A Cup of BiodiversiTea
Podcast
Over a Cup of BiodiversiTea listen to green change makers invested in protecting nature for future generations. We talk to community representatives, business leaders, decision-makers, researchers, and civil society advocates to shed some light on the current biodiversity crisis and determine pathways to solve it. We particularly focus on the planet’s botanical wealth and how we can use it in a sustainable and equitable manner. Take a break, grab a cup of tea (or coffee) and enjoy our guests ‘food for thought.’
Listen to our episodes:
Episode 4: Finding joy in protecting biodiversity
April 28, 2022 - 24 minutes
Maria Julia Oliva is the Head of Policy at UN Environment Programme World Conservation Monitoring Centre (UNEP-WCMC) where she oversees a team focused on accounting for the value for biodiversity in policy and providing support to incorporate biodiversity management into policy across many sectors. Previously, she was part of the UEBT staff team from 2009 to 2021 and last served as Deputy Director and Senior Coordinator for ABS and Policy. She is a trained lawyer with internationally recognized expertise on legal and policy issues linked to biodiversity.
Episode 3: Indigenous people are ‘living examples’ of sustainable use of biodiversity
March 14, 2022 - 22 minutes
Jennifer Tauli Corpuz is from the Kankana-ey Igorot People of Mountain Province in the Philippines. She is a lawyer by profession and currently the Global Policy and Advocacy Lead for Nia Tero, a US-based non-profit working in solidarity with Indigenous peoples and movements worldwide. Jennifer participates in the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) related negotiations on the protection of traditional knowledge and was involved in the negotiations leading to the adoption of the Nagoya Protocol on Access and Benefit-Sharing.
Episode 2: Genes are the power of life
February 14, 2022 - 34 minutes
Dr. Amber Hartman Scholz is the deputy to the director and head of the science policy group at the German Collection of Microorganisms and Cell Cultures, at Leibniz Institute, in Brunswick. She holds a PhD in microbiology from Johns Hopkins University and has a passion for the interface between policy and science. Amber has worked in the California State Senate, US National Cancer Institute, and served as the Executive Director for US President Obama’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST) at the White House.
Episode 1: Biodiversity is hanging on by its fingernails. A reason for hope.
January 20, 2022 - 33 minutes
Global biodiversity advisor and proud Namibian Pierre du Plessis shares with us the three most important questions about the global biodiversity crisis that we must address in our lifetime.
Pierre du Plessis is a technical advisor to the African Group of Negotiators on Biodiversity. Pierre has worked on various aspects of sustainable development since 1987. Over the last 20 years he has developed a specialist focus on access to genetic resources and the fair and equitable sharing of benefits arising from their utilisation. He was one of Africa’s lead negotiators during the development of the Nagoya Protocol and has frequently represented Namibia and Africa at the CBD, WIPO and FAO.
Our hosts
Lara Koritzke
Born in the San Fernando Valley of California, Lara started out studying fine arts, working in New York City, Los Angeles and Moscow. She changed careers in 2000 spurred by her growing concerns for the environment and joined the nonprofit Rainforest Alliance. She spent more than a decade there, writing about and building partnerships for projects worldwide. Today, she is a well-known sustainability systems expert, with a focus on market-based solutions. She currently works for UEBT and lives in an old house in Toronto with her partner and three teenagers.
Tobias Dierks
Tobias hails from Germany. He grew up steeped in the academic world, playing on the university campus where both parents worked. After fulfilling his familial duty by obtaining a degree in sociology, he ran as far from the academy as possible: he got a job in entertainment television. However, he soon left it behind for more fulfilling work in development aid. He currently works in biodiversity communication at GIZ. Tobias lives in Berlin with many two- and four-footed beings who boss him around.