Episoder

  • In this episode, we welcome Simon Dawes, a driving force behind the Environment Agency's push towards sustainability, with over two decades of experience in the environmental sector.

    Currently, Simon is the Head of Sustainable Business Strategy, where he led the development and integration of a Net Zero delivery plan for a complex £1.3bn organisation.


    He also spearheaded the creation of an expansive Carbon Literacy training program for 11,000 staff, fostering a culture of innovation and sustainability at every level.



    Simon is a key player in the UK's journey to Net Zero, representing the Environment Agency on task forces and acting as a Sustainability Ambassador.



    Beyond his sustainability role, Simon is driven by a zest for adventure and challenge. A keen snowboarder and supporter of protecting our winters. His passion has led him to conquer the towering summits of Europe's Mt. Blanc and Africa's Kilimanjaro, alongside testing his endurance in triathlons at the Olympic distance.



    Simon's story is one of passion, leadership, and a relentless pursuit of a better future for all.



    We explore:

    🌱 Simon’s vision for the future of the UK


    🌱 The role of a regulator and how to be inclusive and progressive


    🌱 How to accelerate change through collaboration in the construction sector


    🌱 The business reasons to embracing the circular economy


    🌱 That the circular economy and net zero are intrinsically interlinked



    🌱 Water, rivers, pollution and Climate adaptation



    🌱 …and the projects Simon is working on as part of the UK environment agency



    Listen to the end to hear about Simon's campaigning passion with Protect Our Winters and the role sports can play in creating a better world for all.

    You can read the action takeaways from this episode, comment, co-create future episodes and connect with fellow change makers in the FuturePlanet community of action, visit https://www.futureplanet.love to sign in or sign up.

    Let's get into it.



    Where shall we go next, what questions shall we ask? To co-create the podcast with us, connect with fellow change makers in the FuturePlanet community of action, visit www.futureplanet.love to sign in or sign up.

  • In this episode, we welcome Andres Roberts, Founding Partner for the Bio-Leadership Project. A place where a new story of leadership is growing, working with the rules of life: cycles, connection, regeneration, reciprocity and love.


    The vision for the Bio-Leadership Project is to help a global ecosystem of people to grow this new story all over the world.


    Five kinds of Bio-Leadership stories are redefining human progress. The work is about helping these stories connect up and grow.

    🌱 New forms of purpose and progress connected to nature.

    🌱 New organisational forms that work like nature.

    🌱 New ways of working as ecosystems, inspired by nature.

    🌱 New, regenerative models of organisation and society.

    🌱 New cultures that reconnect to nature and the web of life.

    Andres, Ella and Javi believe that to grow new forms of leadership, we need to grow new forms of knowledge.

    And to navigate complex and urgent times, we need to cultivate human capacities for resilience, connection, adaptability, systemic awareness, and care for things greater than ourselves.

    Bio-Leadership is about working with nature to grow these qualities as individuals, communities, businesses and society.

    This is a rich and emotive conversation. Listen to the end to hear an exploration of nature and a desire to rekindle that worldview of nature's our home as well.

    Let’s get into this.


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    Where shall we go next, what questions shall we ask? To co-create the podcast with us, connect with fellow change makers in the FuturePlanet community of action, visit www.futureplanet.love to sign in or sign up.

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  • In this episode, we welcome Vibhati Bhatia, the founder of South Asians for Sustainability and managing consultant for social sustainability at Energise.


    She is also the co-partner of Race Report UK-- part of Students Organising for Sustainability (SOS)-- and advisory board for Catalyse Change, which focuses on helping 18 to 25 females or non-binary people getting into sustainability.


    This is a heart opening adventure through inequality, injustice, and the inspiring story of how a pioneering pro activist is intentionally doing something about it.

