PoddsändningarGeovetenskapThe Eurasian Climate Brief

The Eurasian Climate Brief

Eurasian Climate Brief Team
The Eurasian Climate Brief
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  • The Eurasian Climate Brief

    Melting giants: the history of glaciology across Central Asia

    2026-07-01 | 27 min.
    Melting glaciers are often regarded as icons of climate change. But how were they viewed in the early days of glaciology and, more specifically, climate change research? When and how did scientific research of the Central Asian glaciers begin? And why is this still relevant for us today?
    Angelina speaks to environmental historian and a historian of science Dr. Katja Doose about the history of glacier research in Central Asia. 
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    The Eurasian Climate Brief is a podcast dedicated to climate issues in the region stretching from Eastern Europe to Russia down to the Caucasus and Central Asia.
    ---
    Dr. Katja Doose at the University of Fribourg:
    https://www.unifr.ch/directory/en/people/334449/232f7
    Prof. Mark Carey at the University of Oregon (mentioned in the conversation):
    https://news.uoregon.edu/expert/mark-carey-environmental-studies-program-department-geography
    ---
    This episode is supported by n-ost, a media NGO and European Journalistic Network committed to cross-border and multi-prospective reporting, and made by:
    Boris Schneider, political economist. European Programme Manager at Clean Energy Wire CLEW (Berlin). Has worked as a specialist on Eastern European climate and energy topics, amongst others for n-ost and the German Economic Team.
    Angelina Davydova, environmental/climate journalist. Editor of the magazine Environment and Rights, co-host of the podcast The Day After Tomorrow (Posle Zavtra). Environmental projects coordinator with the Dialogue for Understanding e. V (Berlin). Fellow with the Institute for Global Reconstitution (Berlin). Observer of the UN climate negotiations (UNFCCC) since 2008. Expert/editor of the Ukraine War Environmental CUNFCCC) since 2008. Expert/editor of the Ukraine War Environmental Consequences Work Group.
    Jingle: Natallia Kunitskaya (Mustelide)
    Sound editing & mixing: Angelo Tripkovsky
  • The Eurasian Climate Brief

    Breathless in Bishkek: the struggle for clean air in a city contested by geography, urban development and climate change

    2026-05-11 | 30 min.
    The Kyrgyz capital of Bishkek ranks among the largest cities in all of Central Asia. Located close to the country's border with Kazakhstan, it lies just off the northern fringe of the Kyrgyz Ala-Too Range. While contributing to a scenic panorama, these geographic factors also challenge the city's urbanistic ambitions.
    A largely fossil-based energy generation, a seemingly opaque urban sprawl and the challenges of a changing climate are thoroughly testing the city's limits. How does the challenging air quality affect citizens across geographic zones and income groups, and what can be done to ameliorate this?
    That's what we discussed with Maria Kolesnikova, director and co-founder of MoveGreen, an environmental NGO.
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    The Eurasian Climate Brief is a podcast dedicated to climate issues in the region stretching from Eastern Europe to Russia down to the Caucasus and Central Asia.
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    References cited in the episode:
    https://movegreen.kg/en/
    https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/09668136.2023.2185203
    https://www.buzzsprout.com/1878920/episodes/17798604-of-trolleybuses-and-mountains-struggling-for-clean-air-in-kyrgyzstan-and-community-empowerment-in-tajikistan
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    This episode is supported by n-ost, a media NGO and European Journalistic Network committed to cross-border and multi-prospective reporting, and made by:
    Boris Schneider, political economist. European Programme Manager at Clean Energy Wire CLEW (Berlin). Has worked as a specialist on Eastern European climate and energy topics, amongst others for n-ost and the German Economic Team.
    Angelina Davydova, environmental/climate journalist. Editor of the magazine Environment and Rights, co-host of the podcast The Day After Tomorrow (Posle Zavtra). Environmental projects coordinator with the Dialogue for Understanding e. V (Berlin). Fellow with the Institute for Global Reconstitution (Berlin). Observer of the UN climate negotiations (UNFCCC) since 2008. Expert/editor of the Ukraine War Environmental CUNFCCC) since 2008. Expert/editor of the Ukraine War Environmental Consequences Work Group.
    Jingle: Natallia Kunitskaya
    Sound editing & mixing: Angelo Tripkovsky
  • The Eurasian Climate Brief

