• The Climate Insurance Crisis: Why Insurers Are Abandoning California, Florida, and Beyond - Episode 121
    Apr 27 2026

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    In this episode, Paul explains why catastrophic weather events are becoming uninsurable: broken risk models, a stressed reinsurance market, rising rebuild costs from inflation and tariffs, and the dangerous concentration of homes and commercial buildings in climate-vulnerable areas. He also explores what cascading climate financial risk looks like in practice.

    From the insurance death spiral to the wealth destruction of uninsured home loss, this episode connects climate change directly to household finances, mortgage markets, and economic inequality.

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    7 mins
  • Is Additionality Dead? Rethinking Corporate Renewable Energy in the Age of AI - Episode 120
    Apr 15 2026

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    Additionality has been one of the cornerstones of corporate renewable energy procurement — but is it still relevant? In this episode, Paul breaks down the concept of additionality in clean energy purchasing, explains how Renewable Energy Certificates (RECs) work, and makes the case that surging demand from AI data centers and electrification has fundamentally broken the additionality framework.

    As hyperscalers race to lock up power purchase agreements and new gas plants fill the grid pipeline, does a corporation's renewable energy commitment actually bring new clean energy online — or are they just first to the table? Paul explores why additionality made sense in the early days of renewable energy adoption and why today's energy transition has made it an outdated measure.


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    8 mins
  • How Best to Pursue Energy Independence - Episode 119
    Mar 24 2026

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    As the Iran War enters its fourth week, US consumers are feeling the pinch at the gas pump. Oil prices have shot past $100 per barrel and there are increasing calls to increase domestic supply capacity of energy in order to create more energy independence for the US.

    In this episode, Paul unpacks what that might mean - or whether investing behind clean and renewable technologies may be a far more effective solution toward national energy resiliency.

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    8 mins
  • Repairing our Relationship with Mother Nature (Tim Christophersen - Salesforce) - Episode 118
    Feb 16 2026

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    Paul sits with Tim Christophersen, VP of Climate Action at Salesforce and previously Head of Nature for Climate Branch at UNEP. Tim's recent book, Generation Restoration - How to Fix Our Relationship Crisis with Mother Nature, digs deep into the broken bond that we have with our natural world. Paul and Tim discuss not only how we got here in the first place, but what the public and private sector needs to do to help us replenish the natural infrastructure of this planet.

    For more research:

    Generation Restoration - How to Fix Our Relationship Crisis with Mother Nature - Tim Christophersen

    Future Forests Alliance - World Economic Forum


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    9 mins
  • Reflections on New York Climate Week - Episode 117
    Oct 13 2025

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    How has the conversation changed, now that we're a few months into a new federal administration that has not proven very receptive to climate action? Paul attended New York Climate Week in late September with anxiety around how corporations and organizations were approaching the changing tenor of climate direction. His takeaway? Maybe things aren't as bad as they appear.

    In this episode, Paul dissects the key takeaways from NYCW and looks forward to COP 30 in Brazil. Climate advocacy is changing - but what does that mean for your individual company?

    For more research:

    Highlights: New York Climate Week 2025

    Microsoft's Environmental Sustainability Report 2025

    "Walmart not meeting 2025, 2030 emissions goals, but remains committed to sustainability: report" - ESG Dive


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    7 mins
  • Trump's One Big Beautiful Bill and Its Impact on Clean Energy - Episode 116
    Jul 14 2025

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    As Trump's signature economic legislation made it's way over the finish line two weeks ago, experts lined up to warn us of the impact the bill would have on clean energy, utility bills and even our competitiveness in the emerging AI landscape.

    In today's episode, Paul provides a high level analysis of the bill's primary components affecting these areas and what the impact may actually be.

    For more research:

    One Big Beautiful Bill - White House

    "Assessing Impacts Of “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” On U.S. Energy Costs, Jobs, Health, Emissions" - Energy Innovation Simulator

    "What Passage of the “One Big Beautiful Bill” Means for US Energy and the Economy" - The Rhodium Group


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    8 mins
  • The Proposed GHG Scope 2 Rule Changes - Episode 115
    Jun 30 2025

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    The Greenhouse Gas Protocol is now in the decision phase on how to revise their widely accepted Scope 2 emissions accounting measures. The current set of accounting rules were first established in 2015 - but a lot has changed in the interim. Revisiting these rules to modernize them and promote true, physical decarbonization is important.

    But there are a couple of proposed changes that have generated a LOT of controversy. In this episode, Paul unpacks the impact of hourly matching and deliverability and discusses how these accounting rules may slow down corporate renewable procurement immeasurably.

    For more research:

    "The world's most used carbon accounting rule is about to get a major overhaul" - WoodMackenzie

    "Limitations of Hourly Matching Claims for Scope 2 Reporting" - Greenhouse Gas Management Institute

    "Electricity System and Market Impacts of Time-based Attribute Trading and 24/7 Carbon-free Electricity Procurement" - Qingyu Xi and Jesse Jenkins, Princeton University


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    7 mins
  • How the Massachusetts Community Climate Bank is Supporting Climate Action While Also Addressing Housing Affordability (Maggie Super Church - Mass Community Climate Bank) - Episode 114
    Jun 23 2025

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    States have shifted to the forefront of climate leadership here in the US. And one of the tools that many of these States are employing to make it easier and less risky for individuals and companies to invest behind energy savings has been the Green Bank, a financial institution designed to overcome some of the barriers to financing climate action.

    Massachusetts set up their Green Bank in a novel way, though. They embedded the institution inside of MassHousing and gave it the dual mandate to address not only climate change, but the challenge of affordable housing as well.

    So, how are they doing? Paul sits with Maggie Super Church of the Massachusetts Community Climate Bank to understand more about how the entity is delivering on its promise to save energy and costs for Massachusetts homeowners.

    For more research:

    Maggie Super Church

    Massachusetts Community Climate Bank

    All In Energy

    Cape Light Compact

    Center for ECO Technology

    MA Energy Savings Finder

    Abode Energy Management

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    7 mins