    Together we explore:

    🌱 How a family experience of the Punjab floods deepened her empathy and emboldened her to act with greater intention and intensity


    🌱 The community of South Asians for Sustainability which Vibhati founded


    🌱 The transformation we need to see in diversity and inclusion, climate adaptation, and the loss and damage fund

    And so much more…


    Listen to the end to hear ideas on how we can co-create a more empathetic and connected approach to how we transform our organisations, our roles in them and the communities and projects that we support.



    You can read the action takeaways from this episode, comment, co-create future episodes and connect with fellow change makers in the FuturePlanet community of action, visit www.futureplanet.love to sign in or sign up.

    Lets get into it.



    Where shall we go next, what questions shall we ask? To co-create the podcast with us, connect with fellow change makers in the FuturePlanet community of action, visit www.futureplanet.love to sign in or sign up.

  • In this episode of the Future Planet Podcast, we adventure with Hermione Taylor, the visionary founder and CEO of Do Nation. Hermione is an early pioneer in promoting sustainable actions and living.

    Her journey began in 2009 with an inspiring cycling trip from London to Morocco, a challenge not just for her but for those around her. Instead of seeking financial support, Hermione urged her friends and family to commit to sustainable actions.

    What started as a personal challenge quickly transformed into a global movement.


    Under Hermione's leadership, Do Nation has collaborated with over 500 organizations in 100 countries. Nearly 60,000 individuals have made pledges, collectively saving an astounding 16,500 tonnes of CO2 annually.


    This achievement is equivalent to offsetting over 42,500 flights from London to Morocco, a testament to the power of collective action. And no, that doesn’t mean that we can now take those winter holidays without careful thought about our personal carbon budget.

    In this episode you will hear:

    🌱 Hermione's pioneering journey to empower everyday actions

    🌱 How COP and CSRD are creating urgency and driving change

    🌱 Collaboration, when it works, where its edges are and the opportunities it creates



    We also explore how the movement has changed. And how with more people joining and creating solutions, which is wonderful, that also creates a need to evolve.

    Listen to the end to hear us explore:

    • the very real challenge of money, finance and allocation of resources to supporting the people and solving the challenges we face

    • a curious link to how our approach could be different if we adopted the successes of a pilot project that helped people into work




    Where shall we go next, what questions shall we ask? To co-create the podcast with us, connect with fellow change makers in the FuturePlanet community of action, visit www.futureplanet.love to sign in or sign up.

  • Brad Vanstone is the Founder of Willicroft, a plant‑based cheese producer making planet‑proof cheese for dairy cheese lovers. Inspired by Brad’s family's dairy farming roots dating back to 1957, Willicroft was re‑imagined as a plant‑based cheese company in Amsterdam in 2018.

    This is a journey of an inspiring story of passion, tenacity and commitment to doing the right thing.


    In this episode, we hear the story of how Brad:

    🌱 Grew up in his Grandparents' dairy farm

    🌱 Started from humble beginnings experimenting with recipes in a flat, where he had an attic full of hundreds of kilos of nuts and various other ingredients.

    🌱 Had to completely rebuild the product and business, as they discovered that the original recipe nuts had a higher impact than the legumes that they now use. A brave example of commitment to planet -first innovation

    🌱 Put Mother Nature as CEO, to place the planet's future front and centre behind every decision they make.

    Listen to the end to hear us explore regenerative farming financing, subsidies, taxes as incentivisation - and disincentivization - and some of the blockers and solutions to truly transforming farming and food.

    Where shall we go next, what questions shall we ask? To co-create the podcast with us, connect with fellow change makers in the FuturePlanet community of action, visit www.futureplanet.love to sign or sign up.

    Let's get into it.




    About Brad Vanstone


    Fuelled by concerns about the future of our planet, Brad Vanstone began eating a mainly plant-based diet on moving to Amsterdam. He found the transition easier than he’d imagine with the exception of cheese. Unable to find many plant-based cheese alternatives in the supermarket, Brad started making it at home. Months of experimentation later, and with some basic knowledge of dairy cheese making from time spent growing up on his Grandparents’ dairy farm, Brad founded Willicroft in 2018.