    Saving Balkhash: Kazakhstan's largest lake under threat from extractivism and climate change

    2026-02-18 | 40 min.
    Lake Balkhash is the 14th largest lake in the world and one of the largest in Asia. Its ecological importance is matched by the number of threats it has been facing for decades: copper mining, hydropower, agricultural development – and now a nuclear power plant.
    How to reach local communities and experts, scientists and policy-makers, cultural institutions, businesses, and the wider public in order to transmit the significance of this unique body of water?
    That's what we discussed with Aigerim Kapar, co-founder of the platform Artcom and the initiative Care for Balkhash. Aigerim is an interdependent curator, interdisciplinary researcher, and decolonial activist from Almaty and has been engaged in a number of ecological efforts in Kazakhstan for over 10 years.
    Many thanks to researcher, writer, and curator Giada Dalla Bontà –who had originally conceived and drafted this topic for a collaborative project with(the podcast interviewer Boris Schneider and who introduced him to Aigerim's exhibition 'Interweaving Climate, Water(s) and Communities,' which informs this podcast episode.
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    The Eurasian Climate Brief is a podcast dedicated to climate issues in the region stretching from Eastern Europe to Russia down to the Caucasus and Central Asia.
    ---
    References cited in the episode:
    http://careforbalkhash.org/
    https://artcomplatform.com/
    http://careforbalkhash.org/program_art_collider_balkhash_almaty_eng
    http://artcomplatform.com/artcombb13
    ---
    This episode is supported by n-ost, a media NGO and European Journalistic Network committed to cross-border and multi-prospective reporting, and made by:
    Boris Schneider, political economist. European Programme Manager at Clean Energy Wire CLEW (Berlin). Has worked as a specialist on Eastern European climate and energy topics, amongst others for n-ost and the German Economic Team.
    Angelina Davydova, environmental/climate journalist. Editor of the magazine Environment and Rights, co-host of the podcast The Day After Tomorrow (Posle Zavtra). Environmental projects coordinator with the Dialogue for Understanding e. V (Berlin). Fellow with the Institute for Global Reconstitution (Berlin). Observer of the UN climate negotiations (UNFCCC) since 2008. Expert/editor of the Ukraine War Environmental CUNFCCC) since 2008. Expert/editor of the Ukraine War Environmental Consequences Work Group.
    Jingle: Natallia Kunitskaya
    Sound editing & mixing: Angelo Tripkovsky
  • The Eurasian Climate Brief

    From Central Asia to the Amazon: preparing for COP30

    2025-11-09 | 28 min.
    Central Asia is among the world's most vulnerable regions to climate change. Already today, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan are facing various climate consequences: from droughts to landslides, from glacier melts to flash floods. At the same time, this region's energy landscape contains almost all energy sources from fossil to renewables; to a varying degree, the energy transition is underway, even if not at the desired pace.
    What are the five Central Asian delegations bringing to COP30 in Belém? Which are their plans on adaptation? Are fossil fuels being phased out? And what's happening on the important topic of just transition across Central Asian societies?
    To learn about this and more, Dr. Bakhyt Yessekina, Founder and Director of Kazakhstan's "Green Academy" is joining us on this episode.
    ---
    The Eurasian Climate Brief is a podcast dedicated to climate issues in the region stretching from Eastern Europe to Russia down to the Caucasus and Central Asia.
    ---
    Report cited in the episode:
    https://caneecca.org/en/ndc-updates-in-eecca-findings-from-selected-countries/
    Side event at COP30:
    Formation of the Digital Platform for Article 6 in Central Asia

    The Research and Educational Center “Green Academy”, in cooperation with the Ministry of Ecology and Natural Resources of the Republic of Kazakhstan, with the support of the ISTC (International Science and Technology Center) and international partners, will hold a side event “Formation of a Digital Platform for the Carbon Market in Central Asia” on November 14, 2025, at the Digital Innovation Pavilion, C90, Blue Zone, COP30, Belém, Brazil.

