Keynote Performances 

Thursday, March 28th

Introduction by Cara Romero, Director of Bioneers’ Indigeneity Program

Returning to open this year’s conference, one of the leading figures in the East Bay Indigenous community and a longtime activist for First People’s rights and the protection of land and waters globally, Corrina Gould, will focus on the concept and practice of “Rematriation,” which involves reclaiming traditional land and sacred sites to help rebuild traditional cultures and heal the deep wounds inflicted by colonization and genocide and also prioritizes the unique role women play in that enormous undertaking.   

March 28th | 9:24 am to 9:46 am | Zellerbach Hall

GET DIRECTIONS

VIEW EVENT PAGE

Introduced by


Cara Romero
Indigeneity Program Director
Bioneers

Keynote


Corrina Gould
Co-Founder and Lead Organizer
Sogorea Te’ Land Trust

Nina Simons, co-founder of Bioneers and its Chief Relationship Strategist is also co-founder of Women Bridging Worlds and Connecting Women Leading Change. She co-edited the anthology book, Moonrise: The Power of Women Leading from the Heart, and most recently wrote Nature, Culture & The Sacred: A Woman Listens for Leadership. An award-winning social entrepreneur, Nina teaches and speaks internationally, and previously served as President of Seeds of Change and Director of Strategic Marketing for Odwalla.

March 28th | 9:46 am to 10:05 am | Zellerbach Hall

GET DIRECTIONS

VIEW EVENT PAGE

Keynote


Nina Simons
Co-Founder and Chief Relationship Strategist
Bioneers

Introduction by Film Producer, Writer and Director Peter Bratt

Dolores Huerta, now 93 and still going strong, is a genuine living legend, one of the most influential labor activists in U.S. history as well as a foundational leader of the Chicano civil rights movement. Huerta’s 7 decades of activism have included co-founding the world-renowned United Farm Workers’ Union with César Chávez, leading major strikes and consumer boycotts, negotiating contracts, and tirelessly advocating for safer working conditions (including the elimination of harmful pesticides) and for unemployment and healthcare benefits for agricultural workers. Today she will draw from her decades of experience to share her thoughts on the critical importance of organizing unions in all sectors of the economy to fight for a fairer society, and on how to build more unity between labor, social, racial, gender, and climate justice movements.

March 28th | 10:05 am to 10:27 am | Zellerbach Hall

GET DIRECTIONS

VIEW EVENT PAGE

Introduced by


Peter Bratt
Film Producer, Writer and Director

Keynote


Dolores Huerta
President and Founder
Dolores Huerta Foundation

Introduction by Cara Pike, Founder and Executive Director, Climate Access

With climate advocates subject to surveillance and censorship and giant companies controlling the ways information and knowledge flow around the world, the fight to save our climate is now inextricably intertwined with digital rights. The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), which has long been at the forefront of protecting those rights, has helped environmental activists protect their emails from Chevron, understand the surveillance they are under and develop “Security Self-Defense” practices to protect themselves. Cindy Cohn, EFF’s Executive Director, one of the nation’s leading civil liberties attorneys specializing in Internet law, will explain why EFF’s push for open access to scientific information, for net neutrality, for open source/patents, “creative commons” licenses, and more, is critical in the fight to prevent climatic unraveling.  

March 28th | 10:28 am to 10:50 am | Zellerbach Hall

GET DIRECTIONS

VIEW EVENT PAGE

Introduced by


Cara Pike
Founder and Executive Director
Climate Access

Keynote


Cindy Cohn
Executive Director
Electronic Frontier Foundation

The Local Honeys (Montana Hobbs and Linda Jean Stokley) is a highly acclaimed musical duo from Kentucky that was formed a decade ago. Montana and Linda Jean are solidly anchored in the Appalachian culture and music they grew up in and deeply respectful of those roots, but their innovative songwriting, storytelling and musicianship are not constrained by tradition, as their music is very much of its time, elegantly and powerfully capturing the beauty, struggles and complexities of contemporary Appalachian life. Their most recent album is the eponymous, The Local Honeys, on La Honda Records. http://www.thelocalhoneys.com/