    The name originates from Willicroft Farm in Devon founded by his grandparents in 1957. Brad is reimagining how we consume cheese combining age-old techniques with a more planet-friendly ingredient base. With Mother Nature as their CEO, Willicroft is placing the planet's future front and centre behind every decision they make.



    Where shall we go next, what questions shall we ask? To co-create the podcast with us, connect with fellow change makers in the FuturePlanet community of action, visit www.futureplanet.love to sign in or sign up.

  • In this episode, we adventure with the pioneer of zero waste, Catherine Conway. Catherine's is an inspiring story of persistence, commitment, and resilience – values that all founders need.

    Catherine's instincts lead her to be truly collaborative and, like all great impact pioneers, she prioritizes impact and doing the right thing.

    We adventure through circular economy behavior change, collaboration, and policy. We tackle short-termism and explore the need for longer-term thinking.

    Together we explore:

    the journey of Catherine's early careerher path through working with Planet Organic and pioneering zero-waste in-store working with Waitrose and then setting up The Refill Coalition, a mission to transform our retail ecosystem to be zero-waste


    Listen to the end to hear Catherine's big dream and where she wants to impact next.

    You can read the action takeaways from this episode, comment, co-create future episodes, connect with fellow changemakers, and join us on the journey.

    You can visit futureplanet.love to sign in or sign up. Let's get into it.



    Who is Catherine Conway


    Catherine has always been at the heart of blending business with social responsibility. Her journey through both the private and Third Sectors has been dedicated to this harmony.

    With nearly two decades in Corporate Social Responsibility, Catherine saw the plastic problem early on.

    Visionary in her approach, Catherine launched Unpackaged in 2006 — the world's first modern zero-waste shop. This was long before the zero waste and circular economy movements gained traction.

    Unpackaged hasn't just been a store; it's revolutionized sustainable, desirable retail. Catherine's drive to develop refill and reuse systems has helped countless businesses make a meaningful difference.

    Her passion bridges the corporate and policy-making worlds, tirelessly working to establish reuse projects and shape policies for a thriving reuse economy.




    Where shall we go next, what questions shall we ask? To co-create the podcast with us, connect with fellow change makers in the FuturePlanet community of action, visit www.futureplanet.love to sign in or sign up.

  • In this episode, we welcome human rights activist and environmentalist Kumi Naidoo.

    Kumi was the International Executive Director of Greenpeace International (from 2009 through 2016) and Secretary General of Amnesty International (from 2018 to 2020).

    Kumi served as the Secretary-General of CIVICUS, an international alliance for citizen participation, from 1998 to 2008.

    He’s also the author of the deeply moving book ‘Letters to My Mother: The Making of a Troublemaker’ and ‘Can Citizen Action Save the World’.



    Together we will explore:


    - Kumi's love for artivism, the synergy between arts, culture, and activism

    - the elements of his tireless campaigning for economic justice, gender justice, environmental justice, and climate justice

    - intersectionality, indigenous rights, and youth rights

    - how do movements become mainstream

    - what Kumi's message is for a good activist, leader, and changemaker



    You can read the action takeaways from this episode, comment, co-create future episodes, connect with fellow changemakers and join us on the journey. You can visit futureplanet.love to sign in or sign up. Let's get into it.



    Who is Kumi Naidoo


    Kumi Naidoo proudly stands as the Founding Chair at Africans Rising for Justice, Peace & Dignity.

    Born in 1965, Kumi's commitment to justice took root early. At just 15, he joined the Helping Hands Youth Organisation, making strides in South Africa's freedom journey.


    However, his activism drew the government's eye, leading to arrests and forcing him into hiding. Seeking safety, he moved to the UK in 1987.

    While in exile, Kumi thrived as a Rhodes scholar at Oxford, earning a doctorate in political sociology.

