31 episodes

It’s hard to imagine a bright future in the face of the climate crisis. This new podcast, from Hugo Award winning podcaster and author Emma Newman,  will take you on a journey from despair to the most radiant, radical hope. Made in partnership with Friends of the Earth, Imagining Tomorrow shows how we can create a future that is good for people and for nature, based on innovations in technology and community action that are already having a positive impact. Join Emma as she pieces together the roadmap to utopia by interviewing amazing inventors, communities and award-winning science fiction authors. We can’t build a better future until we can imagine it, so let’s imagine it together.

Imagining Tomorrow Emma Newman with Friends of the Earth

    • Science
    • 3.7 • 42 Ratings

It’s hard to imagine a bright future in the face of the climate crisis. This new podcast, from Hugo Award winning podcaster and author Emma Newman,  will take you on a journey from despair to the most radiant, radical hope. Made in partnership with Friends of the Earth, Imagining Tomorrow shows how we can create a future that is good for people and for nature, based on innovations in technology and community action that are already having a positive impact. Join Emma as she pieces together the roadmap to utopia by interviewing amazing inventors, communities and award-winning science fiction authors. We can’t build a better future until we can imagine it, so let’s imagine it together.

    Monitoring, Rescuing, Cleansing

    Monitoring, Rescuing, Cleansing

    One day, a man in Salford Quays awoke to find a duck nesting on his balcony, 150 ft above the water. Once born, her ducklings had to be lowered down in a bucket. With over 20 acres of water at her disposal, why did that mother duck decide to nest there? And why did thousands of fish in the same location die overnight?
    Inspired by talking to the duckling rescuer, the inventor of cutting-edge water monitoring equipment, and an award-winning science fiction author, Emma Newman imagines a future where communities help to keep waterways across the UK clean enough to swim in thanks to a nifty monitoring system.

    In episode 5 we heard from:
    Steve Stuttard, duckling rescuer (watch Steve's rescues on YouTube)Glynn Cotton from WATR, the environmental monitoring systemRachelle Atalla, author of "The Pharmacist" and "Dirty Animals"Additional resources related to the episode
    Join a local action group
    Support the show

    • 44 min
    Financing, Fundraising, Moving

    Financing, Fundraising, Moving

    When the average person can’t control how the funds in their own bank accounts or pensions are used by institutions, is there any way to stop terrible things being done with our money?

    Inspired by conversations with the leader of a grassroots movement empowering women to take control of their finances, a community farm in Wales raising funds to keep the farm in the service of the local people it feeds, and an award-winning science fiction writer, Emma Newman imagines a world in which fossil fuel companies are starved of funds and ethical companies are able to thrive thanks to sensible, sustainable community investment.

    Who we hear from in this episode:

    Money Movers: https://www.wearemoneymovers.com/
    Tydden Teg Farm: https://tyddynteg.com/
    Adrian Tchaikovsky: https://adriantchaikovsky.com/
    My own website: www.enewman.co.uk 
    Resources:
    Friends of the Earth article about the World Bank:
    https://foe.org/blog/finance-to-fossil-fuels-world-bank-imf/
    The Tydden Teg Community Share offer document: https://drive.google.com/file/d/14eQEnnrDs7Bws7eFP8-IAme_gtoOZlFu/view
    Report by Urgewald on World Bank Trade Finance: https://www.urgewald.org/sites/default/files/media-files/Urgewald%20-%20Trade%20Finance%20Paper%20-0923.pdf
    Friends of the Earth article about UK Pension Funds:
    https://friendsoftheearth.uk/climate/revealed-ps16bn-local-government-pensions-fuelling-climate-crisis
     
    Tydden Teg’s Crowdfunder page - now finished, but you can see how they did it: https://www.crowdfunder.co.uk/p/tyddyn-teg-community-shares
    foe.uk/community-groups
    Co-operatives UK - Helped Tydden Teg to do their community share offer: https://www.uk.coop/
    The origin of Money Movers: https://experiments.friendsoftheearth.uk/projects/money-movers-get-your-friends-or-colleagues-together-take-climate-action-your-finances
    Climate Town video on banks financing fossil fuel projects: https://youtu.be/NJ7W6HFHPYs
     
