poverty and health. Hannah is also the co-host of the podcast Solving for Climate, where she interviews innovators working on climate solutions. 📚 Recommended Reading & Resources:
💬 Quote Highlights: “The world can be terrible, getting better, and still need to improve — all at the same time.” — Hannah Ritchie “Climate change is a catastrophic risk, but not an existential one. And that distinction matters.” — Hannah Ritchie “We don't just need anger — we need a vision for a better future to work toward.” — Hannah Ritchie “We can’t solve problems by moralising people into submission. We need good, scalable alternatives.” — Mark Lynas 🌐 About WePlanet:WePlanet is a global citizen and science movement defending the science-based solutions we need to save the world — from clean energy and sustainable food to prosperity for all. Learn more at weplanet.org. 📥 Join the Conversation:💬 Feedback? Thoughts? Email us: podcast@weplanet.org 📬 Get alerts when new episodes drop: weplanet.org/podcast | |||
| Launching Saving The World From Bad Ideas | 19 Mar 2025 | 00:02:10 | |
TRAILER What if some of the biggest obstacles to saving the planet aren’t what you think? In Saving the World from Bad Ideas, Mark Lynas—once a self-proclaimed eco-activist turned science advocate—is here to question the ideas that shape environmental debates. Are GMOs really dangerous? Is nuclear power a threat or a solution? Will billions die from climate change? With sharp discussions and guests like Steven Pinker, Hannah Ritchie, and George Monbiot, this podcast digs into the myths, misconceptions, and inconvenient truths that too often go unchallenged. If you're ready to rethink everything you thought you knew about saving the planet, hit subscribe. | |||
| Bad Idea #5 "Progress is inevitable" with George Monbiot | 17 Apr 2025 | 01:01:57 | |
🔍 Episode Summary: In this powerhouse episode, Mark Lynas is joined by long-time friend and environmental journalist George Monbiot for a brutally honest conversation on where we are — and how we fight back. Together they challenge the idea that environmental progress is automatic or guaranteed, and instead delve into the deep political, economic, and social forces that shape our chances for a better future. Monbiot argues that unless we confront power, capitalism, and the failure of incrementalism, we’re simply sleepwalking into authoritarianism and ecological collapse. From colonialism to neoliberalism, from fascism to the failures of the left, this is a sweeping conversation on what went wrong — and how we can make things right, through a positive politics of belonging. This one pulls no punches. 🧠 Topics Discussed:
👨🏫 Guest Bio: George Monbiot is a columnist for The Guardian, environmental activist, and author of several books including Regenesis, Out of the Wreckage, and The Invisible Doctrine (with Peter Hutchison). He’s one of the most influential and outspoken voices on the British left — and he’s spent four decades fighting for ecological justice, democratic reform, and systemic change. 📚 Recommended Reading & Resources: 💬 Quote Highlights: “Progress is not inevitable. And if you don’t confront power, you lose — every time.” — George Monbiot “Capitalism didn’t start with commerce. It started with slavery and extraction.” — George Monbiot “If we fail to offer a positive politics of belonging, the fascists will offer a negative one — and people will choose it.” — George Monbiot “Incrementalism is not a theory of change. It’s an excuse for failure.” — George Monbiot “We need a politics of private sufficiency, public luxury.” — George Monbiot 🌐 About WePlanet: WePlanet is a global citizen and science movement advocating for bold, science-based solutions to the world’s greatest challenges. We fight bad ideas with better ones. Learn more at weplanet.org. 📥 Join the Conversation: 💬 Got thoughts on this episode? Email us: podcast@weplanet.org 📬 Subscribe for future episodes: weplanet.org/podcast | |||
| Bad Idea #4 "The global south can skip fossil fuels" with Vijaya Ramachandran | 10 Apr 2025 | 01:02:25 | |
🔍 Episode Summary: In this searing and deeply compelling conversation, Mark Lynas speaks with Vijaya Ramachandran, economist and Director for Energy and Development at the Breakthrough Institute, to unpack what she calls one of the worst “bad ideas” shaping today’s climate discourse: the blanket opposition to fossil fuel development in the Global South. From indoor air pollution to energy inequality, and from misguided climate justice campaigns to blatant geopolitical hypocrisy, Vijaya takes aim at the idea that development must be sacrificed for the climate. She explains why poor countries need more energy — including some fossil fuels — in order to fight poverty, save lives, and build resilience to climate shocks. If you think climate justice means banning gas in Africa, you might want to listen to this first. 🧠 Topics Discussed:
👩🏫 Guest Bio: Vijaya Ramachandran is Director for Energy and Development at the Breakthrough Institute and an economist who has written for Nature, Foreign Policy, and The Economist. Her research focuses on energy access, development, and the geopolitics of climate finance. She's a fierce advocate for energy equity and pragmatic climate solutions rooted in the needs of the world’s poorest. 📚 Recommended Reading & Resources:
💬 Quote Highlights: “LPG saves lives. It’s better for women, better for children, and even better for the climate when you look at the alternatives.” — Vijaya Ramachandran “You can’t cook with wind and solar. That’s the reality for hundreds of millions of people.” — Vijaya Ramachandran “The World Bank’s fossil fuel financing ban only hurts the poorest — and it won’t solve climate change.” — Mark Lynas “Climate justice has become what Western NGOs want, not what poor people actually need.” — Vijaya Ramachandran 🌐 About WePlanet:WePlanet is a global citizen and science movement dedicated to bold, science-based solutions for climate and development. We believe in energy abundance, food security, and global prosperity — without environmental collapse. Learn more at weplanet.org. 📥 Join the Conversation: 💬 Email feedback: podcast@weplanet.org 📬 Sign up for updates: weplanet.org/podcast | |||
