After 40 years of reporting on the world's most pressing ecological crises, you might expect Fred Pearce to be a cynic. Instead, he’s one of our greatest advocates for hope.

If you follow the news about the environment, it’s easy to feel a sense of impending doom. We hear about accelerating extinctions, collapsing water cycles, and climate tipping points. But my guest today, environmental journalist Fred Pearce, says that if you look at the "ground-truth"—the stories of nature and people he has encountered—there is a surprising, even radical, case for hope. His work has taken him to more than eighty countries, from the logging concessions of Borneo to the radioactive exclusion zones of Chernobyl. He is the environment consultant for New Scientist and a regular contributor to The Guardian.

In his latest work, Despite It All: A Handbook for Climate Hopefuls, he challenges the prevailing narrative of environmental collapse. He argues that the "population bomb" is being defused, that we are approaching "peak stuff" in developed nations, and that nature possesses a staggering capacity for resilience that we often ignore. He says that a "Good Anthropocene" is not only possible but is already beginning to take shape through a combination of ancient wisdom and modern technical fixes. We’ll talk today about his life as a journalist and why pessimism may be the greatest enemy of progress.

(0:00) The Radical Case for Climate Optimism

(2:46) Traveling the World to Find Environmental Resilience

(5:08) Fixing the Anthropocene and Escaping Despondency

(10:22) Indigenous Wisdom and Local Stewardship

(15:28) Rewilding and Trusting Nature's Adaptability

(21:10) The Renewable Energy Transition in China and Beyond

(23:56) Peak Stuff and Redesigning the Cities of the Future

(34:01) Defending Democracy and Environmental Protestors

(36:12) Drinking Radioactive Vodka in Chernobyl's Exclusion Zone

(41:29) When the Rivers Run Dry and Water Scarcity

(50:37) Why the Population Bomb is Defusing

(55:36) The Origins of an Environmental Journalist

(1:03:15) The Future of Journalism in the Age of AI

(1:13:27) Generational Hope and the Next Industrial Revolution

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