    Support the show

    • 1 hr 1 min
    Warming, Decarbonising, Celebrating

    Warming, Decarbonising, Celebrating

    Across the UK there are thousands of faith buildings playing important roles in their communities. Churches, mosques, gurdwaras, all host gatherings for worship and for community activities such as playgroups, choirs, support groups and many more. Recently, many have been serving as warm banks, providing a space for people struggling to heat their homes in the energy crisis. How can these buildings, often huge and sometimes hundreds of years old, afford to provide these critical spaces in times of energy price hikes and still meet net-zero goals? Inspired by talking to an interfaith group in Birmingham, an innovative infra-red heating company in Bristol and an NYT bestselling science-fiction author, Emma Newman imagines a future in which community groups redesign the function of former shopping malls to create third spaces that repair the fabric of society.
    Who we hear from in this episode: 
    Footsteps: https://footstepsbcf.org.uk/
    Herschel Infrared: https://www.herschel-infrared.co.uk/heating-heritage-buildings/churches/
    Una McCormack: https://unamccormack.co.uk/
    My own website: www.enewman.co.uk 
    https://www.open.ac.uk/blogs/design/faith-buildings-and-local-communities/ - Interesting post about working with Bow Church to expand community activities
    http://www.empoweringdesign.net/ - all about the research project looking at community engagement in the use of faith buildings
     https://www.futurelearn.com/courses/enabling-community-based-leadership-in-design-sustainable-development-of-historic-faith-buildings/1  - An Open University course designed to help people to consult with communities on the use of faith buildings
     A video about the Halo heater, in which the diagram about bubbles of heat mentioned in the episode can be seen: https://youtu.be/eqnZF2uYMz4
    Support the show

    • 52 min
    Growing, Feeding, Nurturing

    Growing, Feeding, Nurturing

    Over the past couple of years, extreme weather events, the energy crisis and Brexit have put a visible strain on the UK’s food supply chain and increased prices for the consumer.
    What if we increased the amount of food that we grow in cities, and thus increased biodiversity and reduced food miles?
    Inspired by talking to a community gardens group in Reading, a horticultural engineer who has co-founded a vertical farm in London and an award-winning author and screenwriter, Emma Newman imagines a future in which communities grow so much food together on their doorstep that the UK no longer needs to import fresh fruit and veg...

    Resources

    In episode 2 we heard from:
    Reading Food for Families Harvest London Temi Oh Reading International Solidarity Centre Presenter Emma Newman The quote from Safia about her experience of growing food at Aisha Mosque garden was taken from this video and used with the kind permission of Andrea Berardi from COBRA Collective.


    Get inspired by existing community gardening projects
    Postcode Gardener scheme (by Friends of the Earth and The Co-operative Bank)Incredible Edible movement (which Reading Food for Families is joining). Check out their campaign to establish a Right to Grow Community food-growing initiatives highlighted by the COBRA Collective (PDF)Support the show

    • 54 min
    Heating, Cooling, Empowering

    Heating, Cooling, Empowering

    Most homes in the UK are still heated by burning fossil fuels. Struggling households are faced with unnecessarily high bills and cold winters, or bearing the financial burden of replacing old-fashioned central heating.
    So is there a better way to heat and cool our buildings, accelerate decarbonisation and reduce fuel poverty?

    Inspired by talking to a Welsh community, a scientist and award-winning author Anne Charnock, Emma Newman imagines a future in which ex-industrial towns can be regenerated, thanks to the intriguing idea of flooding mines...

    In episode 1, we hear from:
    Green SCIES (Centre of Excellence in Smart Local Energy Systems)
    Cym Arian Renewable Energy (CARE)
    Author Anne Charnock
    Presenter Emma Newman 
    For inspiration and guidance on starting your own community energy project, visit the websites listed below:
    Welsh Government Energy Service
    Community Energy Wales
    Regen - Local and community energy support
    Centre For Sustainable Energy 
    Additional resources mentioned in the episode:
    Friends of the Earth's guide to heat pumps and other eco-friendly heating
    The Ogwen Valley social enterprise group (video)
    Support the show

    • 50 min
    Imagining Tomorrow- Trailer

    Imagining Tomorrow- Trailer

    Coming soon, a new podcast, Imagining Tomorrow shows how we can create a future that is good for people and for nature, based on innovations in technology and community action that are already having a positive impact. 

    Join Emma Newman as she pieces together the roadmap to utopia by interviewing amazing inventors, communities and award-winning science fiction authors. 

    We can’t build a better future until we can imagine it, so let’s imagine it together.


    Support the show

    • 4 min

Customer Reviews

3.7 out of 5
42 Ratings

42 Ratings

***sciguy*** ,

The planet is fine

It is our environment that is in jeopardy. Otherwise, great podcast!

viola-ist ,

Useful information

I started listening to this podcast because I like Emma Newman’s other podcasts. I wasn’t sure what to expect but was pleasantly surprised to find it is listenable and useful for triggering thoughts of what I can do to help nudge the larger forces of society towards more environmentally sound behaviors.

Smokeydadog ,

Too Many “Um’s”

I wanted to like this podcast. I listened to the green jobs episode and it was FULL of “um’s” to the point that I couldn’t focus on what the people were saying. It was incredibly repetitive and honestly seemed like something a person in high school would put out while interviewing their young friends. Neither the interviewers nor the interviewees were eloquent in the slightest.

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