Electromobility, the Deutschlandticket, the mobility transition, e-scooters, the e-bike boom: the topics of transport and mobility are currently on everyone's lips. It's only logical that there is now a long list of podcasts on these topics. To help you find your way through the podcast jungle, we have compiled our mobility podcast favourites for you here.
These podcasts give you a good overview and interesting insights into the world of mobility. With them, you are always well informed and can expand your knowledge about current mobility topics and trends. These are our 5 podcast recommendations on the topic of mobility. Have fun listening!
In Future Moves, journalist Christian Cohrs talks to people who are developing the mobility of tomorrow. It's about concepts for the future and New Mobility. For example, he talks to Lina Mosshammer about how to free a business park with a motorway connection from its car fixation or to Albert Pescheck about how software makes 200 out of 500 company cars superfluous.
Host: Christian Cohrs (OMR)
A new episode every week
Length: Approx. 50 minutes
Our tip for listening: #86 - What the Deutschlandticket has brought to public transport - With Prof. Dr. Jochen Eckart
Every week, Alan Atzberger, who is a mobility expert, meets with movers and shakers of the mobility, drive and energy transition in his podcast All About Mobility. During the talks with his guests, he wants to understand what goals they are pursuing personally and in a professional context, and to learn about his guests' view of their own industry.
If you would like to be informed every Tuesday by e-mail about the five most exciting and bizarre mobility topics, you can subscribe to his Mobility Briefing.
Host: Alan Atzberger
A new episode every week
Length: Approx. 45 minutes
Our tip for listening in: #22 Julia Carloff-Winkelmann - CPO at Dance - About culture in a mobility start-up - Unlimited holidays - Mobility as a benefit
From founder to founder or foundress - that's standard in the Wunder Mobility Podcast by Gunnar Froh. He founded the Hamburg-based company Wunder Mobility and has been its CEO ever since. In his podcast, he talks once a month with other shapers in the mobility industry, such as Oliver Mackprang, CEO of the car-sharing provider MILES, or Jennifer Dungs, Global Head of Mobility at EIT InnoEnergy.
NAVIT co-founder and CEO René Braun has also already had the honour of talking to Gunnar in detail about the topics of mobility budgets and employee mobility (link to episode).
Host: Gunnar Froh (Wunder Mobility)
A new episode every month
Length: Approx. 50 minutes
Our tip for listening in: #33 Raymon Pouwels, Co-founder & CEO, GO Sharing
The hosts of the public transport tech provider VESPUTI invite people who deal with innovative and sustainable mobility solutions to their mobility radio. Entrepreneurs from the transport sector have their say, as do decision-makers from politics and local authorities. Other hosts of mobility podcasts have already been guests on Mobilitätsfunk. The podcast already dealt with the influence of our culture on the choice of means of transport (with Isabell Eberlein) and with mobility solutions in urban and rural areas (panel discussion).
Host: Vesputi GmbH
New episodes every fortnight
Length: Approx. 40 minutes
Our tip for listening in: Company bike instead of company car - what can companies do for sustainable mobility? - with Josefine Wickenbrock from JobRad
5. Generation E
In the mobility podcast Generation E, the hosts of RedaktionsNetzwerk Deutschland talk to experts about the transformation of mobility. The topics are diverse and range from automobility to micromobility, from public transport to air travel and from rail transport to the transport of goods. It is about the challenges of electric mobility and autonomous driving as well as the integration of different means of transport and the opportunities of networked transport systems.
Host: RedaktionsNetzwerk Deutschland
New episodes every fortnight
Length: Approx. 30 minutes
Our tip for listening in: We need to make people more mobile, but without traffic. Kathrin Viergutz, mobility researcher at the German Aerospace Center.