The Indisposable Podcast®
Celebrating solutions to plastic pollution and featuring heroes of the movement
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Working Together to Build the New Reuse Economy
Episode 134: Recorded at Circularity 23 in June, an engaging panel discussion on the successes, challenges, opportunities and collaboration needed to enact the vision of a new reuse world.
What sticks is what works
Episode 131: Tim Wolters, co-founder and CEO of CrowdSolve, a platform for climate entrepreneurs, discusses using technology to identify at scale the most impactful solutions and then accelerating change through human-to-human collaboration.
Indisposable Fabrics
Episode 129: A deep dive into sustainability considerations for textiles and apparel, with Reusies judge Lewis Perkins of the Apparel Impact Institute.
Community Powered Entrepreneurship
Episode 127: Camila Vega, Solutions Portfolio Manager at Sustainable Ocean Alliance, offers a window into SOA’s approach to ending ocean plastic pollution through funding solutions-focused startups.
Reuse, reimagine, redistribute
Episode 126: Anita Schwartz, VP at WSP-USA, joins us to discuss how practices like redistribution and reuse can aid in a just transition to a circular economy.
Helping consumers embrace reuse
Episode 124: Thom Almeida, Platform Curator, Future of Consumption at the World Economic Forum, discusses his team’s focus on making reuse accessible for the consumer.
Coming full circle with GreenBiz
Episode 123: GreenBiz’s VP of Circularity Jon Smieja and Circular Economy Manager Kori Goldberg join us to discuss what’s in store for this year’s Circularity conference—including The Reusies 2023!— and share their outlooks on the bright future of reuse.
The business case for catalyzing reuse
Episode 121: Emily Tipaldo of the U.S. Plastics Pact and Lauren Sweeney of DeliverZero discuss the collaborative opportunities to scale reuse made possible by the Pact’s Reuse Catalyst.
Packaging a sustainable future
Episode 119: Atlantic Packaging’s Wes Carter & Caroline James discuss their push for EPR and other sustainability initiatives—and reveal the company’s roots in the fight for racial justice in Jim Crow-Era South.