    Upon Mandela’s historic release in 1990, Kumi returned home, fervently working to legitimize the African National Congress.

    Between 1998 and 2008, Kumi led the global initiative CIVICUS, fortifying citizen action worldwide. He co-chaired the Global Call to Action Against Poverty from its start in 2003.

    His leadership further shone at Greenpeace International (2009-2016) and Amnesty International (2018-2020).

    Currently, Kumi imparts wisdom as a Professor of Practice at Arizona State University's Thunderbird School. He is also a cherished fellow at the University of Oxford and Magdalen College, inspiring many with his journey.




    Where shall we go next, what questions shall we ask? To co-create the podcast with us, connect with fellow change makers in the FuturePlanet community of action, visit www.futureplanet.love to sign in or sign up.

  • In this episode, we welcome the inspirational Adam Read, Chief Sustainability and External Affairs Officer for SUEZ UK, a leading global provider of environmental solutions.

    Adam is a policy expert, pioneer and influencer for positive change in an industry that is connected to everything we do and our whole way of life. Themes include cross-value chain collaboration, circular economy, green skills, policy frameworks, politics, social value and systemic levers.


    Together we will explore:


    - Adam's view on where the waste management industry and our world need to get to and how we will get there

    - what reducing our consumption means in practice

    - how resource efficiency is a core part of the SUEZ’s business

    - Adam's views on where we are with UK legislation



    You can read the action takeaways from this episode, comment, co create future episodes, connect with fellow changemakers and join us on the journey. You can visit futureplanet.love to sign in or sign up. Let's get into it.




    Related resources:

    Number of planet Earths we need to provide resources and absorb our waste (link)


    Since August 3, we have been consuming resources more than what the Earth can regenerate this year (link)


    Interactive charts about the global waste challenge and waste management (link)



    Who is Adam Read

    Adam is a key player at Suez UK, handling external relations, communications, and sustainability. His journey with Suez spans 6 years, following an impressive 30-year career in academia, local governance, and environmental consulting. His PhD delved deep into the intricacies of UK waste policy.

    In recent years, Adam has been instrumental in shaping the UK Government's new Resources & Waste Strategy, leading discussions around vital subjects like EPR, DRS, Plastic Tax, and more. His leadership as President of the CIWM been pivotal in refining these policies and fostering the level of collaboration required to lay the ground for implementing them.

    Beyond this, Adam heads the ESA Resource Strategy & Policy group, a hub for innovative policy ideas. His past role as CIWM's president saw him advocating for green skills in an evolving industry. Adam's commitment to mentorship is clear, always eager to guide the next generation of resource managers.

    He holds several industry roles, including being a CIWM Trustee and a member of CIWM's Policy & Innovation Forum. Recently, his impact was recognized when he was named the 7th most influential figure in the Resource Hot 100.






    Where shall we go next, what questions shall we ask? To co-create the podcast with us, connect with fellow change makers in the FuturePlanet community of action, visit www.futureplanet.love to sign in or sign up.

  • In this episode, we welcome Simeon and Anne from Dream Quickly. What a dream team! I had so much fun with these two beautiful humans, exploring how they co-created a project to put nature on the board at Faith in Nature, and then created a toolkit so you can do the same.

    Together we will explore:

    - How Anne’s love of nature was a seed that grew

    - How to give Nature a voice in decision making

    - The process they went through in including the voice of Nature on the board

    - Some of the challenges that they encountered and how they overcame them

    - How your organisation can contribute to a global shift in placing Nature at the heart of everything

    You can read the action takeaways from this episode, comment, co create future episodes, connect with fellow changemakers and join us on the journey. You can visit futureplanet.love to sign in or sign up. Let's get into it.



