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E 7.4 - Building a Climate-Ready Future in Colorado and Wyoming featuring Mike Freeman

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Manage episode 482505445 series 3291227
Content provided by Anika Horn and Social Venturers. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Anika Horn and Social Venturers or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

Colorado and Wyoming are famed for their wide open spaces and incredible landscapes.

They’re also very, very dry.

Changes in rainfall and snowpack are already impacting agriculture, tourism, and the frequency and intensity of wildfires in the western United States. The wicked problem of climate resiliency isn’t one for the future, it’s making itself known in real-time.

Today, we’re headed west to meet our next NSF Engine, the ASCEND Engine in Colorado and Wyoming, in short, the CO-WY Engine, where I’ll be talking to CEO Mike Freeman about the region’s unique resources and how they’re building a community-based commitment to climate resiliency.

Mike Freeman has dedicated the past 15 years to building up the science and technology innovation ecosystems in Colorado and surrounding areas. He brings several decades in public sector leadership, management consulting, non-profit management, and venture capital to his role at the CP-WY Engine.

Listen to the full episode to hear:

  • How developing environmental technologies underpins community resilience and economic opportunity
  • Why climate resilience is about more than just the weather
  • How the CO-WY Engine is building collaborative partnerships with a particularly diverse set of regional stakeholders
  • Why Mike sees differences among partners as ultimately beneficial to the project
  • Measuring the success of the program, from more traditional economic terms to devising a framework to capture a community’s climate resiliency

Learn more about Mike Freeman:

Learn more about Anika Horn:

Resources:

  continue reading

73 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 482505445 series 3291227
Content provided by Anika Horn and Social Venturers. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Anika Horn and Social Venturers or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

Colorado and Wyoming are famed for their wide open spaces and incredible landscapes.

They’re also very, very dry.

Changes in rainfall and snowpack are already impacting agriculture, tourism, and the frequency and intensity of wildfires in the western United States. The wicked problem of climate resiliency isn’t one for the future, it’s making itself known in real-time.

Today, we’re headed west to meet our next NSF Engine, the ASCEND Engine in Colorado and Wyoming, in short, the CO-WY Engine, where I’ll be talking to CEO Mike Freeman about the region’s unique resources and how they’re building a community-based commitment to climate resiliency.

Mike Freeman has dedicated the past 15 years to building up the science and technology innovation ecosystems in Colorado and surrounding areas. He brings several decades in public sector leadership, management consulting, non-profit management, and venture capital to his role at the CP-WY Engine.

Listen to the full episode to hear:

  • How developing environmental technologies underpins community resilience and economic opportunity
  • Why climate resilience is about more than just the weather
  • How the CO-WY Engine is building collaborative partnerships with a particularly diverse set of regional stakeholders
  • Why Mike sees differences among partners as ultimately beneficial to the project
  • Measuring the success of the program, from more traditional economic terms to devising a framework to capture a community’s climate resiliency

Learn more about Mike Freeman:

Learn more about Anika Horn:

Resources:

  continue reading

73 episodes

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