| Bad Idea #3 "We shouldn’t even talk about geoengineering!" with Oliver Morton | 04 Apr 2025 | 00:59:27 | |
🔍 Episode Summary: In this thought-provoking episode, Mark Lynas is joined by science writer and The Planet Remade author Oliver Morton for a candid conversation about geoengineering — the controversial set of technologies that could help us cool the planet. Oliver argues that not talking about solar geoengineering might itself be a bad idea, especially as climate change accelerates and overshoot scenarios become more likely. They explore how stratospheric aerosols, inspired by volcanic eruptions, could reflect sunlight and reduce warming, and why such solutions are currently taboo in many environmental circles. The episode tackles moral hazard, global equity, the politics of climate action, and why global South leadership is essential for legitimate discussion. Mark even finds himself inching toward changing his own mind — again. 🧠 Topics Discussed:
🧑🔬 Guest Bio: Oliver Morton is a senior editor at The Economist, former science writer for Nature, and author of The Planet Remade: How Geoengineering Could Change the World. He has an asteroid named after him — and no, it's not headed toward Earth. 📚 Recommended Reading
📝 Quote Highlights:“If we have to wait until everyone agrees on how to act in order to address climate change, we are not going to address climate change.” — Oliver Morton “People say the world is burning but refuse to even consider options that might stop it from burning. That’s a hard position to defend.” — Mark Lynas 🌐 About WePlanet:WePlanet is a citizen and science movement that challenges conventional thinking to defend evidence-based solutions to environmental challenges. Learn more at weplanet.org. 📥 Join the Conversation:💬 Got thoughts on geoengineering? Email us: podcast@weplanet.org📬 Sign up for updates: weplanet.org/podcast | |||
| Bad Idea #8 "We need nuclear weapons to stop nuclear war" with Alan Robock | 08 May 2025 | 01:01:39 | |
🔍 Episode Summary: In this urgent and wide-ranging conversation, Mark Lynas is joined by leading climate scientist and nuclear winter expert Alan Robock to confront one of the most dangerous myths of our time: that nuclear weapons keep us safe. Alan lays out why deterrence is a flawed and suicidal strategy, how even a "limited" nuclear war would trigger global famine and societal collapse, and why the existence of nuclear weapons means their eventual use is a matter of when, not if. They also discuss the atmospheric science of nuclear winter, parallels to the asteroid that killed the dinosaurs, the threats posed by solar geoengineering, and why total nuclear abolition is not only possible — but urgently necessary. This is a masterclass in existential risk — and why we ignore it at our peril.
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| Bad Idea #7 "We Can't co-exist with wolves" with Luigi Boitani | 01 May 2025 | 00:51:49 | |
🔍 Episode Summary: In this compelling conversation, Mark Lynas speaks with world-renowned conservation biologist Luigi Boitani to tackle one of the most polarizing debates in wildlife conservation: whether humans and wolves can truly coexist. Luigi, who has spent over five decades studying wolves across Europe and North America, explains why the return of the wolf is not an ecological anomaly — but a natural recovery. Together, they explore the myths that surround wolves, the emotional bonds humans have forged with them, and the hard compromises needed for real coexistence. From debunking the Yellowstone "miracle" story to examining the politics of wolf conservation across Europe, this episode goes far beyond fairy tales to face the real challenges — and opportunities — of living alongside large carnivores again. 🧠 Topics Discussed: 🐺 What really defines "wolf habitat" — and why wolves don't need wilderness 🌍 How wolves recolonized Europe without reintroductions ❤️ Why humans have a deep emotional connection to wolves — and always have 📉 Debunking the Yellowstone 'trophic cascade' myth 🔀 The true meaning of coexistence — and why compromise is essential 🚫 Why political myths about wolves are driving bad policy across Europe 🏞️ Why rewilding efforts in places like the UK are emotionally compelling — but complicated 🐑 Conflict with livestock: guarding dogs, electric fences, and the limits of compensation 🧬 The risks of wolf population fragmentation from border fences 👥 How science can inform, but not replace, political decisions 👨🏫 Guest Bio: Professor Luigi Boitani is Professor Emeritus of Conservation Biology at the University of Rome Sapienza and Chair of the Large Carnivore Initiative for Europe (IUCN SSC). He is one of the world's leading experts on wolf conservation, human-wildlife coexistence, and large carnivore management. His research has shaped European policy and global understanding of large predator recovery. 📚 Recommended Reading & Resources: Large Carnivore Initiative for Europe — IUCN Specialist Group Yellowstone Wolves — book referenced by Luigi Boitani IUCN Guidelines on Human-Wildlife Conflict and Coexistence 💬 Quote Highlights: “The best definition of wolf habitat is anywhere there's something to eat — and where you’re not shot.” — Luigi Boitani “Be honest: the real reason we want wolves back is because we love them, not because of ecosystem services.” — Luigi Boitani “Coexistence means compromise. Without it, we’re just dreaming.” — Luigi Boitani “Even today, most human cultures feel the charisma of the wolf — and build it into their myths and beliefs.” — Luigi Boitani “The Yellowstone story is beautiful, but even the scientists admit: we don’t really know what’s going on.” — Luigi Boitani 🌐 About WePlanet: WePlanet is a global citizen and science movement advancing bold, evidence-based solutions for climate, nature, and human development. Learn more at weplanet.org. 📥 Join the Conversation: 💬 Feedback or thoughts? Email: podcast@weplanet.org 📬 Subscribe for updates: weplanet.org/podcast 🐦 Follow us on Twitter/X: @WePlanetInt | |||