    Examples of this solution


    Faith in Nature has pioneered this solution with the Nature on the Board process (link)


    Anne and Simeon have produced some fantastic FAQs that illuminate the process (link)


    FuturePlanet community member Brad Vanstone at Willicroft was key in making Mother Nature their CEO in January 2020 (link)



    Who is Anne Hopkins


    Anne is the brilliant co-creator and the heart behind Nature on the Board. She pours her heart into her role as the Creative Director at Faith in Nature, letting nature guide her vision and work in branding and messaging.


    With a decade in the creative industry, Anne leads Dream Quickly as its Creative Director to elevate brand creativity. Anne's freelance journey includes collaborating with renowned agencies like Wieden + Kennedy, Crispin Porter + Bogusky, and BBH London, among others.



    Who is Simeon Rose

    Simeon co-created Nature on the Board and leads as Brand Director at Faith In Nature. Since joining Faith In Nature in 2017, he's been reimagining what green companies think and do in our times.


    In 2021, Faith In Nature named Nature as a director. This gave our planet both a voice and a vote in their organisation. Their journey is all shared openly on the Faith in Nature website (link above), inspiring others to do the same.


    He calls West Wales home, living alongside his creative partner, Anne Hopkins, and their dog, Sonic. Living close to nature, they're reminded every day of the beauty of the world around them. And why they do what they do.




    Where shall we go next, what questions shall we ask? To co-create the podcast with us, connect with fellow change makers in the FuturePlanet community of action, visit www.futureplanet.love to sign in or sign up.

  • In this episode, we adventure with David Carlin, Head of Climate Risk and TCFD for the UN Environment Programme's Finance Initiative.

    Together we will explore:

    David's vision for an equitable and just futureHow finance is both an enabler of the challenge and the solution3 blockers to unlocking a flowing river of finance The need to create intentional networks of individuals within and between organisationsHow to evolve our current financial instruments for a sustainable future

    We also talk about:

    Clean energy finance, universal basic income, and wealth redistribution, the difference between acting on climate and reducing carbon and ecological complexity, carbon pricing and Europe's proposed carbon border adjustment, and....the challenges of reporting and what reporting ideally should be

    You can read the action takeaways from this episode, comment, co-create future episodes, and connect with fellow changemakers in the Future Planet Community of Action by visiting futureplanet.love to sign in or sign up. Let's get into it.



    Who is David Carlin

    David Carlin is a leading voice in climate finance. He founded Cambium Global Solutions, guiding governments and businesses on climate matters. He's penned essential guides for financial experts navigating climate change and has empowered global institutions with his knowledge.

    Now leading climate risk at the United Nations Environment - Finance Initiative, David's collaborated with top banks, insurers, and investors on climate strategies. He's a trusted advisor for UNEP FI's nature-focused programs and the Net-Zero Banking Alliance. He's lent his expertise to the Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero and shares insights on Forbes.


    Previously, he shaped financial strategies at Oliver Wyman and PNC Bank. At heart, David is a decision scientist, making him a beacon in the ever-evolving climate conversation.


    Where shall we go next, what questions shall we ask? To co-create the podcast with us, connect with fellow change makers in the FuturePlanet community of action, visit www.futureplanet.love to sign in or sign up.

  • In this episode, we welcome Thrivability Maven, an author of Age of Thrivability, Michelle Holiday. It was such a pleasure to connect and co-create this episode with Michelle.

    The focus of Michelle's work is helping people shift from a mechanistic, reductive, extractive worldview to a regenerative heart-centered one.


    Together we adventure through:

    how our worldview needs to bring nature to the heart of ithow feelings and the words we choose will guide us in the world we co-createhow Michelle has supported farmers to transition how they relate to the landhow tourism organizations can shift how they see their role in communities and the land they bring people toconstellations or clusters of connections within organizations the power of trust in our collaborative relationships


    ...and so much more


    You can read the action takeaways from this episode, comment, co-create future episodes, and connect with fellow changemakers in the Future Planet Community of Action by visiting futureplanet.love to sign in or sign up. Let's get into it.


