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Meet the 2026 VISTA Award Winners

Climate Correction™ Podcast

Release Date: 03/01/2026

Voices of Florida Farmers: Building a Circular Bioeconomy show art Voices of Florida Farmers: Building a Circular Bioeconomy

Climate Correction™ Podcast

Florida agriculture quietly underpins everyday life in the Sunshine State, shaping everything from grocery prices and water quality to how communities bounce back after a hurricane. In this episode of the Climate Correction Podcast, host Shannon Maganiezin sits down with the team behind the newly released report, Voices of Florida Farmers: Building a Circular Bioeconomy, to explore how the state's farmers, ranchers, foresters, and aquaculturists are producing more with less land, water, and resources, while keeping food...

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Climate Correction™ Podcast

Season 6 | Episode 135 Episode Title: When the Grid Goes Down: Decarbonizing Disaster Response When disaster strikes, most people see only devastation. Will Heegaard, founding director of The Footprint Project, sees an opportunity. His perspective was shaped by his work as a paramedic deploying solar refrigeration during the Ebola outbreak in West Africa with International Medical Corps, and by hands-on disaster relief with Team Rubicon across Louisiana, Minnesota, and Puerto Rico, Will developed a guiding philosophy rooted in working with disruption rather than against it. In this episode,...

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Climate Correction™ Podcast

Hospitals exist to protect human health, yet they sit squarely on the front lines of climate risk. They are among the most energy-intensive buildings in our economy, operating 24/7 with zero tolerance for failure. The healthcare sector itself is a significant contributor to greenhouse gas emissions. A difficult paradox emerges: how do you care for people without contributing to the very conditions that make them sick? In this episode of the Climate Correction Podcast, we explore how one children's hospital is tackling that challenge head-on, turning...

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Climate Correction™ Podcast

Season 6, Episode: 133 Peatlands 101 - Florida's Hidden Climate Superpower In this episode, we're joined by two leading scientists from The Nature Conservancy to explore one of the most under-recognized natural climate solutions on the planet: peatlands. Catherine Fitzgerald, global lead for peatlands at The Nature Conservancy, brings a wealth of expertise in unlocking equitable and durable opportunities to conserve and restore peatlands worldwide. With a Master of Environmental Management from Duke University and years of experience as a professional wetland scientist, Catherine leads...

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Meet the 2026 VISTA Award Winners show art Meet the 2026 VISTA Award Winners

Climate Correction™ Podcast

In this special episode of Climate Correction Podcast, we celebrate the power of student-led climate innovation and announce the 2026 VoLo VISTA Award Winners. The VISTA Award, created by VoLo Foundation, recognizes students who exemplify leadership, vision, innovation, sustainability, technology, and action-oriented climate solutions. This year’s winning project does all of that and more. We are joined by an extraordinary research team from the University of Miami Department of Civil and Architectural Engineering. The team includes Jasmine Rodriguez, a first-year PhD student; Farzad...

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The Road From COP30 Starts in the Ocean show art The Road From COP30 Starts in the Ocean

Climate Correction™ Podcast

February 2026 | Season 6, Episode 131 The Road after COP30 Starts in the Ocean In this episode of the Climate Correction Podcast, we explore why the future of climate action, food security, and biodiversity is inseparable from the ocean. The conversation centers on the growing recognition that fish, seaweed, and other aquatic foods are not just economic resources, but climate-smart nutrition solutions with an outsized role in building resilient food systems. Our guest is Karly Kelso, Acting Senior Director of Global Ocean Strategies at the Environmental Defense Fund. Karly sits at the...

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The Interconnectivity of Everything in the Ocean with Leneita Fix of The Reef Institute show art The Interconnectivity of Everything in the Ocean with Leneita Fix of The Reef Institute

Climate Correction™ Podcast

In this episode of the Climate Correction™ Podcast, we’re joined by Leneita Fix, founding leader and executive director of The Reef Institute, one of Florida and the Caribbean’s most important hubs for coral rescue, restoration, and ocean literacy. Leneita shares how The Reef Institute’s groundbreaking Rescue to Reef model is transforming the future of coral conservation through a full-spectrum approach that includes emergency rescues, long-term holding and biobanking, indoor coral spawning, juvenile rearing, and...