| Bad Idea #6 "We can still save the arctic" with Julienne Stroeve | 24 Apr 2025 | 01:04:20 | |
🔍 Episode Summary: What if the bad idea… is thinking we can still save the Arctic?In this sobering but illuminating conversation, Mark Lynas speaks with renowned polar climate scientist Julienne Stroeve to explore one of the most consequential but misunderstood climate tipping points: the melting of the Arctic. Together, they unpack the science behind sea ice loss, permafrost thaw, Greenland melt, and the feedback loops that could push the climate system toward runaway warming. Julienne, who has spent decades conducting fieldwork and analysing satellite data, explains why the idea that we can still "save" the Arctic is, sadly, a myth — and what that means for global sea level rise, extreme weather, and the fate of species like polar bears. From icebreaker expeditions to geoengineering schemes, this episode takes you to the frontlines of a rapidly disappearing world. 🧠 Topics Discussed:
👩🔬 Guest Bio: Dr. Julienne Stroeve is a polar climate scientist and professor currently affiliated with the University of Manitoba and University College London. Her work focuses on satellite remote sensing, Arctic sea ice, climate modeling, and the impacts of climate change on polar systems. She has participated in numerous field expeditions, including the landmark MOSAiC expedition, and is one of the world’s leading experts on Arctic cryosphere dynamics. 📚 Recommended Reading & Resources:
💬 Quote Highlights: “The Arctic is warming four times faster than the global average.” – Julienne Stroeve “The idea that we can still save the Arctic is a bad one. It’s already on a committed trajectory of decline.” — Julienne Stroeve “What happens in the Arctic doesn’t stay in the Arctic. It reshapes weather patterns across the globe.” — Julienne Stroeve “Greenland is now the largest contributor to sea level rise — and that contribution is accelerating.” — Julienne Stroeve “At 2.7 degrees of global warming, parts of the world will become uninhabitable.” — Julienne Stroeve “I used to be hopeful. But now? I think we’ll wait for disaster — and then act.” — Julienne Stroeve 🌐 About WePlanet: WePlanet is a global citizen and science movement advancing bold, evidence-based solutions for climate, nature, and human development. Learn more at weplanet.org. 📥 Join the Conversation: 💬 Feedback or thoughts? Email: podcast@weplanet.org 📬 Subscribe for updates: weplanet.org/podcast | |||
| Bad Idea #19 "greens are anti-science" with Tea Törmänen | 24 Jul 2025 | 00:57:24 | |
🔍 Episode Summary Can Greens support nuclear power? Finnish environmentalist and WePlaneteer Tea Törmänen joins Mark Lynas to dismantle Bad Idea #19: “greens are anti-science.” With clarity, courage, and a wealth of lived experience, Tea shares her journey from feeling like an outcast in the environmental movement to helping make the Finnish Green Party officially pro-nuclear. Drawing from decades of activism, Tea explains how anti-nuclear sentiment became part of the environmentalist identity — and how that is now changing. She unpacks the myths around waste, safety, cost, and tribal loyalties, and shows how climate goals demand pragmatic, science-based solutions — including nuclear energy. From wolves to fast reactors, American football to European energy policy, this episode explores what it takes to change minds and movements — and why it’s time for Greens everywhere to evolve. 🧠 Topics Discussed ● 🌱 How anti-nuclear views became “baked into” green identity ● 🧠 Tribalism, virtue, and the psychology behind environmental dogmas ● 🚧 Why Greens often oppose solutions more than problems ● 🗳️ How the Finnish Green Party became officially pro-nuclear ● ⚛️ Myths about nuclear waste and how Finland solved it ● ☢️ Radiation vs risk: what safety really looks like ● 🔁 Nuclear fuel recycling and “the waste of waste” ● 🧊 Why SMRs could decarbonize district heating ● 🌍 Building a global pro-nuclear environmental movement ● 🧬 From gene tech to clean heat — embracing science in climate action ● 💚 Finding your tribe when you don’t fit into one box 👩🏫 Guest Bio Tea Törmänen is a Finnish environmentalist, science advocate, and movement builder. She’s a former chair of WePlanet Finland and played a key role in shifting the Finnish Green Party toward a pro-nuclear and pro-GMO stance. With a background in animal cognition research and a fierce commitment to evidence-based activism, Tea combines a passion for nature with a pragmatic embrace of clean technologies. She’s also a former a Finnish national team American football player and a wolf behaviour researcher. 📚 Recommended Reading & Resources ● Prescription for the Planet – Tom Blees ● Not Beyond Redemption – Tea’s upcoming work (TBD) ● Apocalypse Never – Michael Shellenberger ● The God Species – Mark Lynas ● Finnish Green Party platform (updated pro-nuclear position) ● POSIVA – Finnish nuclear waste repository project ● Barakah Nuclear Power Plant (UAE case study) 💬 Quote Highlights “Being an environmentalist doesn't mean rejecting technology — it means embracing what works.” “Too much clean energy? That’s not a problem. That’s the solution.” “We solved nuclear waste in Finland. It was never a technical issue. It was political.” “You don't stop climate change by limiting options. You stop it by using all the best ones.” “I never fit in one tribe. Now I’ve found mine in WePlanet.” 🌐 About WePlanet WePlanet is a global citizen and science movement challenging bad ideas and championing evidence-based solutions for climate, nature, and human development. Learn more at weplanet.org. 📥 Join the Conversation 💬 Feedback or questions? Email: podcast@weplanet.org 📩 Subscribe to new episodes: weplanet.org/podcast 👁️ Follow us on Twitter/X: @weplanetint | |||