March 28th | 11:13 am to 11:25 am | Zellerbach Hall

GET DIRECTIONS

VIEW EVENT PAGE

Keynote


Sammy Gensaw III, a dynamic young Yurok leader, will share some of his experiences working for ecological and cultural revival along the Klamath River, central to his people’s identity and livelihood. He’ll discuss how the epic struggle to remove destructive dams required drawing deeply from ancestral wisdom, modern science, and cutting-edge activism, and how Indigenous leadership can play a central role in rekindling our connections to land and water and ushering in a restorative, resilient future for all of us.

March 28th | 11:25 am to 11:41 am | Zellerbach Hall

GET DIRECTIONS

VIEW EVENT PAGE

Keynote


Samuel Gensaw, III – Youth Keynote
Founding Director
Ancestral Guard

Introduction by Nina Simons, Bioneers co-founder and Chief Relationship Strategist

One of the Southeast U.S.’ and Gulf South’s most renowned veterans of climate justice struggles as an activist, community organizer, coalition-builder, and award-winning litigating environmental and human rights attorney, Colette Pichon Battle, born and raised in Bayou Liberty, Louisiana, focuses on creating spaces for frontline communities to gather and advance climate strategies that help them steward their water, energy, and land responsibly. She will draw from her decades of experience fighting for equitable climate resilience to unearth historic lessons and expose the root causes of the inequities and imbalances that characterize our relationships to the natural world and to each other. Colette will argue that we must expand our understanding of what a genuine Climate Justice movement needs to encompass if we are to succeed in innovating a better future, and why such struggles as gender and migrant justice are inextricably connected to human rights for clean air, clean water, sovereign land, and community control of justly-sourced sustainable energy.

March 28th | 11:41 am to 12:04 pm | Zellerbach Hall

GET DIRECTIONS

VIEW EVENT PAGE

Introduced by


Nina Simons
Co-Founder and Chief Relationship Strategist
Bioneers

Keynote


Colette Pichon Battle
Vision & Initiatives Partner
Taproot Earth

Introduction by Nikola Alexandre, Co-Creator & Stewardship Lead at Shelterwood Collective

Taylor Brorby grew in the dynamic shortgrass prairie of western North Dakota, a youth that coincided with the brutal physical and psychic scarring of his surroundings by the coal and oil industry, a fate not made any easier by being a young gay boy enthralled by classical music, art, fishing, and poetry. From here, Taylor became a brilliant poet, writer and dedicated activist, one of the most eloquent and profound critics of the fossil fuel industry in the nation, penning, among other works, the extraordinary memoir: Boys and Oil: Growing Up Gay in a Fractured Land, the powerful essays in Civil Disobedience, and co-editing: Fracture: Essays, Poems, and Stories on Fracking in America. He will share some of his life story and seek to inflame us with the passion we will need to stop the carbon-burning Leviathans from destroying the biosphere.

March 28th | 12:14 pm to 12:37 pm | Zellerbach Hall

GET DIRECTIONS

VIEW EVENT PAGE

Introduced by


Nikola Alexandre
Co-Creator & Stewardship Lead
The Shelterwood Collective

Keynote


Taylor Brorby
Author & Activist
Boys and Oil: Growing Up Gay in a Fractured Land

Friday, March 29th

Kenny Ausubel, CEO and co-founder (in 1990) of Bioneers, is an award-winning social entrepreneur, journalist, author and filmmaker. Co-founder and first CEO of the organic seed company, Seeds of Change, his film (and companion book) Hoxsey: When Healing Becomes a Crime helped influence national alternative medicine policy. He has edited several books and written four, including, most recently, Dreaming the Future: Reimagining Civilization in the Age of Nature.

