logo
episode-header-image
May 2024
2m 3s

Quand les compagnies pétrolières ont-ell...

Choses à Savoir
About this episode
tail spinning
Up next
Mar 12
Pourquoi les personnes âgées sentent-elles différemment ?
Longtemps, cette idée a relevé du cliché ou du malaise social. Pourtant, la science a fini par montrer qu’il existe bien une base biologique objective à ce phénomène. Des chercheurs japonais ont identifié le composé chimique principalement responsable de cette odeur particulière, ... Show More
1m 45s
Mar 11
Qu’est-il vraiment arrivé à la bibliothèque d’Alexandrie ?
La bibliothèque d’Alexandrie est devenue le symbole absolu du savoir perdu. Mais contrairement à la légende, elle n’a probablement pas été détruite en une seule nuit par un incendie spectaculaire. Ce qui lui est arrivé est plus complexe, plus lent… et finalement plus humain.La bi ... Show More
2m 33s
Mar 10
Pourquoi le chimiste Alfred Nobel est-il célèbre ?
Alfred Nobel est célèbre pour les prix Nobel. Bien sûr ! Mais au départ, sa célébrité vient bien d’un explosif précis : la dynamite.Nobel naît en 1833 à Stockholm, dans une époque où l’Europe construit tunnels, voies ferrées, ports et canaux. Le problème, c’est que faire sauter l ... Show More
2m 26s
Recommended Episodes
Jan 2023
Why are we still subsidising fossil fuels?
<p>In 2009, the G20 countries pledged to phase out 'inefficient' fossil fuel subsidies, which have long been seen as an obstacle to fighting climate change. But today, subsidies for oil and gas producers are at record levels -- $64 billion in 2021. It’s not just to do with the wa ... Show More
27 m
Jul 2021
Do oil companies have a future?
Shareholders and courts pile pressure on the oil majors. Amid falling demand for oil and targets to cut carbon emissions, what role if any do companies like ExxonMobil and Shell have in a decarbonised world? Manuela Saragosa speaks to Aeisha Mastagni from the California State Tea ... Show More
17m 47s
Jan 2022
TED Climate: How to realistically decarbonize the oil and gas industry | Bjørn Otto Sverdrup
Bjørn Otto Sverdrup leads the Oil and Gas Climate Initiative (OGCI), which gathers the CEOs of twelve of the world's largest oil and gas companies around an ambitious goal: to get one of the sectors contributing most to climate change to drastically lower their own carbon emissio ... Show More
13m 32s
Dec 2023
Norvège, fossile envers et contre tout
La Norvège est le plus grand fournisseur de pétrole et de gaz vers l’Europe depuis le début de la guerre en Ukraine. Sans abandonner ses activités, le pays s’est engagé à diminuer de 55 % ses émissions de gaz à effet de serre d'ici à 2030. Comment la Norvège va-t-elle répondre au ... Show More
19m 30s
Oct 2021
2. Big oil in the dock
Is big oil trying to mislead the public about what it’s doing about climate change?Several US states are suing some of the world’s largest oil and gas companies, accusing them of “greenwashing”.They claim the fossil fuel industry is deceiving consumers about how much it’s actuall ... Show More
18m 20s
Nov 2021
Climate Ambition vs Energy Reality
David and Helen talk to Jason Bordoff, Dean of the Columbia Climate School and former Special Assistant to Barack Obama, about climate, COP26 and the enormous challenges of the energy transition. How can we balance the need for energy security with the need to wean the world off ... Show More
51m 55s
Oct 2023
What the fossil fuel industry doesn't want you to know | Al Gore
In a blistering talk, Nobel Laureate Al Gore looks at the two main obstacles to climate solutions and gives his view of how we might actually solve the environmental crisis in time. You won't want to miss his searing indictment of fossil fuel companies for walking back their clim ... Show More
26m 48s
Nov 2021
Jet fuel from thin air
Scientists in Switzerland have developed a system which uses solar energy to extract gases such as hydrogen and carbon dioxide from the air and turns them into fuels for transport. So far they have only made small quantities in experimental reactors, however they say with the rig ... Show More
1h 13m