Episodes

  • How Lab Design Shapes Energy Use for Decades
    Feb 2 2026
    If you work in a lab, one small habit can save a surprising amount of energy: Shut the sash.Architect Jacob Werner explains why airflow, safety, and infrastructure choices are some of the biggest (hidden) climate levers.This episode is part of Any Job Can Be a Climate Job — a podcast exploring how people bring climate impact into everyday work, even in roles that aren’t labeled “climate.”👉 Subscribe and leave a comment — I’d love to hear what resonates.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━Research labs are where some of the most important work in the world happens: curing disease, developing renewable energy, and building the future of science.They’re also some of the most energy- and resource-intensive buildings we have. Not because people are careless, but because labs are designed to optimize for safety, airflow, and precision.In this episode, I talk with Jacob Werner, an architect at Ellenzweig who designs science labs for colleges and universities, about why labs function more like machines than offices — and why that makes design such a powerful climate lever.Jacob explains how decisions about airflow, temperature control, filtration, and safety systems quietly shape energy use for decades — and how good design can make the sustainable choice the easiest choice, without relying on constant heroics from the people inside the building.Listen for:Why labs use so much energy (and what “stable experimental conditions” requires)What designers can “bake in” so sustainable behavior is easier (fume hood sashes, recycling access, efficient HVAC)How sustainability sticks best when it’s treated as good design, not an add-onPractical lab actions that matter: Shut the Sash, lights, and equipment power-down normsWhy climate action often starts far upstream, in systems most of us never seeAbout JacobJacob Werner is an architect with Ellenzweig in Boston. Ellenzweig designs science labs primarily for colleges and universities. Jacob also co-chairs the AIA 2030 Commitment, a program supporting architects in tracking and reporting progress toward lower-carbon buildings.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━American Institute of Architects (AIA) 2030 CommitmentInternational Institute for Sustainable Laboratories (I2SL) Resource HubI2SL – Smart Labs Toolkit (practical guidance)⁠Ellenzweig – Jacob / team page⁠Sustainability at Harvard LabsJacob on LinkedIn━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━00:00 — Cold open: reduce → electrify → renewables00:00:32 — Intro: why lab design matters00:01:53 — Who Jacob is + what he designs (Ellenzweig, AIA 2030)00:02:35 — What is AIA / AIA 2030?00:03:00 — How Jacob got into architecture and lab design00:06:25 — How you start designing a lab (vision + flexibility)00:07:54 — Why labs are so energy- and resource-intensive00:10:29 — What designers can build in vs what occupants control00:11:19 — Six Sigma + workflow convenience (waste + behavior design)00:11:37 — Persuading clients: make sustainability “part of the package”00:13:33 — Biggest lesson: climate action isn’t all-or-nothing00:15:00 — Project story: designing for ocean/climate research (URI)00:17:29 — Renovation + reuse + embodied carbon00:19:09 — Low-hanging fruit for lab occupants (Shut the Sash, lights, equipment)00:20:54 — Where to learn more (AIA + I2SL resources)00:21:28 — What green labs may look like in 10–20 years00:25:20 — Closing thoughts: everyone can contribute00:26:23 — Reflection: the biggest wins come from changing systemsDisclaimer: This episode is for informational purposes only. Views are the guest’s own, and nothing here should be taken as professional advice.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━🎧 Listen to the podcastYouTubeApple PodcastsSubstack (behind-the-scenes + updates)━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━✨ Work with me━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━🎙 Any Job Can Be a Climate Job is produced and hosted by Louisa Henry Edited by ⁠Alex Leff⁠Original music by ⁠Run Riot Run Logo design by Cassidy Frost
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    27 mins
  • Turning Green Labs From Idea Into Practice
    Jan 20 2026

    What does it really take to make sustainability stick?

    Pam Greenley shares how she brought the Green Labs concept back to MIT, and adapted it to a culture driven by metrics, incentives, and competition. By designing contests around resource savings and innovation, she helped turn an idea into everyday practice without forcing behavior change.

    This episode is for anyone working inside complex, high-performance organizations who wants to make sustainability normal, practical, and durable.