    Date: November 14, 2025
    Time: 09:00–11:30
    Venue: Digital Innovation Pavilion, C90, Blue Zone, COP30, Belém
    Format: Hybrid (online/offline)
    Draft program: https://lnkd.in/dr_Q8fbU
    Online registration: https://lnkd.in/dsuNit4F
    ---
    This episode is supported by n-ost, a media NGO and European Journalistic Network committed to cross-border and multi-prospective reporting, and made by:
    Boris Schneider, political economist. European Programme Manager at Clean Energy Wire CLEW (Berlin). Has worked as a specialist on Eastern European climate and energy topics, amongst others for n-ost and the German Economic Team.
    Angelina Davydova, environmental/climate journalist. Editor of the magazine Environment and Rights, co-host of the podcast The Day After Tomorrow (Posle Zavtra). Environmental projects coordinator with the Dialogue for Understanding e. V (Berlin). Fellow with the Institute for Global Reconstitution (Berlin). Observer of the UN climate negotiations (UNFCCC) since 2008. Expert/editor of the Ukraine War Environmental CUNFCCC) since 2008. Expert/editor of the Ukraine War Environmental Consequences Work Group.
    Jingle: Natallia Kunitskaya
    Sound editing & mixing: Angelo Tripkovsky
  • The Eurasian Climate Brief

    From coal to clean? Renewable energy pioneers in Central Asia

    2025-10-20 | 43 min.
    Central Asia is among the world's most vulnerable regions to climate change. And while some of the Central Asian countries are heavily reliant on fossil fuels, there is potential for renewable energy across this entire part of the world. Let's have a closer look at electricity today.
    Who are the main drivers of the energy transition? Is cross-border cooperation happening? Are the grids ready for the renewable transition? Which role does hydro play? And what about some countries' nuclear ambitions?
    To get a grip on these and many other topics, Nick Fulghum and Ufuk Alparslan of Ember dive into the Central Asian section of their 2025 Global Electricity Review with Boris, while Angelina meets Tatiana Lanshina of Agora Energiewende, who after an overview of the entire region, zooms into Kazakhstan's power sector specifically.
    ---
    The Eurasian Climate Brief is a podcast dedicated to climate issues in the region stretching from Eastern Europe to Russia down to the Caucasus and Central Asia.
    ---
    References cited in the episode:
    https://ember-energy.org/latest-insights/global-electricity-review-2025/
    https://www.agora-energiewende.org/publications/kazakhstans-power-system-2035
    https://www.agora-energiewende.org/publications/enabling-a-just-coal-transition-in-kazakhstan
    https://www.etf.europa.eu/en/greenskills2025/kazakhstan-green-skills-future
    https://vlast.kz/english/66616-after-trump-tokayev-also-calls-climate-change-a-fraud-and-praises-coal-in-kazakhstan.html
    ---
    This episode is supported by n-ost, a media NGO and European Journalistic Network committed to cross-border and multi-prospective reporting, and made by:
    Boris Schneider, political economist. European Programme Manager at Clean Energy Wire CLEW (Berlin). Has worked as a specialist on Eastern European climate and energy topics, amongst others for n-ost and the German Economic Team.
    Angelina Davydova, environmental/climate journalist. Editor of the magazine Environment and Rights, co-host of the podcast The Day After Tomorrow (Posle Zavtra). Environmental projects coordinator with the Dialogue for Understanding e. V (Berlin). Fellow with the Institute for Global Reconstitution (Berlin). Observer of the UN climate negotiations (UNFCCC) since 2008. Expert/editor of the Ukraine War Environmental CUNFCCC) since 2008. Expert/editor of the Ukraine War Environmental Consequences Work Group.
    Jingle: Natallia Kunitskaya (Mustelide)
     Sound editing & mixing: Angelo Tripkovsky
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Om The Eurasian Climate Brief
The Eurasian Climate Brief is a podcast focusing on climate news in the region stretching from Eastern Europe, Russia down to the Caucasus and Central Asia. It aims to give a voice to the best experts and journalists, enabling them to make sense of a part of the world where environmental news is seriously underreported.The podcast was launched in in October 2021, coinciding with COP26 in Glasgow. After a year-long hiatus, the podcast finally returns - just ahead of COP29 in Baku. Make sure to follow the show in you podcast app of choice!
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