| Bad Idea #18 "we’re addicted to fossil fuels" with Maarten Boudry | 17 Jul 2025 | 01:06:01 | |
🔍 Episode Summary Are we addicted to fossil fuels and can we just go cold turkey? Philosopher of science Maarten Boudry joins Mark Lynas to tackle Bad Idea #18:: “we’re addicted to fossil fuels”. Drawing from his new book The Betrayal of the Enlightenment, Boudry offers a bold and clear-eyed critique of the dominant climate narrative. He argues that moralising fossil fuels as an "addiction" obscures both the complexity of the climate challenge and the role fossil fuels played in liberating billions from poverty, hunger, and hard labour. Fossil fuels have undeniably caused environmental harm. But they also powered modern hospitals, clean water systems, food security, and global development. Denying this legacy may feel righteous, but it risks sabotaging both climate progress and justice for the Global South. This episode explores the psychology of pessimism, the limits of degrowth, the ways today's climate discourse often betrays Enlightenment values like reason, science, and human flourishing, and whether we need a new progressive movement Whether you're a climate activist, a policy wonk, or simply curious about how to save the world without losing our minds, this episode is for you. 🧠 Topics Discussed ● 🛢️ Why calling fossil fuels “evil” is historically ignorant and morally lazy ● 🔥 Fossil fuels as a moral tragedy: the engine of progress and the cause of warming ● 💡 Climate change is a technical challenge, not a cosmic punishment ● 🌍 Green colonialism: how Western elites block energy access in the Global South ● ☢️ Why serious climate policy must include nuclear energy ● 🧠 The evolutionary roots of pessimism — and why alarmism sells ● 🚫 The flaws of degrowth and “planetary boundaries” fundamentalism ● 📚 Enlightenment values and how the modern Left betrayed them ● 🐾 Why real environmentalism means innovation ● 🧪 Why romanticising nature leads us away from real solutions 👩🏫 Guest Bio Maarten Boudry is a philosopher of science at Ghent University and author of several books and essays challenging irrational beliefs — from religion to climate catastrophism. His latest work, The Betrayal of the Enlightenment (currently available in Dutch), critiques how the modern Left has abandoned Enlightenment ideals of reason, science, and human progress, often replacing them with pessimism, guilt, and technophobia. 📚 Recommended Reading & Resources ● De Verraad van de Verlichting (Maarten Boudry) ● Enlightenment Now – Steven Pinker ● More from Less – Andrew McAfee ● The God Species – Mark Lynas ● Apocalypse Never – Michael Shellenberger ● We Are the Weather – Jonathan Safran Foer (for a contrasting perspective) ● Why We Disagree About Climate Change – Mike Hulme ● WePlanet’s “Just Stop Cooking” campaign 💬 Quote Highlights “Fossil fuels aren’t evil. They’re the reason we have modern hospitals, schools, and food security.” — Maarten Boudry “You don’t solve climate change by going backwards. You solve it by going forward, with better tech.” “Calling something evil ends the conversation. It doesn’t start a solution.” “If nuclear isn’t part of your climate plan, then your climate plan isn’t serious.” “We romanticise nature as if it were kind — but nature gave us famine, disease, and child mortality.” 🌐 About WePlanet WePlanet is a global citizen and science movement challenging bad ideas and championing evidence-based solutions for climate, nature, and human development. Learn more at weplanet.org. 📥 Join the Conversation 💬 Feedback or questions? Email: podcast@weplanet.org 📩 Subscribe to new episodes: weplanet.org/podcast 👁️ Follow us on Twitter/X: @weplanetint | |||
| Bad Idea #9 "Dimming the Sun?!" with Cynthia Scharf | 15 May 2025 | 01:05:24 | |
In this timely and far-reaching episode, Mark Lynas sits down with Cynthia Scharf — senior fellow at the Center for Future Generations and former UN climate advisor — to delve into one of the most contentious issues in climate policy: solar geoengineering. Cynthia explains what solar radiation modification (SRM) is, how it could theoretically cool the planet by mimicking volcanic eruptions, and why even discussing it remains taboo. She argues that ignoring SRM may pose greater risks than researching it — especially as global temperatures surge and climate impacts escalate. They discuss the science, the politics, the ethics, and the terrifying prospect of a lone actor dimming the sun without global consent. This is a deeply informed, emotionally honest conversation about a technology born of desperation — and the governance void we urgently need to address. 🧠 Topics Discussed: 🌞 What is SRM, and how would stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI) work?
⚠️ Termination shock: the catastrophic risk of stopping SRM suddenly 💸 The role of private actors and the risks of unregulated experimentation
Cynthia Scharf is a senior fellow at the Brussels-based Center for Future Generations and the former head of strategic communications on climate change in the office of UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. She previously worked with the Carnegie Climate Governance Initiative (C2G) to initiate global dialogue on the governance of solar geoengineering. Her expertise lies at the intersection of diplomacy, climate risk, and intergenerational ethics.
