KPFT Houston and Rice University’s Center for Environmental Studies
Gulf Streams
Environmental and Climate News out of Houston Texas. Gulf Streams is your source for environmental and climate news. Covering a range of topics around Houston, the Gulf Coast, and the world, Gulf Streams brings you the best in conversations with community leaders and advocates, academic experts, and national thought leaders. Join us as we sit down every Monday at noon (central) to dive into the most pressing environmental challenges, solutions, and ideas. A co-production of Rice University’s Center for Environmental Studies and KPFT Houston, with support from Rice’s EcoStudio and the Andrew W....
Author
KPFT Houston and Rice University’s Center for Environmental Studies
Category
Podcast website
Latest episode
Apr 27, 2026
Where to listen?
Podcasts in the app Replaio Radio Coming soonPodcasts are coming to the app soon. Install now and be the first to see a whole new take on podcasts
Episodes
Ep. 109 Harris County's Climate Justice Plan 27.04.2026 51:25
At just a year old now, we're diving into the Harris County Climate Justice Plan to understand what it is, why it matters, and how it will shape our region's future resilience and success as we weather new environmental challenges. Joining us are Lisa Lin (Harris County Office of Sustainability) and Andy Escobar (Coalition for Environment, Equity, and Resilience).
Ep. 108 Cuts to Science Funding 22.04.2026 54:04
On today's show we sit down with Andrew Hoffman (Rice University) to discuss the way that cuts to science are impacting climate research. After that, our researcher Antara talks with two local meteorologists, Justin Stapleton (KPRC2) and Travis Herzog (ABC13) about how funding reductions impact meteorological data at the local level.
Ep. 107 Water Strategies 15.04.2026 1:01:25
On today's show our researcher Sarah sits down with two different practitioners working around the world to combat water scarcity. Later in the hour Dr. Chaney Hill and Sarah talk to a local wolf and wolf dog sanctuary about their work saving local animals.
Ep. 106 Building Ecosystems 08.04.2026 54:00
What happens when we view spaces big (acres) and small (a patio) as its own ecosystem? On today's show, we sit down with Dr. Shaun McCoshum to discuss his new book Natural Habitats and Wildlife Gardening: Inviting Nature into Your Backyard . He walks us through ways to consider our landscapes, however big or small, as part of larger ecosystems and ways to support animals and plants in our lives....
Ep. 105 Urban Farming 30.03.2026 52:24
Our researcher Antara and a guest researcher Paolo take us through a tour of Houston urban farms. Along the way we learn about the challenges of farming in a city, the rewards for community, and how local groups are working to improve their neighborhoods and footways all throughout the city.
Ep. 104 Gulf Coast Demise? 16.03.2026 55:48
The US Gulf Coast faces many, often compounding, threats. On today's show, we sit down with Dr. John B. Anderson (Rice University), whose recent book Gulf Coast Demise explores the unique challenges facing the reason, how sea level rise is exacerbating risk throughout the region, and what we are doing -- and should be doing -- to address these challenges.
Ep. 103 Toxic Air in Our Homes 09.03.2026 56:38
After Hurricane Katrina devastated the Gulf Coast, a slow moving public health disaster followed in the form of disaster recovery: the ubiquitous FEMA trailers that were quickly utilized by rebuilding families turned out to often have extremely high levels of formaldehyde in them. Dr. Nicholas Shapiro (UCLA) spent years following these trailers to understand the impacts of living in toxic environm...
Ep. 102 Saving Animals and Writing to Save the World 23.02.2026 52:04
On today's show, our junior researchers sit down with folks doing very different kinds of work to help protect our wildlife, natural resources, and planet. First, we speak with Nicole Rogers of Saint Francis Wolf Sanctuary about their work saving wolves and wolf dogs. Then we talk to Tristan Ahtone at Grist about the importance of journalism and telling unheard stories for promoting climate awaren...
Ep. 101 Can We Make It Rain? 16.02.2026 53:27
Drought is increasing around the world, and with it desperate conditions for farmers and rural communities. Water shortages present major economic and political threats in the coming decades. One potential solution, much speculated on but less evidenced, is the controversial practice known as "cloud-seeding." Today we sit down with scientists and entrepreneurs to discuss how this practice is being...
Ep. 100 The Mineral Challenge to Electrification 09.02.2026 51:28
Scientists agree that more electricity will be needed to power the world, and that we should use more renewable energy to meet that demand. But electrifying our world takes more minerals to build that infrastructure, especially lithium. How can industry keep up, and what are the risks and challenges in building out new mining facilities around the world? We sit down with Thea Riofrancos (Providenc...
Ep. 99 How Urban Park Revitalization Took Over 02.02.2026 56:02
Ever since the development of the High Line in New York, urban leaders have recognized the potential for unconventional spaces -- especially in economically marginalized areas or in deindustrialized spaces -- for new greenways. These spaces are often privately led, and explicitly aim for economic development as a goal of the new amenity. We sit down with Kevin Loughran (Temple University) to talk...
