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A space for honest, smart conversations about sustainability. Real talks with people who are shaping climate, circularity, innovation, finance, and impact in the real world. No buzzwords. No shortcuts. Just ideas, lessons, and what’s actually working. If you care about climate action, systems change, and practical innovation, this podcast is for you. **************************** In this episode, our conversation with Charlotte Morton, CEO of the World Biogas Association, goes beyond technology and beyond policy language. It is about scale. It is about urgency. And it is about treating methane prevention as what it truly is, foundational climate infrastructure. Biogas is often framed as an alternative energy solution. That framing is too small. What we explored in this episode is the systemic dimension of biogas, how it sits at the intersection of waste management, climate finance, food systems, and economic development. Methane is the fastest lever we have to slow warming in the near term. The science is clear. What is less clear, and what this conversation helps illuminate, is how to translate that science into coordinated, investable, operational systems. Biogas does that when designed correctly. It prevents emissions before they occur. It turns organic waste from a liability into measurable value. It connects local operations to global climate commitments. It creates economic dignity in supply chains that are often invisible. This episode reinforces something we believe strongly at Carrot. Circularity only becomes credible when it is verifiable. And methane prevention only becomes scalable when it is treated as infrastructure, not as an afterthought.