💬 Quote Highlights: “These are technologies born of desperation. And we’re entering desperate times.” — Cynthia Scharf “There is no law — no treaty, no mechanism — to stop a country from deploying SRM today.” — Cynthia Scharf “Solar geoengineering is not a solution. At best, it might be a supplement to reduce suffering in the short term.” — Cynthia Scharf “We should be doing publicly funded research, not leaving this to Silicon Valley billionaires or private companies.” — Cynthia Scharf “The governance vacuum is terrifying. Who decides the temperature of the planet? Based on what legitimacy?” — Cynthia Scharf 🌐 About WePlanet:WePlanet is an international environmental movement that champions science-based solutions for climate, nature, and prosperity. From clean energy to smart agriculture, we challenge bad ideas and promote better ones. Learn more at weplanet.org. 📥 Join the Conversation: 💬 Feedback? Thoughts? Email us: podcast@weplanet.org 📬 Subscribe to new episodes: weplanet.org/podcast 🐦 Follow us on Twitter/X/Bluesky: @weplanetint | |||
| Bad Idea #17 "rewilding VS the people" with Rebecca Wrigley | 10 Jul 2025 | 00:57:00 | |
🔍 Episode Summary Is rewilding just about wolves and wilderness, headset against farmers and rural communities, or something much more hopeful and human? In this episode of Saving the World from Bad Ideas, Mark Lynas is joined by Rebecca Wrigley, Chief Executive of Rewilding Britain, to unpack Bad Idea #17: “Rewilding VS the people.” Together, they challenge some of the biggest myths surrounding rewilding. From fears of people being kicked off land to the notion that it’s anti-farmer. They reveal what rewilding actually means: restoring natural processes at scale, with people and communities at the heart. They discuss how rewilding is about practical solutions and land management to meet the challenges of the 21st century — from marine zones to city parks, from beavers to glow worms. Whether you’re a farmer, policymaker, activist, or someone with a window box, this episode shows that rewilding isn’t about returning to the past — it’s about releasing the future. 🧠 Topics Discussed ● 🐺 The myth that rewilding is only about bringing back predators, and removing humans ● 🌱 What rewilding actually means — and why it’s for people too ● 🧑🌾 Rewilding and farming: from conflict to cooperation ● 💡 Why rewilding should be part of our national infrastructure strategy ● 🌊 The ecological and economic case for marine rewilding ● 🐻 Keystone species: beavers, lynx, deer, and the “beaver deceiver” ● 🌍 Rewilding Britain’s goal: 30% of land and sea for rewilding ● 🧭 How local rewilding networks are revitalising communities ● 🧬 Why rewilding is about future adaptation, not past restoration ● 🏡 How you can rewild your garden, park — or even your street 👩🏫 Guest Bio Rebecca Wrigley is Chief Executive and co-founder of Rewilding Britain, an NGO driving systems change for the large-scale restoration of ecosystems on land and sea. With a background in conservation and community development in Uganda, Mexico, and the Pacific, she’s helped pioneer rewilding in the UK for the last decade. Under her leadership, Rewilding Britain now supporters rewilding across about 180,000 hectares and campaigns for policies that normalise rewilding as a productive, people-powered approach to land and marine use. 📚 Recommended Reading & Resources ● Rewilding Britain ● Feral – George Monbiot ● “Wilding” (book & documentary) – Isabella Tree ● Ocean – BBC documentary on marine rewilding ● National Food Strategy (UK) ● Global Rewilding Alliance – globalrewilding.org ● Rewilding Europe – rewildingeurope.com ● Why Valley Wilding & Wild Ken Hill – community-based rewilding models ● Public Goods Subsidies in UK Agriculture Policy 💬 Quote Highlights “Rewilding is not about going back to the past — it's about releasing the future.” — Rebecca Wrigley “Every ecosystem needs balance. In the absence of wolves, sometimes that means human stalkers managing deer.” “We subsidise sheep farming in the uplands — but ask nothing of that land in return. Rewilding can do so much more.” “You can rewild your garden, your local park, your street verge. It’s not just for landowners — it’s for everyone.” “Natural process-led management should be a discipline in every agricultural college.” 🌐 About WePlanetWePlanet is a global citizen and science movement challenging bad ideas and championing evidence-based solutions for climate, nature, and human development. Learn more at weplanet.org. 📥 Join the Conversation 💬 Feedback or questions? Email: podcast@weplanet.org 📩 Subscribe to new episodes: weplanet.org/podcast 👁️ Follow us on Twitter/X: @weplanetint | |||
| Bad Idea #16 "let's ditch intensive farming" with Michael Grunwald | 03 Jul 2025 | 01:04:35 | |
🔍 Episode Summary: Is industrial agriculture the villain it's made out to be? In this episode of Saving the World from Bad Ideas, Mark Lynas sits down with award-winning journalist and author Michael Grunwald to explore Bad Idea #16: "We need to ditch intensive agriculture." Grunwald, whose latest book We Are Eating the Earth dives deep into the global land crisis, makes the provocative case that abandoning intensive agriculture in favour of romanticised low-yield farming could be catastrophic for both climate and biodiversity. They unpack the real trade-offs behind organic and regenerative farming, expose the hidden environmental costs of biofuels and biomass, and explain why yield and land-use efficiency must be at the heart of any serious green food policy. If you're passionate about climate, nature, or what ends up on your plate, this conversation will challenge your assumptions — and give you new tools for thinking about agriculture, food systems, and the future of the planet. 