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Do you think Climate Change is something that will happen in the future? Or something that will happen somewhere else? Well, as Co-hosts Claudia Romo Edelman and Edie Lush, say: think again. The climate is warming and one of the predicted effects, extreme weather, is happening faster and more severely than climate scientists had forecast. This has produced record heat in western Canada and the United States and unprecedented rain and flooding in China and Europe.

Global GoalsCast visits Mayschoß, one of the German towns ruined by flooding and hears about the physical destruction and the jarring realizations brought on by the flooding.

“It has shown as a community and I think also as a country that we are really vulnerable,” says Anja Menzel, a political science professor whose street was turned into a raging river. “That is something we did not experience before. Because, oh, its those third world countries that are effected by climate change. It isn’t us. we are well equipped.”

This has increased the urgency for both mitigation, such as the European Unions proposal to reduce carbon emissions, and measures to adapt to handle extreme weather events that can no longer be averted. Will the shock of this year of extreme weather be enough to motivate these needed changes?

Featured Guests

Anja Bierwirth, Head of Research Unit Urban Transitions, at Wuppertal Institute, an international think tank for sustainability research focused on impact and practical application.

Dr. Anja Menzel, Research fellow at the Chair for International Politics, FernUniversität in Hagen

Harvey Scherer, event organizer & safety expert who is part of the rescue of Mayschoß, one of the German villages destroyed by the recent floods.

David Ryfisch, team lead for international climate policy at Germanwatch, where he manages the portfolio on sustainable and climate finance.

Featured guests

Anja Menzel, PhD

Anja Menzel, PhD, is a Senior Researcher at FernUniversität in Hagen, Germany. She specializes in issues concerning maritime security and ocean governance. Currently working on a project on sustainability and the sea, she researches the role of development funding for a sustainable Blue Economy.

David Ryfisch

David Ryfisch is the team lead for international climate policy at Germanwatch, where he manages the portfolio on sustainable and climate finance. Prior to joining Germanwatch, he held positions at GIZ, the UNEP DTU Partnership, and the Inter-American Development Bank, working inter alia on climate finance, reporting, and mitigation. David holds a Masters degree in International Economics from the Graduate Institute Geneva.

Twitter: @DavidRyfisch

Linkedin: David Ryfisch

Anja Bierwirth

Anja Bierwirth is head of the research unit “Urban Transitions” in the research division Energy-, Transport- and Climate Policy at the Wuppertal Institute for Climate, Environment and Energy. She studied architecture in Bremen and Cologne and completed her master studies on environmental sciences at the FernUni Hagen. She worked as an architect and in the field of environmental education. Since 2008 she works at the Wuppertal Institute in the fields of local energy and climate action policy, energy efficiency and sufficiency in buildings and sustainable urban development.

Harvey Scherer

Harvey Scherer, event organizer & safety expert who is part of the rescue of Mayschoß, one of the German villages destroyed by the recent floods.