

Future Tense
ABC listen
A critical look at new technologies, new approaches and new ways of thinking, from politics to media to environmental sustainability.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Sep 10, 2022 • 30min
Air conditioning: keeping us cool but making the planet hotter
Around two billion air conditioners are currently in use across the globe but the amount of electricity they use is not sustainable, so what are some alternatives?

Sep 3, 2022 • 30min
The opportunity costs of corporate welfare
Public money is being used to bankroll already wealthy private corporations. So, is there any real benefit to taxpayers?

Aug 28, 2022 • 30min
Xenobots - the tiny robots with enormous potential
They’re small, robotic in nature and formed from living frog cells. Xenobots could play an important part in future health care treatments. But whether or not they represent a new form of life is open to debate. And also, how young people access news content – it’s complicated! We hear about the latest research from the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism.

Aug 21, 2022 • 30min
How ancient trees could help in the fight against climate change
Unlike animals, trees don't have a biological clock, under ideal conditions they can live for thousands of years. Scientists say understanding how ancient trees have survived could help us protect forests from the ravages of climate change. But working out how to propagate them is the tricky part.

Aug 14, 2022 • 29min
Airships return to the skies and a serious problem that could cripple long-range space travel
They were once the very symbol of modernity, but over the past eighty years, Airships have become objects of curiosity and nostalgia. Now, several new airship ventures look likely to put the zip back into zeppelins. Also, why our bones could be the greatest barrier to colonising Mars.

Aug 7, 2022 • 0sec
The strange case of the trees that grow metal and how to harvest them
Agromining is a new process for extracting large quantities of metals such as cobalt and nickel from the sap and leaves of rare plants known as hyperaccumulators. Australian scientists have already established a test farm in Malaysia and it’s hoped the technology will one day provide poor communities with a new source of income, while also helping to rehabilitate former mining sites. Also, why do some people get sick after using Virtual Reality and is that holding back the technology? And a new approach to data storage and processing called Edge Computing.

Jul 31, 2022 • 29min
eDNA monitoring; 'telehealth' for animals; and using animals as early warning system for disasters
Scientists have perfected a system for better sampling animal DNA in the wild. The new process promises a less-invasive way of measuring biodiversity. We also look at the predictive powers of animals and how tracking their movements enmass could help foretell impending disasters. And how remote health monitoring technology can help wildlife and livestock.

Jul 24, 2022 • 29min
The Digital Self, Web3 and reclaiming your online identity
How is our sense of identity changing as our online and offline experiences increasingly merge? What grounds a person’s online persona (or personas) to the physical world? And is such a tie important?

Jul 17, 2022 • 29min
The real worth of net zero is debateable
Net Zero isn’t just a climate target, it’s become a badge of commitment in the global effort to bring down Greenhouse Gas emissions. But its real worth is debateable, with some environmentalists and climate scientists arguing it’s now an impediment to genuine change. Treating Net Zero as an end in itself, they say, has to stop.

Jul 10, 2022 • 29min
Emotional Intelligence and the promise of a better workplace
It’s not enough to be smart. If you’re to avoid being automated out of a job in future, you’ll need to develop your Emotional Intelligence. New research suggests more and more companies see an organisational benefit in promoting such skills. But is the rhetoric being backed up with training? Also, a reality check on the “great resignation” - has the pandemic really spawned a new era of job mobility?