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5,001 - 15,000
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On the show
Recent episodes
Why the cobalt we need for our electric cars is costing lives in Africa
Apr 30, 2026
32m 59s
Uncovering Italy's multi-million euro black market in climate-harming refrigerants
Apr 10, 2026
22m 33s
Why do the world’s whales still need saving from commercial hunting?
Feb 18, 2026
25m 53s
Understanding the impacts of nitrous oxide and why it matters for the climate
Dec 3, 2025
23m 07s
Tackling the methane challenge: Why it matters and what we can do
Nov 26, 2025
28m 44s
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| Date | Episode | Description | Length | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4/30/26 | Why the cobalt we need for our electric cars is costing lives in Africa | Recent findings from an investigation by our colleagues at EIA US reveal a shocking truth about cobalt production in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Cobalt is an essential element in the manufacture of batteries for electric vehicles in the Global North – but its production in DRC has left communities grappling with severe respiratory issues linked to the pollution from a new processing facility. In this episode, EIA US Africa Programme Campaigner Luke Allen joins EIA UK Senior Press & Communications Officer Paul Newman to discuss the findings of the investigation, documented in the report Toxic Transition. | 32m 59s | ||||||
| 4/10/26 | Uncovering Italy's multi-million euro black market in climate-harming refrigerants | Climate-damaging refrigerant gases such as hydrofluorocarbons – more commonly called HFCs – are being phased out, but this has created an opportunity for widescale illegal trade that criminals have been quick to exploit. This chemical black market is worth hundreds of millions of euros a year in lost profits to legitimate suppliers and our investigators found that refrigerants entering Italy via organised criminal networks were penetrating major supply chains, including manufacturing, supermarkets and the state railway. In this episode, EIA Senior Climate Campaigner Fin Walravens joins Senior Press & Communications Officer Paul Newman to discuss the findings of our latest undercover investigations, documented in the new report Fakes, Fraud and F-gases. | 22m 33s | ||||||
| 2/18/26 | Why do the world’s whales still need saving from commercial hunting? | Why do the world’s whales still need saving from commercial hunting? The International Whaling Commission effectively banned commercial whaling from 1986 and yet the world’s amazing and environmentally essential whales are still being hunted for their flesh and blubber. EIA has joined forces with several partners to launch a new global petition calling on the last three whaling nations to join the 21st century and to stop the slaughter for good. In this episode, EIA Senior Ocean Advisor Clare Perry talks with Senior Press and Communications Officer Paul Newman about the history of whaling, the countries that defy the ban to keep on hunting and the new petition we’ve launched with partners to press for a complete end to the appalling and unnecessary practice. You can make your voice heard by signing the petition at https://endcommercialwhaling.org/– and do please share it with family and friends. | 25m 53s | ||||||
| 12/3/25 | Understanding the impacts of nitrous oxide and why it matters for the climate | In recent years, nitrous oxide has gained attention as a significant environmental threat, yet many people remain unaware of its implications for the climate, the integrity of the Earth’s protective ozone layer and for human health. While nitrogen is essential for life, excessive reactive nitrogen results in substantial pollution issues … In this episode, Climate Campaigner Tom Nickson talks with Senior Press & Communications Officer Paul Newman about EIA’s nitrous oxide campaign and unpacks some of the complexities surrounding the gas and its negative effects. | 23m 07s | ||||||
| 11/26/25 | Tackling the methane challenge: Why it matters and what we can do | Methane is widely regarded as the second most important greenhouse gas the world needs to address in the fight against runaway climate change. Tonne per tonne, it’s 82.5 times more potent than carbon dioxide over a 20-year period and is responsible for a third of the warming that has occurred so far. In this episode, EIA Climate Campaigner Jack Corscadden and special guest Christophe McGlade, an energy expert with the Climate Crisis Advisory Group, discuss the impacts of methane and what’s being done to tackle the problem with Senior Press and Communications Officer Paul Newman. | 28m 44s | ||||||
| 11/12/25 | Green Crime: What drives the criminals devastating our wildlife and environment? | Green Crime author Dr Julia Shaw, a criminal psychologist, writer and TV and audio presenter, talks with EIA about her book, which features a number of major case studies, including EIA’s 2017 investigation into and exposure of the notorious Shuidong wildlife trafficking syndicate. | 36m 36s | ||||||
| 11/3/25 | How well are major retailers doing in the switch to climate-friendly cooling? | Our Climate campaigners have been directly engaging with the retail sector since 2009 to make it aware of the serious impacts of using climate-harming refrigeration while simultaneously sharing information about the alternative systems available. | 26m 25s | ||||||