March 29th | 9:24 am to 9:43 am | Zellerbach Hall

GET DIRECTIONS

VIEW EVENT PAGE

Keynote


Kenny Ausubel
CEO and Co-Founder
Bioneers

Introduction by Rex Lyons, Haudenosaunee Nationals

We can all see the Earth is heating up, that polar ice and glaciers are melting, and that ever more fires, floods and droughts are screaming at us that our climate is unraveling. Our societies are also showing signs of unraveling. But the legendary, world-renowned Native American Rights leader, Oren R. Lyons, Faithkeeper of the Turtle Clan of the Onondaga Nation, who, among countless achievements, helped establish the UN’s Working Group on Indigenous Populations and authored or co-authored such profoundly influential texts as: Wilderness in Native American Culture and Exiled in the Land of the Free: Democracy, Indian Nations and the U.S. Constitution, is here to tell us that we can’t give up. We have profound responsibilities to coming generations, and time is of the essence, but if we want to reverse course to prevent climate catastrophe and achieve real peace, we will have to dig deep to transform contemporary society’s core values  that underlie and drive the existential crises we are facing.

March 29th | 9:43 am to 10:08 am | Zellerbach Hall

GET DIRECTIONS

VIEW EVENT PAGE

Introduced by


Keynote


Oren Lyons
Member Chief
Onondaga Council of Chiefs and the Grand Council of the Iroquois Confederacy

Introduction by Kenny Ausubel, Bioneers Co-Founder and CEO

Most of us would like to live in a society accountable to people and the planet, one in which we exercise genuine agency over our lives and have a real say in the decisions that affect our communities, but the dramatic increase in corporate domination, especially the rise of giant tech companies that wield unprecedented levels of surveillance and control, is radically undermining our democracy and concentrating wealth and power in fewer and fewer hands. Stacy Mitchell, who has long been at the forefront of the national movement to rein in excessive corporate power and reinvigorate local self-reliance, is here to tell us that, as powerful as these immense companies and their political allies may seem, they’ve finally met their match. A broad grassroots alliance, together with a new generation of creative government leaders, is bringing long-dormant anti-monopoly laws and strategies back to life. This promising turn of events, Stacy will explain, offers hope for reclaiming our rights and assuring a far more equitable and greener future.

March 29th | 10:08 am to 10:30 am | Zellerbach Hall

GET DIRECTIONS

VIEW EVENT PAGE

Introduced by


Kenny Ausubel
CEO and Co-Founder
Bioneers

Keynote


Stacy Mitchell
Co-Executive Director
Institute for Local Self-Reliance

We spend a lot of time talking about the ecological crisis, and not nearly enough talking about real, workable solutions. If the ultimate goal is to keep fossil fuels in the ground, how must we transform our economy to make that possible? Award-winning activist and innovative educator, Sage Lenier, one of the most impressive young leaders to emerge in recent years, takes to the stage to shed light on what a realistic and just transition looks like, and the role we can each play in leading us towards a more circular and equitable economy.

March 29th | 10:30 am to 10:41 am | Zellerbach Hall

GET DIRECTIONS

VIEW EVENT PAGE

Keynote


Sage Lenier – Youth Keynote
Founder and Executive Director
Sustainable & Just Future

Chris Pierce, a highly acclaimed, socially-conscious singer/songwriter/musician, has been described as “one of America’s most talented, gifted, and affecting artists.” He has toured or played nationally and internationally with such luminaries as Neil Young, B.B. King, Seal, Al Green, Steve Earle, Allison Russell, Ramblin’ Jack Elliot, Rodrigo y Gabriella, Jill Scott, Keb’Mo, Blind Boys of Alabama, Aaron Neville, Allison Russell, Sara Bareilles, and others. He has performed at many prestigious venues from The Kennedy Center to NPR’s World Café to the Newport Folk Festival. His most recent albums are 2021’s American Silence, widely viewed as one of the best folk albums of that year, and 2023’s Let All Who Will. In addition to his solo career, Chris Pierce performs/records with Sunny War as “War and Pierce,” with the Americana/roots band Leon Creek, and occasionally with the Black Opry Revue.
chrispierce.com

