Episodes

  • 19: Unpacking Oil Palm: 80 million
    Mar 31 2026

    From chocolate and shampoo to food, palm oil can be found in a range of packaged goods on the supermarket shelves and is used throughout industry. Its versatility makes it difficult to replace yet its production remains controversial due to high greenhouse gas emissions, the extensive deforestation carried out in Southeast Asia in the 1990s to make way for oil palm plantations, and habitat loss for a range of endangered species. So how can the oil palm industry become more sustainable? In this episode Alice Hope and Sue Nelson visit the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew to meet palm house manager Will Spoelstra, who offers insight into the plant.

    UKCEH scientists Dr Julia Drewer and Professor Niall McNamara share insights from their research in Malaysia to improve soil quality and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Plus Sue and Alice hear from the Malaysian partners in that research – Dr Reza Azmi from the Social Enterprise Wild Asia - about how this trial is helping small-scale producers adopt more sustainable practices to support livelihoods and the environment. Finally the conversation shifts to Africa, where the oil palm originated from, as Dr Nick Cowan explains how lessons learned in Asia are being applied to new regions.

    Hosts: Sue Nelson and Alice Hope

    Producer: Rachael Buchanan

    Counting the Earth is a Boffin Media Production for the UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology.

    Find out more:

    Building a sustainable future for oil palm in West Africa

    Wild Asia


    Innovations in Practice : The Pathway to Nature-Positive, Low-Carbon Palm Oil


    Roundtable for Sustainable Palm Oil
    WWF Palm Oil Buyers Scorecard
    Show more Show less
    48 mins
  • 18: Whiplash weather: 90
    Feb 10 2026

    Let’s talk drought. Yes, that’s right, drought! Our weather is experiencing extremes - from flooding to drought - so Alice and Sue delve into this whiplash weather with UKCEH senior hydrologist Lucy Barker. With the latest Hydrological Summary showing that January has been much wetter than average, they explore whether that is enough to replenish water reserves following the extended drought in 2025.

    Alice and Sue also catch up with UKCEH micro-meteorologist Dr Jon Evans at a COSMOS-UK field site at Chimney Meadows Nature Reserve in Oxfordshire, one of 39 sites which make up a national soil moisture monitoring network that’s literally out of this world. Soil moisture is just one measure alongside rainfall, river flows, groundwater data that UKCEH gathers in partnership with others to produce monthly hydrological summaries – an essential tool for environmental regulators, government agencies, water companies, researchers and farmers.

    Hosts: Sue Nelson and Alice Hope

    Producer: Rachael Buchanan

    Counting the Earth is a Boffin Media Production for the UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology.

    Find out more:
    Hydrological Summary
    UK Water Resources Portal brings together all the data from the Hydrological Summaries – including COSMOS-UK – in near real time.
    COSMOS UK
    Floods and Droughts Research Infrastructure (FDRI)
    Water UK’s Waters Worth Saving page.

    Show more Show less
    39 mins
  • 17: The Burning Issue: 3.7 million
    Oct 16 2025
    Wildfires are evolving. Around the world they are becoming bigger, burning hotter, and harder to control with devastating impacts on humans, the economy and the environment. In this episode, Alice and Sue talk to UKCEH wildfire scientist Dr Douglas Kelley who outlines the causes of this change, drawing on examples from California and the Pantanal, the worlds’ largest tropical wetland.
    Closer to home, it has been a record year for wildfires in the UK. Alice catches up with Station Commander and Wildfire Tactical Adviser Andy Elliott from Dorset and Wiltshire Fire and Rescue Service. They visit Holt Heath National Nature Reserve in Dorset, the site of a fierce large scale blaze in August. Andy reveals that, due to the fire’s intensity, the lowland heath landscape may take up to 30 years to recover.

    Hosts: Sue Nelson and Alice Hope

    Producer: Rachael Buchanan

    Counting the Earth is a Boffin Media Production for the UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology.

    Find out more:

    UKCEH press release on the State of Wildfires report.

    The State of Wildfires project, including the latest report. The State of Wildfires project is co-led by the UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology, University of East Anglia, the Met Office and the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts.

    The National Fire Chiefs Council Wildfire Aware campaign.
    Show more Show less
    39 mins
  • 16: Encounters of the Invasive Kind: 2,104
    May 12 2025
    What do raccoons, purple pitcher plants, signal crayfish and the yellow-legged hornet all have in common? No, this is not a joke - far from it. They are all on the GB invasive non-native species alert list. The introduction of invasive non-native species is one of the top causes of biodiversity loss worldwide. In this episode Sue and Alice meet up with UKCEH ecologist Professor Helen Roy to delve into the challenges posed by invasive non-native species and explore their environmental, economic, and social impacts.
    They also catch up with Dr Olaf Booy, Technical Coordinator for the GB Non-native Species Secretariat, part of the Animal and Plant Health Agency, to find out about the work that goes on to identify, detect, monitor and eradicate invasive non-native species. Olaf also spoke about how events such Invasive Species Week (12-18 May) help to raise awareness of the issue and what you can do to help and get involved.

    Hosts: Sue Nelson and Alice Hope

    Producer: Rachael Buchanan

    Counting the Earth is a Boffin Media Production for the UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology.