Ep. 98 New Ways to Find Nature All Around 28.01.2026 51:35
On today's show we have two segments both thinking through how to bring more natural solutions and greenery into the world. First is a conversation with the team at SPARK , a local non-profit that builds park spaces for students, and how they're thinking about green initiatives in parks. After that we learn about Nature's Burial , a new organization working to preserve local landscape while helpin...
Ep. 97 Growing Green 19.01.2026 55:43
Keeping a city's canopy thriving is hard work: the planting, growing, and replanting of trees takes constant effort. Today we sit down with Barry Ward (Trees for Houston) to talk all about the work of maintaining and growing Houston's tree canopy. Later in the hour our researcher Sophia talks to Robby Robinson (Buffalo Bayou Preserve) in a Critter Corner segment.
Ep. 96 Art and Conservation 15.12.2025 55:25
Teaching the science of ecology and environment is an essential part of educating the next generation of environmental caregivers. But how we communicate those core ideas and help future scientists to understand the world around us requires finding ways of connecting and learning across science and nature. Artist Boat, a local nonprofit dedicated to science education through the arts, works to bri...
Ep. 95 Writing the Gulf South 08.12.2025 55:18
Our co-host Dr. Chaney Hill (Rice University) is joined by Christopher Nicholson (Rice University) to sit down with author Kent Wascom (author of such books as The Blood of Heaven, The New Inheritors, and his newest book, The Great State of Florida). Together, they discuss the role of contemporary fiction in telling the story of the Gulf South and better understanding our natural world through fic...
Ep. 94 Gardening for Resilience 01.12.2025 54:56
Today we sit down with Austin gardener and designer Pam Penick, who tells us all about her newest book Gardens of Texas: Visions of Resilience from the Lone Star State. Over a career writing and thinking about garden spaces, Penick shares her insights into how gardens can survive and thrive even in the harshest of Texas environments.
Ep. 93 The Value of Emptiness 24.11.2025 57:24
We sit down with Christopher Brown, whose new book A Natural History of Empty Lots to discuss finding meaning in abandoned places. Then we chat with Dr. Rebecca Potts (Rice University) who discusses how we came to afford value to places out of larger theological viewpoints.
Ep. 92 jackie sumell and Endangered Feces 17.11.2025 54:00
Artist jackie sumell joins us to discuss her newest artwork, right here in Houston, Endangered Feces. A piece that helps to create ecosystems as it naturally decomposes, summell explains her process, mission, and goals with this new phase in her work.
Ep. 91 Second Nature with Nathaniel Rich 10.11.2025 56:18
Nathaniel Rich (Tulane University) is a journalist, novelist, and creative writer whose work spans deep, investigative research to historical fiction. His documenting legal challenges to PFAS was turned into the 2019 film Dark Waters. Today our researcher Antara and host Weston Twardowski sit down to chat with him about his book Second Nature, which explores how humans are inherently entangled wit...
Ep. 90 Tropical Conservation 03.11.2025 1:00:41
On today's show we sit down with Dr. Rakan Zahawi ( Charles Darwin Foundation ) and Dr. Bren Ram ( Island Conservation ) who walk us through the work global conservation organizations take on, and how the lessons from conservation groups globally can help us rethink our local environments.
Ep. 89 Gulf Screams: Halloween Special 27.10.2025 57:55
Today's episode takes a deep dive into three spooky stories: Edgar Allen Poe's The Fall of the House of Usher, Nathaniel Hawthorne's Young Goodman Brown, and Charlotte Perkins Gilman's The Giant Wisteria. Dr. Chaney Hill (Rice University) walks our researchers Antara and Sarah through how these 19th century Gothic authors turned to the environment to set mood and create haunting backdrops in three...
Ep. 88 Update from the Policy World 23.10.2025 56:00
Today we speak with two policy experts, Jennifer Walker (National Wildlife Federation) and Luke Metzger (Environment Texas) about upcoming policy decisions with immediate impact on Houston. First, Jennifer walks up through Proposition 4, which is on ballots in November and would guarantee funds for future water projects throughout the state. Second, Luke explains what the Roadless Rule is and how...
Ep. 87 Regenerative Agriculture 06.10.2025 55:47
How are local farmers working to make agriculture more sustainable? On today's show we sit down with August Stubler, the head farmer at SkyFarm at POST Houston to talk about the innovative work being done to create newer, more ecologically friendly, agricultural systems.
Ep. 86 How Conservation Works 29.09.2025 58:30
Today we sit down with Mary Anne Piacentini, Executive Director and CEO of Coastal Prairie Conservancy, to discuss the role of conservation organizations in building better environments all around us. Beyond the work of habitat creation and maintenance, conservation is a complex mix of science, law, education, and outreach that creates spaces that plants, humans, and animals can enjoy. Piacentini...
Ep. 85 Houston's New Homes are Often in Flood Zones 22.09.2025 53:19
Today we're sitting down with Yilun Cheng (Houston Chronicle) to talk about her recent series of stories focused on where and how we're building new homes in the Houston metro area. Through her reporting, the Chronicle has learned that nearly 1 in 5 new homes built in the area are in FEMA designated floodplains. We talk through what this means for flood risk throughout Houston, and what can be don...
Similar podcasts
Replaio is not a podcast publisher; show names, artwork and audio belong to their authors and are distributed through public RSS feeds.