    Who is Michelle Holliday

    Over two decades, Michelle Holliday has elegantly woven her vision of “Age of Thrivability” into her role as a writer, presenter, and consultant.

    Her mission? To help people feel truly alive, connect deeply, and make their work serve life in the most impactful way.

    Michelle began in brand strategy for giants like Coca-Cola and H.J. Heinz. Later, she focused on employee engagement in Washington, DC. Today, she’s the heart behind Montreal's Cambium Consulting, guiding a community of purpose-driven souls.

    With degrees in International Marketing and Russian Studies, Michelle's journey took her across 19 cities – from Moscow to a quaint Scottish town. Now, Montreal is home, where she cherishes time with her husband and two kids.

    Where shall we go next, what questions shall we ask? To co-create the podcast with us, connect with fellow change makers in the FuturePlanet community of action, visit www.futureplanet.love to sign in or sign up.

  • In this episode, we welcome Timothée Parrique, a pioneering proactivist, passionate about degrowth. Timothée is a researcher, economist, and scientist who focuses on questions about de-growth, post-growth, and post-capitalism.

    We explore:

    what degrowth ishow it can be definedwhy it needs to existwhat it means in practicewhat practical policies we can adoptand examples where they are working.


    You can read the action takeaways from this episode, comment, co-create future episodes, and connect with fellow changemakers in the Future Planet Community of Action by visiting futureplanet.love to sign in or sign up. Let's get into it.


    Who is Timothée Parrique

    Timothée Parrique is an economist, originally from Versailles, France. He is currently a researcher at the School of Economics and Management of Lund University (Sweden).

    He holds a PhD in economics from the Centre d’Études et de Recherches sur le Développement (University of Clermont Auvergne, France) and the Stockholm Resilience Centre (Stockholm University, Sweden). Titled “The political economy of degrowth” (2019), his dissertation explores the economic implications of degrowth.

    Tim is the author of Ralentir ou périr. L’économie de la décroissance (September 2022, Seuil), a wide-audience book adaptation of his PhD dissertation.

    Tim frequently writes about green growth and decoupling; he is the lead author of “Decoupling debunked – Evidence and arguments against green growth” (2019), a report published by the European Environmental Bureau (EEB).



    Where shall we go next, what questions shall we ask? To co-create the podcast with us, connect with fellow change makers in the FuturePlanet community of action, visit www.futureplanet.love to sign in or sign up.

  • In this episode, we welcome Philippe Birker, co-founder of Climate Farmer-- visionary and adventurous--on a mission to scale regenerative agriculture through a community of practice for farmers and carbon.

    We dive into:

    what is regenerative farmingsoil healththe role that farmers play in maintaining healthy ecosystemsit's not the cow, it's the howthe need for a better subsidy frameworkmore transparent pricing through the supply chain and more value being passed to farmers for their hard workthe challenges of the availability of landand the need to create a movement of future farmers for our future generation


    Philippe is deeply knowledgeable and it was a pleasure to receive his hard-earned insights, which I'm now happy to share with you. Let's get into it.


    Who is Philippe Birker

    Philippe Birker is a regenerative farmer and leader, committed to helping humanity transition toward a regenerative future.

    Philippe is on a mission to support regenerative farmers in Europe and experiments with regenerative culture and leadership. He believes that regenerating our soils through climate farmers is crucial for a sustainable future.

    If you are interested in compensating your CO2 emissions through regenerative agriculture or implementing regenerative culture in your organization, Philippe is the person you want to talk to.

    He has also worked for five years in business and community development for different impact start-ups, including Peerby, Fairphone, and Ritual technologies.

    Aside from his work in regeneration, Philippe holds the world record for simultaneous fire breathing since 2009. He is also a member of Ashoka's Changemaker community, the BMW Foundation's Responsible Leader network, Viva con Agua, and the Love Foundation, which he co-founded in 2013.

