One Year of Straight Talking Sustainability: Anniversary Special Featuring the Most Powerful Insights from Nicola Jones, Briony Pete, Andy Middleton, Jen Gale, and Phil Korbel
Description
In this landmark anniversary episode of Straight Talking Sustainability, host Emma Burlow celebrates one year of the podcast by revisiting the most impactful moments from five extraordinary guests who have shared their hard-earned wisdom over the past 12 months.
After nearly 30 years in the sustainability sector, Emma knows that we simply do not have time to keep knowledge locked away, which is why she launched this podcast to democratise sustainability expertise and make connections across industries, backgrounds, and experience levels.
This bumper compilation episode features powerful excerpts from conversations with industry leaders, changemakers, and thought leaders who are actively transforming how we approach climate action, carbon literacy, sustainable living, and systemic change.
From heavy industry decarbonisation to personal behaviour change, from ambitious climate action to managing eco-anxiety, these voices represent the breadth and depth of sustainability challenges and solutions.
Nicola Jones, Market Business Development Manager at Tata Steel UK, shares insights from the frontlines of industrial transformation, revealing how a £1.25 billion investment in electric arc furnace technology will deliver an immediate 90% carbon reduction when it comes online in 2027. Her perspective dismantles the myth that heavy industry resists climate action, demonstrating instead how customer Scope 3 emissions requirements are driving rapid change. Nicola explains why companies that fail to decarbonise will lose customers within five to ten years, making sustainability not just ethical but essential for business survival.
Briony Pete, Director at The Circular Life, explores the critical importance of mindset in sustainability work, tackling imposter syndrome, overwhelm, and the burnout that sustainability professionals frequently experience. She introduces practical frameworks for understanding where people are on their sustainability journey (from closed to leadership-ready) and emphasises the power of meeting people where they are rather than expecting everyone to jump to expert level immediately. Her insights about moving from judgement to curiosity offer a roadmap for more effective sustainability communication.
Andy Middleton, Co-Founder of Do Good Faster, brings a provocative perspective on ambition and long-term thinking. Drawing on his experience taking 200,000 people safely through potentially dangerous outdoor adventures, he argues that we are facing a "big volume class five rapid" as a species, yet most people have not even looked at the river or understand the terminology. He challenges the notion of being "realistic" by arguing that true realism means preparing for the threats and opportunities ahead with appropriate urgency and scale.
Jen Gale, Author of The Sustainable(ish) Living Guide, offers candid reflections on managing climate anxiety whilst doing advocacy work, the power of reaching mainstream audiences rather than preaching to the converted, and why influence often creates unseen ripples that advocates may never witness. Her work with schools, veterinary practices, and the Sustainable(ish) community demonstrates how embedding sustainability conversations in trusted community institutions can create exponential impact.
Phil Korbel, co-founder of the Carbon Literacy Project, explains how carbon literacy training has become one of the most powerful tools for closing the gap between net zero targets and actual action. With examples ranging from AutoTrader (a FTSE 100 company driven by employee demand) to the British Plastics Federation, Phil demonstrates that carbon literacy works across all sectors by giving people the emotional engagement and practical agency to act on climate knowledge they may already possess intellectually.
Throughout this anniversary special, common themes emerge: the importance of meeting people where they are, the power of cross-sector collaboration, the need for systemic rather than siloed thinking, and the critical role of building confidence and capacity across organisations rather than expecting sustainability teams to carry the entire burden alone.
These conversations remind us that sustainability transformation is not about perfection but about progress, not about experts holding knowledge but about democratising access to tools and insights that enable everyone to contribute.
In this anniversary sustainability compilation episode, you'll discover:
- How Tata Steel's 90% carbon reduction proves heavy industry is leading (not following) on decarbonisation
- Why customer Scope 3 requirements create more powerful drivers than regulation in many sectors
- The mindset shifts that prevent burnout whilst maintaining impact in sustainability roles
- How to identify where people are on their sustainability journey and meet them appropriately
- Why preparing for a "class five rapid" requires ambition that many dismiss as unrealistic
- The challenge of thinking across 200-year time scales when business typically plans three years ahead
- How climate anxiety affects advocates and practical strategies for managing emotional impact
- Why unseen ripples mean your sustainability influence extends far beyond what you can measure
- The "carbon literacy catch-22" (you don't understand its value until you experience it)
- How AutoTrader became the first FTSE 100 carbon literacy adopter through employee advocacy
Key Anniversary Insights and Timestamps:
(02:00 ) Nicola Jones on competitive necessity: "I think the reality is if we don't decarbonise, we're not going to have any customers in five to 10 years time because our customers have also got scope three emissions reduction goals. And if they're not going to get their low carbon emission steels from us, they'll go somewhere else to get it."
(11:05 ) Briony Pete on mindset fundamentals: "How we think affects how we feel and how we feel affects how we act. If we're trying to change behaviours, we've got to start with how we're thinking and we've got to start with an awareness of what's the most common theme of my thoughts."
(18:20 ) Briony on meeting people appropriately: "We're expecting people to jump to where we are... And actually when we meet people where we are, we can say, well, how open are you to change? And if you're closed, then I don't want to talk to you about sustainability. I want to build relationship with you and build trust."
(24:19 ) Andy Middleton on long-term thinking: "Dad died at 100. And I've paid to some of them sitting with his two great grandchildren and their lives together could span 200 years. So we've really got to understand how to fall into the messiness of thinking longer term."
(29:07 ) Andy on organisational readiness: "In terms of our rapid facing as a species, I think as a minimum, we're facing a big volume class five. Now, if you're doing that for real, every single person going down the river would have paddled class three before. But right now, most people haven't been in a raft or looked at the video of a river."
(32:41 ) Jen Gale on career commitment: "What else would I do? Which doesn't mean I'm stuck in any shape or form... For me, I've not really known what else I've ever wanted to do. And I think that's just about having a strong commitment to something."
(37:14 ) Jen on reaching mainstream audiences: "We've got to meet people where they are and we've got to meet them at a level that they can act on... People learn off people. People follow people."
(41:59 ) Jen on unseen impact: "A lot of the impact will be unseen and unknown. And a lot of the criticism will be very in your face... It can feel like a thankless task all the time."
(45:36 ) Phil Korbel on the carbon literacy barrier: "I call it the carbon literacy catch 22. You don't get carbon literacy until you're carbon literate... The number of advocates in employers that come back to me say, they see a day away from the job. Yeah, I get that a lot... No, of course it's the job. It is the job."
(50:14 ) Phil on sector transformation: "I'm not sure if there is a trend. Because of the way that we've grown, it tends to be stories being passed on. It's very word of mouth that people are coming to us and some are small with big impacts, some are huge that are coming in."
Featured Guests:
- Nicola Jones (Tata Steel UK) - 26-year steel industry veteran leading sustainability initiatives
- Briony Pete (The Circular Life) - Sustainability mindset coach and behaviour change expert
- Andy Middleton (Do Good Faster co-founder) - Systems thinker and ambition advocate
- Jen Gale (The Sustainable(ish) Living Guide author) - Mainstream sustainability communicator
- Phil Korbel (Carbon Literacy Project co-founder) - Carbon literacy pioneer and trainer
Connect with Emma
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