March 29th | 11:07 am to 11:19 am | Zellerbach Hall

GET DIRECTIONS

VIEW EVENT PAGE

Keynote


Chris Pierce
Singer, Songwriter, Musician

Introduction by entrepreneur/activist Azita Ardakani

Like so many of our other industries, the enormous mass incarceration system has wreaked havoc on our society. Our desire for punishment, and the profits made by the incarceration of millions of human beings, consequences be damned, lead to the destruction of the social fabric of countless communities in the short term, and contribute to the ravaging of the larger global environment in the longer term. Our only path forward is to make amends with the land, water and air, one harmful industry at a time, including abolition of the prison industrial complex as we know it. 

March 29th | 11:20 am to 11:42 am | Zellerbach Hall

GET DIRECTIONS

VIEW EVENT PAGE

Introduced by


Azita Ardakani
Activist and Entrepreneur

Keynote


Claudia Peña
Co-Director
For Freedoms & Center for Justice at UCLA

Introduction by J.P. Harpignies, Bioneers Senior Producer

For decades, scientists have warned about the consequences of deforestation and fossil fuel burning that have led to today’s climate and biodiversity crises.  They have also conducted careful research that has helped inform development of nature-based solutions.  Despite the urgency of the interdependent crises and the agency we have in helping address them, there abound efforts to discredit peer-reviewed climate change science. Dr. Simard’s talk will delve into recent backlash she has experienced over her science that informs climate solutions for the forests of western North America.

March 29th | 12:02 pm to 12:24 pm | Zellerbach Hall

GET DIRECTIONS

VIEW EVENT PAGE

Introduced by


J. P. Harpignies
Senior Producer
Bioneers

Keynote


Suzanne Simard
Professor of Forest Ecology
University of British Columbia

Saturday, March 30th

Introduction by Alexis Bunten, Bioneers Indigeneity Program Co-Director 

In this talk, one of the most respected, beloved and impactful longtime activists on behalf of Indigenous rights and women’s leadership as well as a major figure in the “Rights of Nature” movement, will delve deeply into how many Indigenous peoples view the human relationship to the natural world and what their ancestral wisdom teaches about how to harmoniously interact with nature’s fundamental components, aka the “elements”—Earth, Air, Water, and Fire. Casey will explore how these incredibly sophisticated traditional Indigenous land, water and fire stewardship strategies, many of which are now being “rediscovered” by contemporary managers, have much to teach us as we grapple with the climate crisis.

March 30th | 9:17 am to 9:39 am | Zellerbach Hall

GET DIRECTIONS

VIEW EVENT PAGE

Introduced by


Alexis Bunten
Co-Director, Indigeneity Program
Bioneers

Keynote


Casey Camp-Horinek
Environmental Ambassador, Elder and Hereditary Drumkeeper
Ponca Tribe of Oklahoma

Introduction by J.P. Harpignies, Bioneers Senior Producer

A widely-traveled, brilliant conservation ecologist/wildlife biologist who has done cutting-edge work on apex predators in many remote and rugged locales around the world, Rae Wynn Grant is also one of the most captivating and inspiring science communicators of our time as well as a leading advocate for women and people of color in the sciences. In this talk, she will draw from her just about-to-be-released memoir, Wild Life, to share some of her experiences finding her way in a profession with very few scientists who looked like her as she embarked on a quest to study the ever-shifting relationship between humans, animals, and place and came to understand the vital roles we must each play not just as stewards for our land and water, but also for our communities, each other, and ourselves. 

