Tangelic Talks – Season 04 | Episode 02
Investigating the Climate Story Beneath the Headlines: Systems, Power & Truth w/ Rachel Donald
11 minutes to read
In this thought-provoking episode of Tangelic Talks, co-hosts Victoria Cornelio and Andres Tamez sit down with Rachel Donald — investigative journalist, systems thinker, and creator of Planet Critical. Rachel doesn’t just report on crises — she interrogates why they exist in the first place. From climate finance to geopolitical resource extraction, from media ethics to economic narratives, this conversation challenges the dominant stories we’re told about progress, sustainability, and growth.
Investigative Journalism in the Age of Climate Collapse
Rachel Donald’s path into investigative journalism wasn’t accidental.
As a fourth-generation journalist, she grew up immersed in the craft of questioning authority and identifying inconsistencies in narratives. While she initially resisted following the same career path, her growing disillusionment with global systems ultimately led her toward it.
Her turning point came when she noticed something missing in mainstream reporting:
Not enough stories were asking systemic questions.
Rather than simply documenting environmental damage or political decisions, she became interested in examining:
- Who benefits from the status quo
- Who bears the cost of ecological destruction
- Why many proposed climate solutions fall short
This shift toward systems thinking defines her work today.
Through Planet Critical, Rachel now reaches audiences in over 180 countries — a testament to growing public demand for journalism that examines root causes rather than surface-level events.
Connecting the Climate Crisis to Power and Economics
One of the most compelling insights from this episode is Rachel’s emphasis on “flows.”
In her investigative process, she follows:
- Financial flows
- Energy flows
- Material flows
- Social capital flows
These interconnected systems shape our modern economy.
As she explains, our global economy is not abstract — it is physical.
GDP growth reflects material extraction.
Digital infrastructure depends on physical resources.
Economic expansion often mirrors ecological depletion.
This perspective reframes the climate crisis as more than an environmental issue.
Instead, Rachel describes it as:
A crisis of violence, greed, and systemic imbalance.
From this lens, climate change is not simply a technological challenge — it is a structural one.
Why Legacy Climate Narratives Fall Short
Traditional climate coverage often focuses on:
- Emissions targets
- Renewable technologies
- Policy commitments
While important, these conversations frequently overlook deeper dynamics.
Rachel argues that the climate crisis cannot be fully understood without examining:
- Resource extraction
- Wealth concentration
- Geopolitical competition
- Economic growth models
For example, the link between material consumption and economic success remains largely unquestioned in dominant narratives.
Yet evidence increasingly shows that GDP growth no longer guarantees improved quality of life.
This disconnect is creating generational tension.
Many younger audiences are beginning to question whether current economic systems truly serve human well-being or planetary stability.
The Myth of a Controlled System
A recurring theme in the conversation is the rejection of conspiracy-style thinking.
Rachel does not view global crises as the result of coordinated elite control.
Instead, she describes the current system as:
A runaway train built over centuries of colonization, extraction, and industrial expansion.
This perspective shifts the conversation from blame to structural understanding.
Modern institutions — governments, corporations, financial systems — are not necessarily orchestrating collapse.
Rather, they are embedded within a system that prioritizes growth, often at the expense of resilience.
And this system now operates with momentum that is difficult to slow.
Climate Finance: Political, Not Neutral
One of the episode’s most important discussions centers on climate finance.
Too often framed as a technical issue, climate funding is inherently political.
Key questions include:
- Who funds climate adaptation?
- Who decides how funds are allocated?
- Which nations are expected to sacrifice resource development?
Rachel highlights the complexity of asking resource-rich developing countries to leave fossil fuels untouched — especially when industrialized nations built wealth through similar extraction.
In this context, climate finance becomes an issue of equity.
Wealthier nations may need to fund infrastructure alternatives to ensure that developing regions can pursue sustainable pathways without replicating historical harm.
The Politics Behind Climate Investment
Climate funding decisions also reveal deeper geopolitical concerns.
For example, resistance to international climate funds may stem from fears of legal accountability.
Providing financial support for climate damage could imply acknowledgment of historical responsibility — potentially opening pathways for legal claims.
This illustrates why climate finance cannot be treated as a purely economic mechanism.
It reflects power dynamics, historical injustice, and competing national interests.
The Resource Rush and Modern Geopolitics
Rachel’s investigative reporting often focuses on how resource competition shapes global conflict.
She notes that many modern tensions are driven not only by ideological differences but by material interests.
Examples include:
- Fossil fuel reserves
- Strategic minerals
- Precious metals
Cultural narratives — such as religious or political divides — may sometimes obscure underlying economic motivations.
States may frame conflicts through identity or ideology while pursuing access to resources.
Understanding these dynamics is essential for unpacking the true drivers of environmental and geopolitical instability.
Rethinking Solutions: Growth vs. Sustainability
The episode also challenges assumptions about technological solutions.
