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In September 2025, Vladimir Putin acknowledged that the climate crisis presents “risks” for Russia that are “very dangerous”. Though not unprecedented, such statements differ from other Russian government messaging that...
Are Russian climate politics changing? is an episode from The Economy, Land & Climate Podcast by Land and Climate Review . In September 2025, Vladimir Putin acknowledged that the climate crisis presents “risks” for Russia that are “very dan...
This episode belongs to The Economy, Land & Climate Podcast.
Use the player on this page to stream the episode online.
Published Feb 6, 2026, 34:13 long, audio available.
In September 2025, Vladimir Putin acknowledged that the climate crisis presents “risks” for Russia that are “very dangerous”. Though not unprecedented, such statements differ from other Russian government messaging that has argued climate threats are overstated as part of a Western agenda, or that climate change could benefit the country. Is the state’s narrative changing? This week on The Land and Climate Podcast, Alasdair MacEwen is joined by Marianna Poberezhskaya to discuss the history of complex and often contradictory climate politics in Russia. They also discuss Russia’s burgeoning climate conspiracism, the history of climatology through the fall of the Soviet Union and Russia’s increasingly isolationist stance on climate cooperation. Marianna Poberezhskaya is an Associate Professor in Politics and International Relations at Nottingham Trent University, where she researches climate discourse from non-democratic governments and their nations’ media, with particular focus on Russia. Further reading: 'Explainer: How Russia seeks to 'instrumentalise' climate issues at COP30', Clare Denning, 2025, BBC 'Conspiracies as one of the dangers of online climate change communication: origins, spread, and impact' , Marianna Poberezhskaya, 2025, Routledge handbook on climate crisis communication pp. 229-239 'Climate obstruction in Russia: surviving a resource-dependent economy, an authoritarian regime, and a disappearing civil society', Marianna Poberezhskaya and Ellie Martus, 2024, Climate obstruction across Europe pp. 214-242 'Russian climate scepticism: an understudied case' , Teresa Ashe and Marianna Poberezhskaya, 2022, Climatic Change 172 (3-4) Send us Fan Mail Click here for our website to read all our most recent Land and Climate Review features and pieces.
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Are Russian climate politics changing? is an episode from The Economy, Land & Climate Podcast by Land and Climate Review .
This episode is 34:13 long.
This episode was published on Feb 6, 2026.
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Are Russian climate politics changing? is from The Economy, Land & Climate Podcast by Land and Climate Review .
Published Feb 6, 2026 and 34:13 long