    🎙 Any Job Can Be a Climate Job is produced and hosted by ⁠Louisa Henry⁠. Edited by ⁠Alex Leff⁠. Original music by ⁠Run Riot Run⁠. Logo design by ⁠Cassidy Frost⁠.


    Newsletter: https://anyjobcanbeaclimatejob.substack.com/

    Coaching: https://www.kidoki.com/

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    31 mins
  • Process Improvement as a Climate Tool
    Jan 6 2026

    Teddy Salgado, a Senior Manager of Continuous Improvement at Boston Children's Hospital, loved the idea of using his education to help combat climate change. He had the opportunity to help a brewery in Thailand cut waste with the help of the process improvement methodology, Six Sigma.

    Disappointed in the lack of manufacturing opportunities to take the same climate action in Boston, he joined Boston Children’s Hospital to help with process improvement. Soon after, he saw an opportunity to connect those efficiencies with the company’s sustainability strategy. Teddy became a Six Sigma coach, helping employees across the company spot opportunities, and implement change.

    In this interview, Teddy talks through case studies, and gives us tools to help spot waste and take action in our own workplaces. You’ll leave with tips, ideas, and proof that the triple bottom line can (and does) exist: People, Planet, Profit.


    About Teddy: Teddy Salgado is a Senior Manager of Continuous Improvement at Boston Children's Hospital. He received his undergraduate degree from the University of Pennsylvania and his Master of Business Administration from the Duke University Fuqua School of Business. In addition to healthcare, Teddy has professional experience in education and sustainability. His current focus is partnering with the operating rooms on improvement initiatives, and he serves on the leadership committee for the hospital's sustainability focused employee affinity group. In his personal time, Teddy enjoys playing ultimate frisbee, biking, and hiking with his wife and retired racing greyhound. Mentions:

    • Lean Six Sigma
    • “8 wastes” DOWNTIME framework - Defects, Overproduction, Waiting, Non-utilized talent, Transportation, Inventory, Motion, Extra process
    • 5S Methodology - Sort, Set in order, Shine, Standardize, Sustain
    • Visual management - using pictures instead of text
    • Triple Bottom Line - People, Planet, Profit
    • Boston Children’s Hospital - Sustainability


    Credits:🎙 Any Job Can Be a Climate Job is produced and hosted by Louisa Henry. Edited by Alex Leff. Original music by Run Riot Run. Logo design by Cassidy Frost. Subscribe for more episodes on how real people are driving climate impact through their everyday work. Found wherever you get your podcasts. anyjobcanbeaclimatejob.com

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    28 mins
  • The Hidden Climate Hotspot in Surgery: Anesthesia Gases
    Dec 24 2025

    For many inhaled anesthetic gases, very little is metabolized. So a lot of what’s delivered ends up getting exhausted/vented out (for staff safety), and not processed. They go up and out into the atmosphere.


    In the third episode of the Greener Hospitals, Healthier Futures series, I sat down with Dr. Prabhakar Devavaram, Director of Environmental Sustainability in the Division of Peri-operative Anesthesia and a pediatric anesthesiologist at Boston Children’s Hospital. He’s also the site principal investigator for Project SPRUCE, a multicenter trial to reduce anesthetic greenhouse gas emissions.


    Prabhakar’s cared about this topic for some time, and shares not only how Boston Children’s Hospital is going about reducing their anesthetic climate impact, but also dives into what these gases are, the various types, and how they’re used.


    Did you know that nitrous oxide (laughing gas) can linger in the atmosphere for ~114 years! And very little is metabolized at all. Nitrous oxide is especially relevant in pediatrics, where it’s often used to help kids feel comfortable during mask induction, before adding other agents.


    Prabhakar teaches us how anesthesiologists can reduce their climate impact by using non-inhaled alternatives when possible, low-flow options, checking for leaks, and how to make smarter decisions in patient care. He also shares a surprising systems fix: a big chunk of nitrous emissions can happen before it ever reaches the patient. It’s lost through central piping and leaks. Switching to point-of-use cylinders (and tightening the system) can dramatically reduce waste.