    Where shall we go next, what questions shall we ask? To co-create the podcast with us, connect with fellow change makers in the FuturePlanet community of action, visit www.futureplanet.love to sign in or sign up.

  • In this episode, we welcome Sir Jonathon Porritt - a renowned environmentalist, sustainability campaigner, writer, member of the British Green Party, and founder-director of Forum for the Future.


    We talk about intergenerational justice and intersectionality. We explored citizen leadership and civil disobedience and the blocker that is the indifference of so many people.


    We adventured politics and political funding, the juxtaposition of oil investment and climate action, nuclear power, EV, energy and energy efficiency and Jonathan's book, Hope in Hell (A Decade To Confront the Climate Emergency).


    My heart is wide open for Jonathan and I am deeply grateful for the encouragement and support he gave at the very beginning of the Future Planet. This is why it's a great pleasure to bring this conversation to you at the start of our journey together.


    Who is Jonathon Porritt, CBE

    Sir Jonathon Porritt is an eminent writer and campaigner on sustainable development.

    For the last 30 years, Jonathon has provided strategic advice to leading UK and international companies to deepen their understanding of today’s converging environmental and climate crises.

    He is also focused on intergenerational justice, supporting young people in their activities around sustainable development issues as they face a future defined by the twin crises of the Climate Emergency and Biodiversity Emergency.

    He is President of The Conservation Volunteers and is involved in the work of many other NGOs and groups.

    In 1996, he co-founded Forum for the Future, a leading international sustainable development charity, working with business and civil society to accelerate the shift toward a sustainable future.

    Jonathon was formerly Co-Chair of the Green Party (1980-83) and Director of Friends of the Earth (1984-90). He stood down as Chair of the UK Sustainable Development Commission in 2009, after nine years of providing high-level advice to Government Ministers, and served a ten-year term as Chancellor of Keele University (2012-2022).

    Jonathon was awarded a CBE in January 2000 for services to environmental protection.

    His latest book, Hope in Hell (Simon & Schuster, 2020, revised 2021) is a powerful ‘call to action’ on the Climate Emergency.

    Where shall we go next, what questions shall we ask? To co-create the podcast with us, connect with fellow change makers in the FuturePlanet community of action, visit www.futureplanet.love to sign in or sign up.

  • In this episode, we welcome Catherine Howarth who has been pioneering systems change for over a decade with ShareAction.

    ShareAction coordinates civil society activism to promote responsible investment across Europe.

    We explore the critical role that finance, pension funds, asset managers and big banks have in transitioning to a low carbon future and that there is no space in our carbon budget for further investment in fossil fuels.

    Catherine talks about their formula for successful campaigning, the need for us to be a movement for change and influence our pension funds and how that can happen and a vision for a sustainable financial system that serves society instead of being so self-serving.

    You can support the work that ShareAction does by visiting https://shareaction.org/


    Who is Catherine Howarth

    Since 2008, Catherine has been the Chief Executive of ShareAction, an organization that coordinates civil society activism to promote responsible investment across Europe.

    In addition to her role at ShareAction, Catherine is a board member of the Scott Trust and serves on the HM Treasury’s Asset Management Taskforce.

    She also holds a First Class BA in Modern History from Oxford University and an MSc in Industrial Relations from the London School of Economics.

    Catherine's expertise in corporate governance has not gone unnoticed, as she was named a 'Rising Star of Corporate Governance' by Yale University's Millstein Center in 2011, and recognised by the World Economic Forum as a Young Global Leader in 2014.

    When Catherine finds the time for herself, she loves heading up to Scotland to spend some time in the mountains and by the sea.

    Of course, her two boys keep her occupied at home, but she still manages to sneak in some runs around the East End of London when she can.



    Where shall we go next, what questions shall we ask? To co-create the podcast with us, connect with fellow change makers in the FuturePlanet community of action, visit www.futureplanet.love to sign in or sign up.