🧠 Topics Discussed: ● 🗺️ Why land, not just carbon, is the key environmental constraint of our time ● 🌽 Corn ethanol, biomass power and the case against biofuels ●🕵️How global institutions like the IPCC got food and land use wrong ● 🤔 The myth of regenerative agriculture as a climate solution ●🥩 Beef, land use and the real environmental cost of meat ● 🌾 Why high-yield agriculture is essential to save nature ● 🧬 Cultivated meat, GMOs and other high-tech food fixes ● 🤯 Sri Lanka's organic farming disaster: a cautionary tale ● 🌍 The moral case for better — not just different — agriculture 👨🏫 Guest Bio: Michael Grunwald is a long-time investigative journalist and bestselling author of The Swamp and The New New Deal. His new book, We Are Eating the Earth, tackles the global agricultural land crunch and the myths we tell ourselves about food, farming, and the environment. A former senior writer for Politico, Time, and The Washington Post, Grunwald lives in Miami and has received numerous awards for his reporting. 📚 Recommended Reading & Resources: 💬 Quote Highlights: "Every farm, even the most romantic organic one, is a kind of environmental crime scene." — Michael Grunwald "The idea that regenerative ag can reverse climate change is a nice story — but it's not backed by science or math." — Michael Grunwald "The goal isn't to make farming pretty. The goal is to make food with less land, so we can spare nature." — Michael Grunwald "If we don’t double yields again, we’re going to need a second planet." — Michael Grunwald 🌐 About WePlanet: WePlanet is a global citizen and science movement challenging bad ideas and championing evidence-based solutions for climate, nature, and human development. Learn more at weplanet.org. 📥 Join the Conversation: 💬 Feedback or questions? Email: podcast@weplanet.org 📩 Subscribe to new episodes: weplanet.org/podcast 👁️ Follow us on Twitter/X: @weplanetint | |||
| SPECIAL: Bad Idea #15 "Just Stop Cooking" with Patricia Nanteza | 26 Jun 2025 | 00:45:00 | |
SPECIAL: This episode dives into our new campaign, JUST STOP COOKING with WePlanet Africa lead, Patricia Nanteza. 🔍 Episode Summary: What happens when climate policies from the Global North collide with the lived reality of energy poverty in Africa? Mark Lynas is joined by Patricia Nanteza, WePlanet’s Africa Lead, to expose one of the most dangerous and overlooked injustices in climate policy today: the effective ban on clean cooking solutions in sub-Saharan Africa. The message being sent to millions of Africans is clear — just stop cooking. Together they unpack the story behind WePlanet’s new campaign and report, Just Stop Cooking, which reveals how blanket bans on fossil fuel finance, pushed by Global North governments and institutions like the World Bank, are blocking support for LPG. This fuel is one of the only practical clean cooking options available to millions of people right now. The consequences are devastating. Forests are being destroyed, indoor air pollution is killing women and children, and communities are being left with no safe alternatives. All of this is enforced through a climate double standard, backed by Western green NGOs that claim to speak for Africa without ever listening to it. If you believe climate justice means justice for everyone, this episode will challenge what you think you know — and show you why real solutions must come from the ground up.
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| Bad Idea #14 "increasing disaster costs show extreme weather is getting worse" with Roger Pielke Jr | 19 Jun 2025 | 01:10:13 | |
🔍 Episode Summary: Hurricanes. Floods. Fires. Tornadoes. Are extreme weather disasters getting worse because of climate change — or is that just the story we tell? In this provocative episode, Mark Lynas sits down with climate scientist and policy scholar Roger Pielke Jr., one of the most polarising voices in climate debates over the last 30 years. Roger explains why the costs of disasters are rising — but not primarily because extreme weather is increasing. Instead, it's us — where we build, how we build, and what we place in harm’s way. Together, they unpack why pointing this out has gotten Roger attacked, investigated, and effectively blacklisted in parts of the climate community. They discuss hurricanes, attribution studies, politicisation of science, the breakdown of trust in expertise, and why nuance is often unwelcome in highly charged public debates. This is a must-listen for anyone who cares about evidence-based climate science — and why getting the science right matters, even when it’s inconvenient. 🧠 Topics Discussed:
👨🏫 Guest Bio: Roger Pielke Jr. is a political scientist, climate policy expert, and Senior Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute. For three decades, he has published widely on science, risk, and policy, often challenging simplistic narratives on extreme weather and climate change. He is the author of The Honest Broker and writes extensively on his Substack, also titled The Honest Broker. 📚 Recommended Reading & Resources: 💬 Quote Highlights: “If you want to see the signal of climate change, don’t look at extreme events — look at temperature and precipitation. That’s where the evidence is.” — Roger Pielke Jr. “We’ve built more hotels on the beach. Of course the costs go up when storms hit. That’s exposure, not stronger hurricanes.” — Roger Pielke Jr. “When science becomes partisan, we put a target on our backs. The expert community needs support from everyone — right, left, and centre.” — Roger Pielke Jr. “Evidence-based fairness — not identity politics — is the only way to regulate transgender athletes in sport.” — Roger Pielke Jr. 🌐 About WePlanet: WePlanet is a global citizen and science movement challenging bad ideas and championing evidence-based solutions for climate, nature, and human development. Learn more at weplanet.org. 📥 Join the Conversation: 💬 Feedback or questions? Email: podcast@weplanet.org | |||
| Bad Idea #13 "The Energiewende" with Noah Rettberg | 12 Jun 2025 | 01:04:31 | |