While innovations like renewable energy and nuclear power offer promise, Rachel raises a critical question:
What happens when energy becomes unlimited?
Human societies use energy to transform the natural world.
Without limits, increased energy access could accelerate extraction and consumption rather than reduce it.
This introduces an important tension:
Can technological advancement alone solve ecological problems — or must cultural attitudes toward consumption also change?
Rachel expresses interest in systems that encourage moderation.
For example, intermittent energy sources may foster awareness of limits, prompting societies to rethink consumption patterns.
Localized Solutions and Community Agency
Another key takeaway is the importance of localized approaches.
Global challenges require global cooperation — but solutions must reflect local realities.
Different regions face distinct:
- Environmental conditions
- Cultural contexts
- Economic priorities
A one-size-fits-all model may overlook these nuances.
Community-scale initiatives — such as localized renewable energy projects — can empower populations to adapt solutions to their needs.
This approach also challenges centralized models of decision-making.
Moving Beyond Hope: The Role of Anger
Perhaps the most emotionally resonant moment of the episode comes when Rachel addresses climate burnout.
Rather than promoting optimism as the primary motivational force, she highlights the role of anger.
Anger, she argues, can be productive.
It reflects:
- Recognition of injustice
- Desire for change
- Refusal to accept harmful norms
When channeled constructively, anger can drive collective action.
Storytelling that acknowledges frustration and grief may resonate more authentically than narratives that insist on hope.
Storytelling as Intervention
Ultimately, Rachel views journalism not as passive observation but as active intervention.
Effective storytelling can:
- Reveal hidden connections
- Challenge dominant assumptions
- Inspire agency
Even dystopian narratives can mobilize action by provoking emotional engagement.
For example, cultural stories that highlight injustice often increase willingness to resist harmful systems.
This underscores the importance of honest reporting — even when it is uncomfortable.
A Climate Conversation That Looks Deeper
This episode of Tangelic Talks invites listeners to reconsider how climate issues are framed.
Rather than focusing solely on emissions or innovation, Rachel Donald encourages audiences to examine:
- Economic structures
- Political incentives
- Resource competition
- Cultural narratives
These deeper forces shape the trajectory of both crisis and response.
Understanding them is essential for meaningful change.
Final Reflection
The climate story is not just about carbon.
It is about power, systems, and choices.
As Victoria and Andres close the episode, they emphasize the importance of continuing these conversations — not only in podcasts but through ongoing dialogue and storytelling.
Because confronting uncomfortable truths may be the first step toward building a more just and resilient future.
Thought Provoking Q&A Session with Rachel Donald
"I think people want a sense of realism and they want to be told that they are allowed to feel sort of the
full spectrum of things. I often hear that it's people working in sort of like the institutional space that are
feeling burnt out... they've all just been banging their heads against walls for decades, essentially, like not
achieving very much to be totally frank. I think to feel futile, to feel ineffective is depressing. So whatever
gets you feeling effective and angry, I think is helpful."
"I don't feel burnt out doing my work and I don't feel despair doing my work... I feel angry. I am so
angry. I'm furious with the state of the world. I'm angry deep in my bones and it keeps me going. Emotion
travels the fastest on social media. It's anger, it's anger. If you tell [an audience] that there's something to
be hopeful about, they might just not believe you at this stage. I think storytellers should focus... on what
people can achieve together and also how they can fight back together.
Apparently watching the Hunger Games film actually increases people's willingness to hypothetically
resist against authoritarianism. I don't think anybody watched the Hunger Games and felt hopeful... I
think they're feeling pretty angry. What is this crazy system that has been set up that these poor children
are having to engage in? You should feel the same way about this reality. This timeline sucks. Get angry about it."
"We're so diverse culturally and it's wonderful to be diverse culturally. I've interviewed Indigenous
people like deep in the forests of Borneo... they actively choose to not live near a hospital because they
want to live as much as they can in their home environment. And then you've got these degrowth papers
being like, everyone needs to have access to Swiss level healthcare. Oh, hang on. Maybe not though.
[People] in the UK... are not best [equipped] to tell the Moroccans what they need."
"Take responsibility for your part, do your thing, try and get people on board that you can relate to and
who can relate to you. Think about the difference between... Scotland and Morocco, right? Such different
landscapes, they are going to handle the... poly crisis very, very differently."
Rachel Donald
Investigative Journalist and Founder of Planet Critical
Rachel Donald investigates why the world is in crisis—and what to do about it.
She has taught at universities, produced guerrilla radio programs, and written world exclusives for major papers. She now publishes everything independently on Planet: Critical and its sister project, Planet: Coordinate, a documentary series investigating what to do for a world in crisis. She considers her work as weaving, connecting the dots of the big picture, and is regularly invited to speak at conferences and lecture at universities.
Rachel is currently writing her first book HER BODY, OUR CHOICE which will be published by Virago in early 2027.