    Find out more:
    Invasive Species Week – 12-18 May 2025
    Non-native Species Secretariat
    ID sheets for Invasive Non-native Species
    Check, Clean, Dry
    Be Plant Wise
    Record a sighting of an invasive non-native species, especially an alert species
    Show more Show less
    40 mins
  • 15: Resistance Rising: 1.14 million
    Mar 27 2025
    In this episode, Alice and Sue visit the River Kennet and the Reading Sewage Treatment Works to explore antimicrobial resistance (AMR), a growing global issue. In 2021 1.14 million deaths were attributed to antimicrobial resistant bacterial infections, according to the UN Environment Programme. AMR occurs when bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites become resistant to the medicines that are meant to kill or treat them. Microorganisms from our waste, along with chemicals from our homes (like medications, cleaning products, and antifungal shampoos), contribute to this problem when entering our watercourses, along with agricultural and urban runoff.
    Alice and Sue meet with Dr Holly Tipper and Dr Isobel Stanton, molecular microbiologists at UKCEH, to learn more about their research on AMR, what we know and where the knowledge gaps are and role of the environment in the development of AMR in microbes. Then, they put on boots, hats, Hi-Viz jackets, and goggles to see for themselves the wastewater journey through the treatment works with Dan Freeman, lead for Thames Water’s Chemical Investigation Programme, providing insight into monitoring of emerging contaminants.

    Hosts: Sue Nelson and Alice Hope

    Producer: Rachael Buchanan

    Counting the Earth is a Boffin Media Production for the UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology.

    Find out more about AMR research at UKCEH
    https://www.ceh.ac.uk/news-and-media/blogs/our-research-will-inform-action-tackle-amr-environment-and-risk-human-health

    The Naked Scientist podcast on AMR, featuring Dr Andrew Singer from UKCEH
    https://www.thenakedscientists.com/podcasts/naked-scientists-podcast/amr-unleashed-silent-pandemic

    Show more Show less
    35 mins
  • 14: Top of the crops: 2080
    Jan 24 2025
    In this episode, Alice and Sue time travel to the year 2080, to explore what crops we might be growing in the UK, after 50 years of a changing climate. They speak with UKCEH Spatial Ecologist Dr John Redhead about horizon- scanning research on how climate change could shape the suitability of crops in the UK and the challenges this brings for UK farming systems.
    Alice also speaks with Josiah Meldrum from the UK-based wholefoods supplier Hodmedods to explore the benefits of beans and uncover how crops like chickpeas and lentils are already being cultivated in the UK. They also discuss ongoing trials of other crops, which are setting the stage for a more diverse and sustainable agricultural future.
    Read more about the research in our media release
    https://www.ceh.ac.uk/press/scientists-predict-what-will-be-top-crops-2080-due-climate-change


    and the paper in Environmental Resilience and Sustainability
    https://doi.org/10.1002/cli2.70007


    Show more Show less
    36 mins
  • 13: Slow the flow: 5.7 million
    Dec 12 2024
    In England alone, an estimated 5.7 million properties are at risk of flooding from rivers, the sea, surface water and groundwater.

    In this episode and in the wake of Storm Bert, Alice and Sue visit the Bruern Estate in Oxfordshire to explore how Natural Flood Management measures are reducing flood risks downstream in Milton-under-Wychwood. UKCEH senior hydrologist Dr Alejandro Dussaillant explains how a holistic nature-based approach can work alongside more traditional flood management techniques to help address the challenges presented by the climate crisis and changes in land use.

    Alice and Sue also speak with Ann Berkeley from Wild Oxfordshire, to learn how features such as leaky woody dams, swales, wet woodlands and field corner bunds are helping to manage water flow through the catchment, bringing co-benefits along the way. UKCEH hydrologists Neeraj Sah and Ponnambalam Rameshwaran share insights from the ongoing monitoring activity to evaluate the longer-term effectiveness, co-benefits and any trade-offs to consider of these innovative approaches.

    For more information about the work done at the Bruern Estate and across the Evenlode Catchment please see the website for that project



    Hosts: Sue Nelson and Alice Hope

    Producer: Rachael Buchanan

    Counting the Earth is a Boffin Media Production for the UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology.
    Show more Show less
    31 mins
  • 12: Breaking down microplastics: 115
    Nov 25 2024
    Microplastics are everywhere—tiny plastic particles that permeate our soil, water, food, drinking supplies, and even our bodies. But how much do we actually understand about their long-term effects on our health and the environment?

    In this episode, Alice visits UKCEH labs in Wallingford to explore these questions. Pollution scientist Dr Richard Cross shares insights into how microplastics impact the environment, and Dr Gbotemi Adediran introduces the innovative CoreMis facility, which is pushing the boundaries by studying even smaller particles: nanoplastics, which are so tiny they're invisible to the naked eye.

    Also, Sue discusses how microplastics are present in the air we breathe and what that could mean for human health with Dr Stephanie Wright, from the Medical Research Council’s Centre for Environment and Health at Imperial College London.

    Hosts: Sue Nelson and Alice Hope

    Producer: Rachael Buchanan

    Counting the Earth is a Boffin Media Production for the UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology.


    Show more Show less
    43 mins