🔍 Episode Summary: Energiewende — is Germany a shining example of how to lead the global energy transition, or a cautionary tale of how not to do it? In this unnerving episode, Mark Lynas is joined by German energy analyst and activist Noah Jakob Rettberg for a deep dive into one of Europe’s most consequential policy blunders: Germany’s nuclear shutdown. Noah explains how the Energiewende — once celebrated as a green transition — has resulted in skyrocketing electricity prices, energy insecurity, and creeping deindustrialization. He reveals how anti-nuclear ideology within Germany’s Green Party has led to the dismantling of 12.5 GW of clean energy capacity, just when Europe needs it most. They explore whether Germany’s nuclear plants can be restarted, what it would take politically, and why this is not just a fight about energy — but about the very future of liberal democracy in Europe. 🧠 Topics Discussed: 🇩🇪 The political origins of Germany’s Energiewende and anti-nuclear ideology 💶 The economic fallout: high prices, lost industry, and rising emissions 💡 Why Germany’s electricity consumption is falling — and why that’s not a good sign 🔋 Battery storage, hydrogen myths, and the brutal math of a “Dunkelflaute” 🪓 How decommissioning is erasing 12.5 GW of clean energy — and fast 🔧 The Radiant Energy restart plan: 9 reactors, €15B, 8 years 🧱 What it would take to reverse course legally and politically 🌍 Why this is Europe’s problem, not just Germany’s 🚨 How energy policy could undermine NATO, rearmament, and European stability 🧑🔬 Guest Bio: Noah Jakob Rettberg is a leading figure in Germany’s pro-nuclear movement and an advisor to Nuklearia. He is a contributor to the Radiant Energy Group’s report on restarting Germany’s nuclear fleet and a frequent commentator on European energy policy. 📚 Recommended Reading & Listening:
📝 Quote Highlights: “Every day that passes is vandalism of clean energy infrastructure.” — Mark Lynas “We don’t even have a tenth of a thousandth of the battery storage needed. And yet they believe we’ll run the grid this way.” — Noah Jakob Rettberg “Europe needs Germany. And a strong Germany needs power. This is a battle for liberal democracy.” — Noah Jakob Rettberg “You could restart nine reactors for less than what they’re spending on hydrogen-ready gas plants.” — Noah Jakob Rettberg 🌐 About WePlanet: WePlanet is a citizen and science movement that challenges conventional thinking to defend evidence-based solutions to environmental challenges. Learn more at weplanet.org. 📥 Join the Conversation: 💬 Got thoughts on Germany’s energy future? Email us: podcast@weplanet.org 📬 Sign up for updates: weplanet.org/podcast 📸 Follow us on Twitter: @weplanetint | |||
| Bad Idea #12 "There’s nothing down there" with Callum Roberts | 05 Jun 2025 | 01:03:17 | |
🔍 Episode Summary: What if the largest living space on Earth was being plundered before we even understood it? In this timely episode, Mark Lynas speaks with marine conservationist Callum Roberts, Professor at the University of Exeter and lead author of a new Nature commentary calling for full protection of the high seas. They challenge the pervasive (and dangerous) idea that the deep ocean is just a lifeless void — free for mining, overfishing, and exploitation. Callum explains why the high seas cover nearly half the planet’s surface and are a critical part of Earth’s life-support system: absorbing heat, producing oxygen, sequestering carbon, and hosting the largest migration on the planet. From deep-sea mining to human slavery in high-seas fisheries, this is a shocking exposé of the last, vast wilderness on Earth — and why leaving it alone might be the smartest thing we’ve ever done. 🧠 Topics Discussed:
👨🏫 Guest Bio:Callum Roberts is Professor of Marine Conservation at the University of Exeter and one of the world’s leading experts on the impact of fishing and human activity on the ocean. His books include The Unnatural History of the Sea and Reef Life, and he sits on the board of the Maldives Coral Institute. His latest work calls for a paradigm shift in how we govern the high seas — toward full ecological protection. 📚 Recommended Reading & Resources:
💬 Quote Highlights: “The high seas cover 43% of the planet — and yet remain largely unprotected, poorly governed, and misunderstood.” — Callum Roberts “Mining the deep sea is like strip-mining the last untouched rainforest on Earth — except it’s darker, colder, and more mysterious.” — Callum Roberts “Most of what we eat from the deep sea is only possible because we massively subsidize it — often more than the fish are worth.” — Callum Roberts “The ocean is Earth’s life support system — it gives us oxygen, absorbs our heat, and locks away our carbon. We mess with it at our peril.” — Mark Lynas 🌐 About WePlanet: WePlanet is a global science-and-citizen movement promoting evidence-based solutions to protect climate, nature, and prosperity. Learn more at weplanet.org. 📥 Join the Conversation:Send feedback or questions: podcast@weplanet.org 📬 Subscribe to new episodes: weplanet.org/podcast 🐦 Follow us on Twitter/X: @weplanetint | |||
| Bad Idea #11 "No such thing as planetary boundaries" with Johan Rockström | 29 May 2025 | 01:02:48 | |
🔍 Episode Summary: What if Earth came with a dashboard warning light — and it just started flashing red? In this pivotal episode, Mark Lynas sits down with Johan Rockström, one of the world’s leading Earth system scientists and co-architect of the planetary boundaries framework — the closest thing we have to that planetary dashboard. Together, they retrace the origin story of one of the most important scientific ideas of our time: that there are nine critical systems holding Earth in a stable, livable state… and that we’ve already pushed several of them past their limits. From tipping points to nitrogen overshoot, and from nuclear war scenarios to political pushback, Johan offers a bracing but hopeful overview of where we stand — and what it will take to keep our only home within its safe operating space. This isn't just an academic discussion. It's a user's manual for the future of civilization.🧠 Topics Discussed:
