Inspiring action for the ocean wins top environmental prize for ex-engineer
Release Date: 05/13/2025
Mongabay Newscast
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Carlos Zorrilla has been living in an Ecuadorian cloud forest since the 1970s, and his last 30 years there have been spent mining companies seeking to extract its large copper deposits. He and his community have successfully fought such proposals by multiple firms in one of the most biodiverse regions on the planet, but sometimes at great personal risk, he tells Mongabay's podcast. While his organization, Defensa y Conservación Ecológica de Intag (), and allies in the local community notched a against mining there in a 2023 court case, he explains they're still not out of the proverbial...
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has been awarded the for protecting the marine biodiversity of Tenerife, the most populated of the Canary Islands. On this episode of Mongabay's podcast, Molina explains what led him to quit his job as a civil engineer on a road project impacting the Teno-Rasca marine protected area (MPA) and his subsequent campaign to stop the port project it was planned to connect to, which would have impacted the biodiversity of the area. His successful campaign contributed to the decision of the Canary Islands government to abandon the port plan. Now, Molina and his nonprofit are helping set up an...
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A biotech company in the United States made last month by revealing photos of genetically modified gray wolves, calling them “dire wolves,” a species that hasn’t existed for more than 10,000 years. edited 14 genes among millions of base pairs in gray wolf DNA to arrive at the pups that were shown, leaving millions of between these wolves and real dire wolves. This hasn’t stopped some observers from asserting to the public that “de-extinction” is real. But , says podcast guest Dieter Hochuli, a professor at the at the University of Sydney. Hochuli explains why ecologists like...
info_outlineCarlos Mallo Molina has been awarded the 2025 Goldman Environmental Prize for protecting the marine biodiversity of Tenerife, the most populated of the Canary Islands. On this episode of Mongabay's podcast, Molina explains what led him to quit his job as a civil engineer on a road project impacting the Teno-Rasca marine protected area (MPA) and his subsequent campaign to stop the port project it was planned to connect to, which would have impacted the biodiversity of the area.
His successful campaign contributed to the decision of the Canary Islands government to abandon the port plan. Now, Molina and his nonprofit Innoceana are helping set up an environmental education center in its place.
"I was going diving every weekend in my free time, and it was full of sea turtles, it was full of whales, it was full of marine life. And so, I think understanding how my impact was going to destroy [a] marine protected area … I think that was where I had my biggest click in my brain … I need to do something to change what I'm doing, in [a] way that I can protect this ocean," he says.
Image Credit: Pinnacles of Fonsalía, Tenerife, Canary Islands. Photo by Innoceana.
B-roll Credit: Goldman Environmental Prize
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Timecodes
(00:00) From engineer to activist
(05:31) The biodiversity of Teno-Rasca
(06:58) Fighting for protection
(12:13) Shutting the port down
(16:29) A future of sustainable tourism?
(21:02) Future projects
(22:19) Carlos’ connection to the ocean