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Sustainable Ambassador Podcast


Latest episode

  • Sustainability with Indigenous Knowledge and Leadership

    42:23|
    In this episode of the Sustainable Ambassador Podcast, we speak with Prabindra Shakya about Rethinking Sustainable Development with Indigenous Leadership — and why climate progress, energy transitions, and the Sustainable Development Goals must move beyond top-down technical models. Prabindra, a human rights and Indigenous rights defender with nearly two decades of experience, argues that sustainable development will only succeed when Indigenous leadership and traditional knowledge are placed at the center of decision-making.Drawing from his work in Nepal and across Asia, Prabindra explains how many modern development projects — from hydropower and mining to carbon markets — continue patterns of dispossession under the banner of progress. While the impacts are often local, the drivers are global: international finance, supply chains, and legal systems that fail to recognize Indigenous peoples as rights-holders.We explore what real balance looks like in the energy transition, why “green” solutions can still cause harm if communities are excluded, and how Indigenous-led energy and development models offer practical alternatives. The conversation also dives into the realities of advocacy — pushing multilateral banks, leveraging international standards, and securing small but meaningful wins for communities.If we are serious about climate action and equitable development, we must rethink sustainable development — and ensure Indigenous leadership shapes the path forward.

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  • Indigenous Rights Must Be Core to Climate Solutions

    43:55|
    In this episode of the Sustainable Ambassador Podcast, we speak with Eriel Deranger of Indigenous Climate Action about why protecting Indigenous rights and lands must be central to any real climate solution.Through this discussion we unpack the tension between urgency and intention in climate action, why “inclusion” often becomes assimilation, and what it takes to build climate solutions that are equitable, durable, and grounded in real community power.This conversation is a call to look back in order to move forward—so we don’t rebuild the future using the same systems that created today’s crises.
  • Climate Change, Heat and Brain Health

    42:37|
  • How Climate Change and Pollution Impact the Heart

    45:26|
    In this episode of the Sustainable Ambassador Podcast, I sit down with Professor Mark Miller of the University of Edinburgh to explore how climate change and pollution impact the heart — and what really happens inside the body when we’re exposed to environmental stress. From air pollution to rising temperatures, we unpack how a warming world is placing measurable strain on the cardiovascular system.For decades, we’ve known polluted air damages the lungs. But Mark’s research shows something deeper and more systemic: even short-term exposure to diesel exhaust can stiffen blood vessels, elevate blood pressure, and disrupt heart rhythms — effects that resemble years of accumulated cardiovascular stress. As climate change increases heatwaves and alters pollution patterns, these stressors don’t act alone. They interact.
  • Power of Benchmarks to Accelerate Corporate Action

    33:38|
    In this episode, we speak with Gerbrand Haverkamp, Executive Director and co-founder of the World Benchmarking Alliance (WBA), about what benchmarking is for—and of the power benchmarks have to accelerate corporate action. Gerbrand explains why WBA was founded in the wake of the SDGs, how WBA translates evolving standards into comparable measures of performance, and how change happens through a mix of learning, pressure, and ultimately norm-setting. The conversation closes with a grounded message to sustainability leaders: focus on what actually reduces emissions, restores nature, and improves lives—because that’s what will stand the test of time.
  • Making Climate Progress in the Midwest

    48:11|
    In this episode, we speak with Heather Navarro about her work at the Midwest Climate Collaboration to support a spectrum of stakeholders making climate progress in the Midwest.Through our discussion, we explore why the Midwest may be one of the most consequential regions in the world for climate progress — and why the most effective work happening there often doesn’t look like “climate action” at all.Along the way, you’ll hear practical lessons from the intersection of advocacy, governance, and implementation — including why solutions break down without the people who have to live with them, enforce them, and maintain them.
  • What If Sustainability Isn't Enough?

    37:33|
    In this episode of the Sustainable Ambassador Podcast, we dive into the concept of degrowth with John Mulrow, founder of the Degrowth Institute and adjunct professor at Purdue University, as a way to answer the question "What if sustainability isn't enough?" A question many sustainability professionals have begin to reflect on as they seek to better understand true impact of their work—and question whether efficiency gains and carbon reductions are enough— at the same time the topic of degrowth is emerging as a conversation about what the wider goals should be.John unpacks what degrowth really means—beyond the buzzword—and why it's essential for achieving ecological sustainability and social justice. We explore the shortcomings of traditional sustainability frameworks, the role of economic savings in fueling further consumption, and how professionals and organizations can begin to challenge the growth paradigm in their own work. With thoughtful insights into equity, historical responsibility, and systems thinking, this episode pushes us to reimagine prosperity in a world of limits.