| 10/29/25 | Climates of fear: Five eco-themed chillers to watch for the Halloween season | Fantastical cinema has long been a place where audiences can confront their darker fears in a safe environment, albeit often dressed up in the guise of shambling monsters and unknown alien threats to keep them at arm’s length. In this episode, we’re taking a look at five unsettling films with environmental themes – just in time for Halloween! Join EIA Senior Technical Services Manager Chris Buckler and Senior Press and Communications Officer Paul Newman as they share their thoughts after viewing The Last Winter (2006), The Bay (2012), Silent Running (1972), Prophecy (1979) and Soylent Green (1973). | 43m 45s | ||||||
| 9/16/25 | Despite commendable efforts, Vietnam remains a hub for illegal wildlife trade | Our latest report, A Pivotal Player – Vietnam’s ongoing fight against the illegal wildlife trade, concludes that, although the country has made significant inroads, it still faces significant challenges. In this episode, the report’s main authors, EIA UK Senior Wildlife Campaigner Linh Nguyen and EIA US Senior Wildlife Policy Analyst Taylor Tench, discuss the latest findings and talk about what more Vietnam and other countries need to do to tackle wildlife crime with Senior Press & Communications Officer Paul Newman. | 15m 07s | ||||||
| 8/27/25 | After the collapse of Global Plastic Treaty talks, where do we go from here? | The final round of talks to hammer out the detail of a Global Plastics Treaty opened in Geneva in early August – and almost two weeks later collapsed with no agreement at all, due in large part to the blocking tactics employed by a handful of petrostates and a multitude of lobbyists working to safeguard corporate fossil fuel interests. To discuss what went wrong in Geneva and what the way forward for a plastics treaty might look like now, in this episode EIA Ocean Campaign Lead Chris Dixon talks with Senior Press & Communications Officer Paul Newman. | 30m 32s | ||||||
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| 7/28/25 | Science in the crosshairs of industry lobbyists as Global Plastic Treaty talks go down to the wire | The final round of talks in pursuit of a Global Plastics Treaty is due to get under way in Geneva shortly and there's everything still to play for. But as ambitious countries and civil society organisations such as EIA pursue a robust agreement to meaningfully tackle the crisis, corporate fossil fuel interests seek instead to discredit the science and push for a diluted Treaty which will allow them to continue business as usual. To discuss what’s at stake and what we might expect from the talks, Senior Press & Communications Officer Paul Newman talks with EIA Ocean Campaign Lead Chris Dixon and special guest Bethanie Carney Almroth, Professor of Ecotoxicology at Sweden’s University of Gothenburg and a part of the Scientists Coalition for an Effective Plastics Treaty. | 33m 56s | ||||||
| 5/9/25 | The grim toll of fisheries bycatch on whales, dolphins and porpoises in European waters | Tens of thousands of dolphins, porpoises and whales are killed each year in European waters due to being bycaught in fishing gear – and some populations are coming perilously close to extinction. To discuss the findings of her new report Catch of the Day, EIA Senior Ocean Campaigner joins Senior Press & Communications Officer Paul Newman. | 23m 14s | ||||||
| 3/17/25 | Taking a look inside the murky world of tiger farming and its role in illegal wildlife trade | With approximately only 5,500 wild tigers left in the world, this iconic species remains under threat from a variety of factors, particular illegal wildlife trade. The illegal trade in tigers and their parts and derivatives continues to be fuelled by facilities holding tigers in captivity, especially in China. One survey estimate more than 6,000 individual tigers being held in China’s ‘tiger farms’ but more recently the country claimed that number had fallen by more than 3,300, begging the question as to where they’ve gone … In this episode, EIA Asian Big Cats Campaign Lead Debbie Banks and Legal & Policy Specialist Avinash Basker chat with Senior Press & Communications Officer Paul Newman about the current state of tiger farming and the threats the practice represents. | 27m 25s | ||||||
| 2/4/25 | Busting the myths spread by Big Chemical to keep climate-wrecking refrigerants in play | Climate-damaging F-gases are synthetic substances widely used in refrigeration, air-conditioning and elsewhere. Hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) are the most common and are so harmful that they are to be phased down under the Montreal Protocol and phased out altogether in the EU. However, the chemical industry is pushing to replace them with a new generation of lucrative products which, although easier on global warming, also come with their own environmental and health concerns … In this episode, EIA Climate Campaigner Adam Aucock, the author of our new briefing Refrigerant Myth Busting, debunks at some of the misinformation spread by Big Chemical to support its own harmful products and sow distrust over the viability of alternative natural refrigerants. | 33m 18s | ||||||
| 1/10/25 | As UN talks fail to deliver a Global Plastics Treaty, what went wrong in Busan and what’s next? | What was expected to be the fifth and final session of the UN’s Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee met in South Korea last month, but ultimately it failed to agree a Global Plastics Treaty. Instead of cause for celebration, our campaigners came away from the talks concerned that the process had been hijacked by vested financial interests. In this episode, EIA Ocean Campaign Leader Christina Dixon and Ocean Campaigner Jacob Kean-Hammerson join Senior Press & Communications Officer Paul Newman to talk about what went wrong in Busan and contemplate what may happen next. | 39m 10s | ||||||