👨🏫 Guest Bio: Johan Rockström is Director of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research and Professor of Earth System Science at the University of Potsdam. He is a globally recognised expert in resilience, tipping points, and sustainability, and co-originated the planetary boundaries framework — a cornerstone of Earth system science used by scientists, policymakers, and businesses around the world.📚 Recommended Reading & Resources:
💬 Quote Highlights: “If you breach a boundary, you enter the danger zone. Cross too far, and you risk irreversible Earth system change.” — Johan Rockström “We don’t set boundaries based on what humans need — we set them based on what the planet can tolerate.” — Johan Rockström “The real tipping point is when Earth stops being our best friend — and starts amplifying the damage we’ve done.” — Johan Rockström “We’ve made no progress. Zero. Halfway through the decisive decade, the curves are still heading in the wrong direction.” — Johan Rockström “This isn’t about constraint vs growth — it’s about whether the playing field still exists for us to grow on.” — Mark Lynas🌐 About WePlanet: WePlanet is a global citizen and science movement promoting bold, science-based solutions for climate, nature, and human prosperity. We challenge bad ideas and elevate the best ones. Learn more at weplanet.org. 📥 Join the Conversation:💬 Feedback or questions? Email: podcast@weplanet.org 📬 Subscribe for future episodes updates: weplanet.org/podcast 🐦 Follow us on Twitter/X: @weplanetint | |||
| Bad Idea #10 "Everyone hates nuclear" with Rebecca Tuhus-Dubrow | 22 May 2025 | 00:57:05 | |
🔍 Episode Summary: In this revealing and deeply reflective conversation, Mark Lynas sits down with journalist and essayist Rebecca Tuhus-Dubrow, whose new book Atomic Dreams dives into the unexpected rise of climate-conscious pro-nuclear activism. They explore the cultural and political history of nuclear power in the United States, the generational shift in attitudes, and the motley crew of environmentalists, influencers, policy wonks and iconoclasts who make up the new pro-nuclear movement. From Diablo Canyon to Pandora’s Promise, from James Hansen to Mothers for Nuclear, this episode is a journey through energy tribalism, climate urgency, and the evolving story of what it means to be an environmentalist. 🧠 Topics Discussed:
👩🏫 Guest Bio: Rebecca Tuhus-Dubrow's work has appeared in The Nation, Dissent, The New York Times, The New Yorker, and many others. Her new book, Atomic Dreams: The New Nuclear Evangelists and the Fight for the Future of Energy (out April 8, 2025), explores the people, politics, and passions behind the return of the nuclear energy debate in the age of climate crisis. 📚 Recommended Reading & Resources:
💬 Quote Highlights: “If we trust Hansen on the science of climate change, maybe we should listen when he says nuclear needs to be part of the solution.” — Rebecca Tuhus-Dubrow “The people in this movement aren’t all engineers — some of them are hippies, mothers, influencers, even ex-models.” — Rebecca Tuhus-Dubrow “I came to see the pro-nuclear world as a tribe of its own, with factions, language, and competing visions.” — Rebecca Tuhus-Dubrow “You can’t just get off fossil fuels without causing massive human suffering. That’s the reality that changed my mind.” — Mark Lynas “The strange thing is, nuclear power hasn’t yet become a culture war issue in the US — and that might be its saving grace.” — Mark Lynas 🌐 About WePlanet: WePlanet is a global citizen and science movement promoting bold, science-based solutions for climate, nature, and human prosperity. We challenge bad ideas and elevate the best ones. Learn more at weplanet.org. 📥 Join the Conversation: 💬 Feedback or questions? Email: podcast@weplanet.org 📬 Subscribe for future episodes: weplanet.org/podcast 🐦 Follow us on Twitter/X: @weplanetint | |||
| Bookend episode: looking back at season 1 of Saving The World From Bad Ideas | 31 Jul 2025 | 00:36:30 | |
In this special season finale of Saving the World from Bad Ideas, host Mark Lynas flips the script by inviting producer Rob on mic for the first time. Together, they look back on an exhilarating first season — what worked, what surprised them, what they learned, and where the podcast might go next. From nuclear debates and rewilding wolves to Just Stop Cooking and geoengineering taboos, Mark and Rob unpack the biggest ideas (and the most controversial guests). They also explore a meta bad idea: the notion that “bad ideas = bad people”, and why it’s crucial to challenge ideas without descending into tribalism or cancel culture. Expect behind-the-scenes stories, reflections on feedback, philosophical rabbit holes, and a few laugh-out-loud moments. Plus: what’s coming in Season Two — AI, decarbonising flying, oceans, and existential risks. 🧠 Topics Discussed ● 🎙️ Favourite guests & episodes: George Monbiot, Hannah Ritchie,, Luigi Boitani, and more ● ⚛️ Nuclear myths, green tribalism & the rise of a global pro-nuclear movement ● 🌍 Climate justice & cooking with charcoal — insights from Uganda ● 🐺 Wolves, rewilding, and de-romanticising nature ● 💥 Nuclear winter, biofuels, and the politics of bad ideas ● 🌡️ Planetary boundaries vs. ecomodernist optimism ● ✈️ Future topics: AI, sustainable aviation, oceans & rethinking activism ● 🧪 Why progress means embracing technology and complexity ● 📚 Blurbs, books, and podcast crossovers: Pinker, Grunwald, Richie, Robock & more 👩🏫 Featured Guests (Season Highlights)
📚 Recommended Listening & Reading 💬 Quote Highlights 🌐 About WePlanet 📥 Join the Conversation | |||