Season 2, Episode 8: Dan Esty

 
 

Nov. 4, 2021

You can't solve 21st Century environmental problems with 20th Century laws and policies. We face a climate crisis and a host of intertwined environmental problems. Science and technology have rapidly advanced. Environmental justice has come to the fore. It's time to update environmental policy.

That’s the message of Dan Esty, today’s guest on the Mother Earth Podcast. In this conversation, Dan provides a blueprint for updating our environmental laws and policies. He argues that while 20th Century environmental laws and policies served 20th century purposes, “it’s time to refresh the game plan.” 

Dan is a professor at the Yale Schools of Law, Environment, and Management and is director of the Yale Center for Environmental Law and Policy. He's the author or editor of twelve books, including 40 Big Ideas for a Sustainable Future and the award winning Green to Gold, named a top "green business" book of the past decade. Dan is also the former commissioner of Connecticut's Department of Energy and Environmental Protection and served as a high-ranking US EPA official who helped negotiate the 1992 climate treaty in Rio de Janeiro.

In our discussion, Dan proclaims that we all have the right to a healthy environment and that “a sustainability imperative is a foundational principle for life on the planet Earth in the 21st century.” He calls for an end to externalities and wants businesses to pay for the right to pollute in order to align businesses' need for profit with society's need for a healthy and safe environment. Doing so will also allow for new and better ways for companies to reduce pollution while providing value to both shareholders and a broad set of societal stakeholders.

Learn more about Dan's take on modernizing environmental policy and incentivizing businesses to operate sustainably in this week’s episode of the Mother Earth Podcast.

Headshot of Dan Esty
“The end of externalities is now the right model. That is the paradigm shift. The real goal needs to be moving towards a zero harm reality.”
— Dan Esty

Show Notes