| 11/20/24 | INC-5 - Will we get a viable Global Plastics Treaty or will compromise water it down? | The fifth round of talks in pursuit of a legally binding Global Plastics Treaty kicks off in Busan, South Korea shortly — but will we emerge with an agreement capable of tackling the world’s plastic crisis or will vested interests compromise the final vision. In this episode, EIA Ocean Campaign Leader Christina Dixon and Ocean Campaigner Jacob Kean-Hammerson join Senior Press & Communications Officer Paul Newman for an update on the progress so far and a look ahead to the challenges remaining for negotiators in Busan. | 36m 45s | ||||||
| 11/18/24 | EIA at 40 – ‘EIA helped change the narrative around organised criminality and environmental crime’ | In the countdown to EIA’s 40th anniversary in September, as well as sharing films and stories from our archive, we’ve also recorded a short series of new podcasts with some of the longest serving campaigners to get an insight into how the organisation has evolved over four decades. In this episode, EIA’s Senior Press and Communications Officer Paul Newman talks with Debbie Banks, the leader of EIA UK’s Tigers and Wildlife Crime campaign, about her experiences with EIA over the years and the challenges to come.Image (c) Elliott Neep / www.elliotneep.com | 37m 34s | ||||||
| 6/21/24 | EIA at 40 – 'You've got to worry about being accused of espionage or something more serious' | EIA UK Campaigns Director Julian Newman talks about his early days in the organisation and looks at the challenges that lie ahead in investigation environmental crime. | 36m 20s | ||||||
| 5/17/24 | EIA at 40 – ‘You can take on the biggest, whether it's the oil industry or illegal logging’ | In the countdown to EIA’s 40th anniversary later this year, as well as sharing films and stories from our archive, we’ve also recorded a short series of new podcasts with some of the longest serving campaigners to get an insight into how the organisation has evolved over four decades. In this episode, EIA’s Senior Press and Communications Officer Paul Newman talks with EIA US Executive Director Alexander von Bismarck about the changes he’s seen in the organisation and the challenges it faces in the future. | 22m 53s | ||||||
| 4/15/24 | With the clock ticking, can we agree a Global Plastics Treaty by the end of 2024? | Progress to date and what to expect when the fourth session of the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee – INC-4 for short – opens in Canada later this month. | 39m 47s | ||||||
| 3/28/24 | Will Mexico’s crackdown on illegal fishing give vaquita porpoises a fighting chance? | With only an estimated 10 individuals left, the vaquita porpoise is the world’s most endangered marine mammal, pushed to the edge of extinction by illegal fishing for the dried swim bladders of totoaba fish which are in high demand in Asia. But despite the species’ alarmingly low numbers, recent action in their range by Mexico’s Navy appears to give them a fighting chance – now we need consumer countries to take meaningful action to curtail the illegal trade that’s killing them. In this episode, EIA Senior Press and Communications Officer Paul Newman is joined by Senior Ocean Campaigner Sarah Dolman and special guest Lorenzo Rojas-Bracho, an internationally recognised authority on vaquitas. | 40m 40s | ||||||
| 3/28/24 | EIA at 40 – ‘I've been threatened by senior government officials, shouted at and screamed at’ | In the countdown to EIA’s 40th anniversary later this year, as well as sharing films and stories from our archive, we’ve also recorded a short series of new podcasts with some of the longest serving campaigners to get an insight into how the organisation has evolved over four decades. In this episode, EIA’s Senior Press and Communications Officer Paul Newman talks with EIA UK Executive Director Mary Rice about the highs and lows she’s experience and about the challenges to come. | 34m 14s | ||||||
| 1/19/24 | Oppression, sanctions and blood teak, hallmarks of Myanmar’s coup on its third anniversary | EIA Senior Press and Communications Officer Paul Newman is joined by Forests Campaigner Kate Klikis to talk about the ongoing impacts of the coup and efforts to stop the military junta from cashing in on Myanmar’s natural commodities. | 20m 15s | ||||||
| 12/19/23 | Drilling down into the detail of eco crime prosecutions on our open access Crime Tracker | More than two years ago, EIA unveiled our Environmental Crime Tracker, an open access online tool to help analyse and better understand wildlife and forest crime around the world. Recently, we expanded its capabilities even further with a new dashboard to help assess the prosecutions of environmental crimes. In this episode, Data Manager Royce To and Data Analyst Shaliza Malik from EIA’s Intelligence and Investigations team talk with Senior Press and Communications Officer Paul Newman about the Tracker and the value of its new prosecutions feature. | 27m 06s | ||||||
| 12/8/23 | Is the palm oil in so many of our products still a problem and will it ever be truly sustainable? | Palm oil is cheap, versatile and used widely in countess thousands of products and in biofuels, but its production has been linked to human rights abuses, illegal logging and deforestation, causing considerable harm to indigenous peoples and the habitats of endangered orangutans. In this episode, EIA Forests Campaigner Siobhan Pearce talks to Senior Press and Communications Officer Paul Newman about the various problems associated with palm oil and what is being done to address them. | 33m 16s | ||||||
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