Then, Charlotte Moore told her officers "Go forth and bring me programming on climate change, for has not God said, for whatever one sows, that will he also reap. And, again, He said 'It not enough for you to feed on the good pasture, that you must tread down with your feet the rest of your pasture; and to drink of clear water, that you must muddy the rest of the water with your feet?'"
And her officers, looking carefully at their shoes, went forth and scoured the darkest corners of the schedule, and did find some stuff with extraordinarily tendentious links to climate change...
Radio 3: The Tempest: 'a new environmentally-inflected version of Shakespeare’s play'
Radio 3: Music Matters examines the environmental impact of classical music and how listeners and musicians are changing the way they work.
Social media 'The BBC National Orchestra and Chorus of Wales will surface daily digital content across all their social media including behind the scenes tours of how they meet sustainable outcomes, interviews with players about cycle to work schemes and films showcasing commissioned community compositions to raise awareness of climate change in Wales.'
Children's: Show Me The Honey 'follows wanna-be beekeepers as they learn everything there is to know about caring for a hive of 50,000 pollinators.'
BBC4 Nature and Us: A History through Art. Art historian James Fox shows how the art of the past can perhaps offer lessons for our future on this planet.
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