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Retrofit Radio

Retrofit Radio

By: Nicholas Stancioff
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Season 1 of Retrofit Radio with Ekubirojs is a six-episode deep dive into one of Europe's most overlooked crises: energy poverty, and why — despite decades of funding, policies, and good intentions — almost nothing is fixing it. Nicholas opens by introducing the staggering scale of the problem — 34 million Europeans who can't afford to heat their homes — before revealing that the real number is almost certainly far higher, because most people suffering from energy poverty are too ashamed to admit it. From there, the series peels back layer after layer of why the problem persists: the data is messier than anyone admits, the split incentive between landlords and tenants creates a structural deadlock, retrofits routinely fail to deliver their promised savings, and the communities that need help most are also the ones who trust institutions the least.

But the season isn't a dirge — it builds toward something. Every episode chips away at the "why nothing works" question until the finale lands on a genuinely different answer: the RENEW-IT project, running right now in France, Germany, and Spain, where energy-poor residents are trained to retrofit their own buildings alongside professionals. It cuts costs by 15%, creates real career pathways out of poverty, and — perhaps most importantly — replaces shame with something that actually looks like agency. The season's core argument is simple and quietly radical: we've spent decades designing solutions for people in energy poverty, and the one thing we've never really tried is designing them with those people, and by those people.

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Episodes
  • The Hidden Crisis
    Jul 6 2026

    Nicholas kicks things off by pulling back the curtain on what he calls "invisible energy poverty" — the 34 million Europeans who can't afford to heat their homes, except the real number is almost certainly much higher, because most people suffering won't even admit it. He takes you inside a freezing apartment in Besançon, France, where a mum is choosing between turning on the heat and buying groceries — and from there, unpacks how energy poverty isn't one thing, it's nine distinct profiles, each with different causes and different solutions that most policies completely ignore.

    The episode ends on a genuinely exciting note: the RENEW-IT project, which asks the completely radical question — what if the people living in these buildings just fixed them themselves? Not with a manual and a pat on the back, but with real training, side-by-side with professionals. And it's working: costs down 15%, people gaining skills, neighbors becoming friends, and — maybe most importantly — the shame of invisible poverty replaced by something that actually looks like pride.

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    19 mins
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