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Climate Correction™ Podcast

  In this special holiday episode of Climate Correction Podcast, we welcome Dr. Pablo Ribeiro Dias, co-founder and chief technology officer at , a pioneering, tech-driven recycling company producing sustainable, domestic materials at scale for the solar industry. Dr. Dias is a world-renowned researcher in solar PV module and e-waste recycling technologies. He leads innovation in high-value, low-cost recycling processes that are shaping the future of renewable energy.  With dual PhDs from UFRGS (Brazil) and Macquarie University (Australia), and a master’s in photovoltaics...

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Catherine Valdivieso and the SwapCo App Make Sustainability Stylish show art Catherine Valdivieso and the SwapCo App Make Sustainability Stylish

Climate Correction™ Podcast

Show notes for this episode come from an article that has been republished with approval from the author, Carlos Roa. See the .   As billions of garments end up in landfills each year, Catherine Valdivieso’s SwapCo app makes sustainable fashion simple by helping users “swipe, match and swap” clothes while curbing overconsumption this holiday season   By Carlos Roa   According to , the fashion industry produces more than 100 billion garments each year, and an estimated 92 million tons of them end up in landfills. That is the equivalent of a garbage...

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Climate Correction™ Podcast

What if clean energy wasn’t just about powering our homes, but about powering opportunity? My guest today believes renewable energy can be the bridge to economic justice, workforce empowerment, and a more inclusive future. On this episode of the Climate Correction Podcast, I’m joined by Erica Mackie, P.E., co-founder and Co-CEO of GRID Alternatives, the nonprofit that has turned solar into a tool for community transformation. From day one, Erica has led GRID’s growth into a national force—bringing renewable energy technology and job training directly to underserved communities. Along...

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In this special episode of Climate Correction Podcast, we celebrate the power of student-led climate innovation and announce the 2026 VoLo VISTA Award Winners. The VISTA Award, created by VoLo Foundation, recognizes students who exemplify leadership, vision, innovation, sustainability, technology, and action-oriented climate solutions. This year’s winning project does all of that and more.

We are joined by an extraordinary research team from the University of Miami Department of Civil and Architectural Engineering. The team includes Jasmine Rodriguez, a first-year PhD student; Farzad Rezaeicherati, a second-year PhD candidate; Sevil Ozsut, also a second-year PhD candidate; and their advising professor, Dr. Ali G. Together, they are advancing a breakthrough solution at the intersection of materials science, climate mitigation, and Florida’s natural ecosystems.

Their winning project is called Functionalization and Pre-Carbonation of Florida-Native Algae Biochar for Carbon Negative Cementitious Composites. It reimagines one of the most carbon-intensive materials on Earth: concrete. Cement production alone accounts for roughly eight percent of global CO₂ emissions. This team is tackling that challenge head-on by replacing a significant portion of cement with algae-derived biochar sourced from Florida-grown algae.

In simple terms, the team transforms algae into a charcoal-like material that naturally traps carbon. They then chemically treat, or “functionalize,” this biochar so it bonds effectively with concrete, overcoming a major limitation seen in past biochar-concrete experiments where strength and durability were compromised. Their innovation doesn’t just maintain structural performance; it enhances it. Even more importantly, the process permanently stores CO₂ inside the concrete itself, turning a traditionally high-emissions material into a carbon-storing one.

During the episode, Jasmine walks us through the science behind the process, the climate and construction challenges they set out to solve, and how this novel idea emerged. The team explains how they measure success through rigorous lab testing at the University of Miami, evaluating strength, durability, workability, and long-term carbon storage. We also explore what large-scale, real-world application could look like, from infrastructure and buildings to broader adoption within the construction industry.

The conversation turns toward what’s next: scaling the research, refining the material, and moving closer to real-world deployment. The team shares how the $25,000 VISTA Award grant will directly support advanced testing, materials optimization, and the next phase of development needed to bring this solution closer to market.

Then comes the moment no one saw coming. The interview was presented as a screening with “finalists.” At the end, host Shannon Maganiezin reveals the truth. This team isn’t just in the running; they are the 2026 VoLo VISTA Award Winners. The episode closes with a raw, joyful reaction that captures the heart of climate innovation, young leaders doing serious science, rooted in place, and driven by the belief that better solutions are possible.

This episode is a reminder that the future of climate solutions is already being built in university labs, by students who refuse to accept the status quo, and by ideas bold enough to turn algae into carbon-negative concrete.