March 30th | 9:47 am to 10:09 am | Zellerbach Hall

GET DIRECTIONS

VIEW EVENT PAGE

Introduced by


J. P. Harpignies
Senior Producer
Bioneers

Keynote


Rae Wynn-Grant
Wildlife Ecologist and Conservation Biologist
University of California at Santa Barbara + Host of Wild Kingdom

What can fiber arts and rotor sails have in common? How can we create sustainable technologies that can be implemented in the near future while balancing interests of profit with public health and climate change mitigation? Charlotte Lenore Michaluk, an extraordinary 17-year-old scientist, researcher, biomimetic inventor and passionate eco-activist and conservationist shares her hopeful vision informed by a deep respect of the natural world and powered by brilliant, clean green technologies. Pulling insight from her experiences ranging from cargo ship systems to a novel constructed writing script for greater freedom of expression, she will share the possibilities unleashed by an interdisciplinary mode of thinking that leverages common ground and societal and technological inertia.

March 30th | 10:09 am to 10:20 am | Zellerbach Hall

GET DIRECTIONS

VIEW EVENT PAGE

Keynote


Charlotte Michaluk – Youth Keynote
Engineer, Scientist and Linguistics Researcher
Acnestis By Wind

The Destiny Arts Youth Performance Company (DAYPC) is a diverse group of teens that collaborates with professional artists to create dynamic, original productions. Combining hip hop, modern and aerial dance, theater, song, and rap, company members take the stage to tell stories that stem from their lived experiences and express their visions for a world transformed. Since 1993, DAYPC has performed original work for up to 25,000 audience members annually, garnering critical acclaim and widespread community support for both their technical prowess and their commitment to advancing inclusivity, equity, and justice.

March 30th | 10:46 am to 11:58 am | Zellerbach Hall

GET DIRECTIONS

VIEW EVENT PAGE

Keynote


Introduction by Teo Grossman, President of Bioneers

Erica Gies is an independent journalist, National Geographic Explorer, and the author of Water Always Wins: Thriving in an age of drought and deluge, published in the U.S., U.K., and China. She covers water, climate change, plants and wildlife for Scientific American, The New York Times, bioGraphic, Nature, and other publications. The honors she has received include the Sierra Club’s Rachel Carson Award, Friends of the River’s California River Award, the Renewable Natural Resources Foundation’s Excellence in Journalism Award, and the Harvey Southam Lectureship at the University of Victoria.

March 30th | 11:19 am to 11:41 am | Zellerbach Hall

GET DIRECTIONS

VIEW EVENT PAGE

Introduced by


Teo Grossman
President
Bioneers

Keynote


Erica Gies
Author & Journalist
Water Always Wins: Thriving in an Age of Drought and Deluge

Introduction by Toby Kiers, Ph.D., Executive Director and Chief Scientist, SPUN

Most fungi live out of sight, yet they make up a massively diverse kingdom of organisms that support and sustain nearly all living systems. The symbiotic mycorrhizal networks formed by plants and fungi comprise an ancient life-support system that easily qualifies as one of the wonders of the living world. Yet climate change strategies, conservation agendas and restoration efforts overlook fungi and focus overwhelmingly on animals and plants. This is a problem: the destruction of underground fungal networks accelerates both climate change and biodiversity loss and interrupts vital global nutrient cycles. In this session, Merlin Sheldrake, the biologist and bestselling author of Entangled Life: How Fungi Make our World, will drive home just how critically important fungi are and discuss the visionary work of the Society for the Protection of Underground Networks (SPUN) and its efforts to map and protect the mycorrhizal fungal communities of the planet. He will also present cutting-edge research into the flow dynamics of carbon and nutrients within mycorrhizal fungal networks.

March 30th | 11:41 am to 12:04 pm | Zellerbach Hall

GET DIRECTIONS

VIEW EVENT PAGE

Introduced by


Toby Kiers
Executive Director and Chief Scientist
Society for the Protection of Underground Networks (SPUN)

Keynote


Merlin Sheldrake
Biologist and Writer
Entangled Life: How Fungi Make Our Worlds, Change Our Minds and Shape Our Futures