    In this episode you’ll learn:

    • Understand the main anesthetic gases and their climate impact

    • Learn practical levers (alternatives, low-flow, leak reduction)

    • See how hospitals operationalize change (systems & workflow)

    • Discover how data and feedback loops shift clinician behavior


    Mentions:

    • Project SPRUCE

    • Joint Commission “Reducing the Environmental Impact of Anesthetic Gases” + Seattle Children’s Project SPRUCE reference

    • ASA Environmental Sustainability: “Environmental Impact of Inhaled Anesthetics” (clear, clinician-friendly guidance)

    • Association of Anaesthetists “Guide to green anaesthesia”

    • Practice Greenhealth anesthetic gas how-to toolkit (PDF)

    • Health Sector Climate Pledge (waste anesthetic gases explicitly called out)

    • Ether Dome background (Mass General Museum page)

    Credits:🎙 Any Job Can Be a Climate Job is produced and hosted by Louisa Henry. Edited by Alex Leff. Original music by Run Riot Run. Logo design by Cassidy Frost. Image attribution: vecteezy.com.Subscribe for more episodes on how real people are driving climate impact through their everyday work. Found here, Substack, or wherever you get your podcasts.
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    25 mins
  • Greener Hospitals: The Hidden Footprint of Surgery
    Dec 5 2025

    Hospital operating rooms are an impressive dance of teamwork and timing. At Boston Children's Hospital, when the operating team wraps up, the cleaning team enters, each with specific assignments to clean and prep the room for the next surgery. On top of that, the team is always on the lookout for ways to reduce the environmental impact.

    We start today's episode with a conversation with Kristine Rodman, mother of a patient at Boston Children's Hospital. It was incredibly emotional to sit down and hear her story. It was a stark reminder of the stakes behind each operational decision.

    Julian Inferrera is the Operating Room Flow Manager at Boston Children’s Hospital, where he integrates sustainability into one of the most resource-intensive areas of healthcare. By focusing on waste streams, partnering with colleagues, and using data to reshape daily workflows, he works to demonstrate that sustainability initiatives can be integrated into clinical practice.

    In this episode, you'll learn:

    • The invisible systems, decisions, and people behind each surgery
    • Why ORs are one of the most resource-intensive spaces in the hospital
    • An inside look into the operating room
    • What OR waste streams look like, and his team's ideas to reduce them
    • How Julian and his team take inspiration from NASCAR pit crews
    • Why bottom's-up movements can be more effective than top-down mandates
    • Why noticing, asking questions, and starting small matters


    🎧 Listen now and start spotting climate wins in your own workplace.

    Credits:🎙 Any Job Can Be a Climate Job is produced and hosted by Louisa Henry. Edited by Alex Leff. Original music by Run Riot Run. Logo design by Cassidy Frost. Image attribution: vecteezy.com.

    Mentions: Surgery waste art exhibit

    👉 Subscribe for more episodes on how real people are driving climate impact through their everyday work.

    Found here, Substack, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts.

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    47 mins
  • The Freezer That Sparked a Climate Movement at Boston’s Children’s Hospital
    Oct 14 2025

    Hospital labs aren’t where most people look for climate solutions. But Chuck Blanchette did — and found more than anyone expected.

    As Manager of Research Facilities at Boston Children’s Hospital, Chuck oversees 200+ labs and more than 800 freezers. When he joined the Freezer Challenge, it sparked a transformation: turning routine lab maintenance into a nationally recognized climate program that’s slashed energy use, reduced plastic waste, and changed how researchers work.


    In this episode, you’ll hear:

    • How Chuck helped Boston Children’s become a model for sustainable labs

    • What most people get wrong about climate work in hospitals

    • How storytelling and competition sparked behavior change across 50+ labs

    • Why fume hoods, defrost kits, and cheese farms all matter more than you think


    🎧 Listen now and start spotting climate wins in your own workplace — no matter your job title.


    Guest Bio:

    Chuck Blanchette is the Manager of Research Facilities at Boston Children’s Hospital. He leads their award-winning Green Labs Program, co-chairs the E.A.R.T.H. sustainability group, and was honored as the Phil Wirdzek Emerging Leader in Healthcare. Under his leadership, BCH has become a national leader in lab energy reduction, reuse systems, and sustainable research operations.

