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Alex Bloomberg

2episodes
1podcast

We have 2 summarized appearances for Alex Bloomberg so far. Browse all podcasts to discover more episodes.

Featured On 1 Podcast

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2 episodes

AI Summary

→ WHAT IT COVERS Reporter Kendra Pierre-Louis examines how car-centric propaganda displaced bicycles from American culture, explores the historical dominance of cycling before 1950, and presents evidence that biking offers accessible, joyful, climate-friendly transportation for diverse populations. → KEY INSIGHTS - **Historical infrastructure shift:** Wealthy cycling clubs lobbied for paved roads in the early 1900s, then abandoned bikes for cars and redirected their political capital toward automobile infrastructure, leading to the 1956 Interstate Highway System that banned bikes on many roads. - **Transportation emissions reduction:** Over 50% of US car trips are under six miles one-way, roughly 30 minutes by bike. Replacing these short car trips with cycling significantly reduces the 25% of greenhouse gas emissions from transportation, including emissions from EV manufacturing. - **Dutch bicycle design advantages:** Upright Dutch-style bikes with swept-back handlebars, fenders, chain guards, lights, kickstands, and cargo racks enable comfortable commuting without spandex or helmets. The upright position prevents forward falls and allows conversation while riding, making cycling practical for groceries and transporting children. - **Disability accessibility expansion:** Cycling provides mobility for people who cannot drive due to vision impairments, intellectual disabilities, or physical conditions. Adaptive bikes including tandems, recumbent bikes, trikes, hand cycles, and electric-assist models offer transportation independence where public transit is inadequate. → NOTABLE MOMENT Between 2010 and 2019, Black cyclists increased by 98% and Hispanic cyclists by 29%, while white cyclists grew only 3%, fundamentally challenging the stereotype of cyclists as predominantly white males in spandex and demonstrating cycling's expanding demographic reach. 💼 SPONSORS [{"name": "LifeLock", "url": "lifelock.com/podcast"}] 🏷️ Urban Transportation, Climate Solutions, Cycling Infrastructure, Disability Mobility

How to Save a Planet

Presenting: What If We Get It Right?

How to Save a Planet
66 minPodcast Co-Founder/Former Co-Host

AI Summary

→ WHAT IT COVERS Ayanna Elizabeth Johnson reunites with former How to Save a Planet co-host Alex Bloomberg to discuss his transition from podcast entrepreneur to climate tech founder of Daisy Chain Energy, solving building decarbonization challenges. → KEY INSIGHTS - **Split Incentive Problem:** Multiunit buildings face a financial barrier to solar adoption because building owners pay installation costs (often $1 million+) but individual residents pay separate utility bills, preventing anyone from capturing the savings that would justify the investment. - **Submetering Solution:** Daisy Chain Energy aggregates building electricity usage under one commercial-rate meter (cheaper than residential rates), then bills residents individually. The rate difference generates revenue to fund solar panels, heat pumps, and electrification upgrades while lowering resident costs. - **Building Carbon Ratings:** New York City assigns A-F carbon ratings to buildings, creating social pressure and property value concerns that motivate condo boards to act. Buildings with F ratings face potential fines and decreased resale values, making climate action economically rational beyond environmental concerns. - **Virtual Power Plants:** Buildings with submetering software can sell curtailed electricity back to utilities during peak demand events when rates spike 100-1000x normal prices. This transforms buildings from passive consumers into active grid participants generating revenue through demand response programs. - **Climate Communication Strategy:** Target solutions-focused content at people already concerned about climate rather than trying to convince skeptics. Make clean alternatives cheaper and better than fossil fuel options so adoption happens naturally without requiring lifestyle sacrifice or mass behavioral change. → NOTABLE MOMENT Bloomberg discovered that convincing his 180-unit condo board to decarbonize required years of volunteer meetings, expensive studies, and millions in upfront costs with 150-year payback periods, revealing that individual building action alone cannot scale fast enough to meet climate goals. 💼 SPONSORS None detected 🏷️ Building Decarbonization, Climate Tech Entrepreneurship, Urban Sustainability, Virtual Power Plants, Clean Energy Finance

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