    He’s also a dad of two — and everything he builds is grounded in a deep commitment to leaving behind a livable planet for the next generation.

    📬 Connect with ChuckLinkedIn


    Photos + Substack Story:Check out freezer photos, defrost kits, and behind-the-scenes images from this episode on Substack.


    Referenced Organizations & Resources:

    • My Green Lab - A nonprofit promoting sustainability in science, and the origin of tools like the Freezer Challenge and SWOOP stickers.

    • International Institute for Sustainable Laboratories (I2SL) - A nonprofit organization dedicated to sustainable lab design, operation, and use. Chuck is actively involved with I2SL and was recognized by them as an emerging leader.

    • The Freezer Challenge - Hosted by My Green Lab and I2SL. An international competition that encourages labs to optimize cold storage for energy efficiency.

    • AstraZeneca SWOOP Case Study - “Creating a culture of sustainability across labs”


    Credits: 🎙 Any Job Can Be a Climate Job is produced and hosted by Louisa Henry. Original music by Run Riot Run. Logo design by Cassidy Frost.


    Subscribe for more episodes on how real people are driving climate impact through their everyday work.

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    38 mins
  • From Executive Assistant to Sustainability Leader: Marissa Pitchford on Building Influence from Within
    Jul 31 2025

    Marissa Pitchford didn’t plan to lead climate strategy. She started behind the scenes as an executive assistant at a global cybersecurity company — managing calendars, planning events, and supporting leadership. But she began to notice: her company could be doing more.

    In this episode, Marissa shares how she turned that quiet awareness into a full-scale sustainability and corporate responsibility program at ESET North America. We talk about how to gain influence without a title, how to embed sustainability into everyday decisions, and what it really takes to lead change from the inside out.

    Whether you're in operations, admin, HR, or tech — this is an inspiring reminder that any job can be a climate job.


    ⏱️ Chapter Markers:

    00:00 Introduction and Background

    01:15 ESET: Company Overview and Role Evolution

    02:06 Sustainability Journey Begins

    05:31 Transforming Philanthropy into Corporate Social Responsibility

    07:33 Doing a Materiality Assessment

    08:35 Building a Strategic Framework for Sustainability

    11:28 Aligning to Company Values

    13:10 Navigating Change & Resistance

    15:10 Building the Case for Sustainability

    18:41 Landfill Neutral Guarantee

    21:04 Empowering Sustainable Choices in Business

    23:07 Starting Sustainable Actions in the Workplace

    25:23 The Role of ESG in Corporate Strategy

    26:54 Navigating Diversity and Inclusion in Changing Times

    30:58 Measuring Impact and Progress in Sustainability

    33:19 Strategies for Achieving Net Zero by 2050

    37:47 Innovative Approaches to Vendor and Travel Management

    41:15 Personal Growth and the Journey to Sustainability

    45:00 Wrap Up & Thank You


    🔗 Resources Mentioned:

    • Learn more about ESET’s sustainability efforts: eset.com/about/environment

    • Boston College Center for Corporate Citizenship: ccc.bc.edu

    • How to do your own double materiality assessment: opinionx.co/blog

    • Zero Waste Chef — Anne-Marie Bonneau

    • Connect with Marissa on LinkedIn

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    46 mins
  • With a Flip of a Switch
    Jul 16 2025

    How one animated video helped Springfield pass clean-energy policy—and what it teaches us about moving people and systems.

    • Guests: Kathryn Taccone (Open Pixel Studios) and Samantha Hamilton (Public Health Institute of Western Mass).
    • Host: Louisa Henry


    If you'd like to support the show, please follow, like, and share.

    Reach out and join the conversation on Subtack.


    Links mentioned in the show:

    • LiveWell Springfield
    • Community Choice Energy
    • Public Health Institute of Western MA
    • OpenPixel Studios
    • Check out the Animation Video on YouTube
    • Local News article about City Council Approval
    • Looking to learn from people who have made the switch into climate-specific careers? Check out Climate Swings Podcast.


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    29 mins