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14 votes
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Maelstrom under Greenland's glaciers could slow future sea level rise – pioneering mission into mysterious and violent world may reveal ‘speed bumps’ on the way to global coastal inundation
3 votes -
Painting one turbine blade black has shown promise for preventing bird collisions
18 votes -
US Bipartisan Infrastructure Law to invest $76 million closing legacy oil & gas wells in Pennsylvania
16 votes -
Hvaldimir, a celebrated ‘spy’ whale, is found dead in Norway – first spotted in 2019 wearing what looked like a camera harness
15 votes -
Greenhouse gas emissions in US beef production can be reduced by up to 30% with the adoption of selected mitigation measures
18 votes -
The hidden engineering of landfills
17 votes -
Ocean plastics: How much do rich countries contribute by shipping their waste overseas?
17 votes -
Eleven on trial in Sweden's largest environmental crime case – Bella Nilsson's company Think Pink accused of dumping at least 200,000 tonnes of waste
23 votes -
Personally protecting a piece of prairie
13 votes -
Finland's Fortum starts using US nuclear fuel in bid to reduce Russian dependence
7 votes -
A storm of sand: the powerful intercontinental reach of Saharan dust
5 votes -
The FactoBattery
9 votes -
As California dam removal wraps up, river flows for first time in century
17 votes -
Cache Energy’s mysterious white pellets could help kill coal and natural gas
9 votes -
Giant 'living tractors', water buffalo are bringing nature back to post-industrial wastelands
17 votes -
The amount of lightning happening globally at any given time is impressive
16 votes -
I went to Iceland for a road trip. I left with climate anxiety.
21 votes -
Why have salmon deserted Norway's rivers? Salmon farming and the climate crisis threaten the fish's future.
8 votes -
Finland is building the world's largest heat pump – will provide enough heat for 30,000 homes, saving roughly 26,000 tonnes of CO2 emissions each year
21 votes -
Three Danish energy tech firms have opened the doors to the first ever green ammonia plant in the world, capable of producing 5,000 tons per year
5 votes -
The intractable puzzle of growth
12 votes -
‘I have lost everything’: Bangladesh floods strand 1.24 million families. Bangladeshis claim Indian dam water release made it more severe.
21 votes -
How to get the most out of urban gardens
6 votes -
Where have all the insects gone? The tiny creatures on which the world depends seem to be in decline. But what does the data really say — and what is to be done?
35 votes -
Dogs with bags of native wildflower seeds are helping rewild English nature reserve
23 votes -
A dam collapses in eastern Sudan after heavy rainfall and local media report dozens missing
19 votes -
What works: Groundbreaking evaluation of climate policy measures over two decades
22 votes -
An American man has died in south Iceland after ice collapsed while he was on a group tour to a glacier
22 votes -
A voyage like no other, from Norway to Canada through the Northwest Passage – to raise awareness of the six planetary tipping points in the Arctic
7 votes -
Sphen, partner in Australian same-sex penguin couple, dies
17 votes -
I met the activists getting arrested for fighting fossil fuels
20 votes -
AI tech giants hide dirty energy with outdated carbon accounting rules
12 votes -
Sweden to kill 20% of its brown bears in annual hunt – conservationists say number of hunting licences granted is too high and condemn it as ‘pure trophy hunting’
15 votes -
Buy burned land
Tis fire season again here in North America and Europe. From my house in coastal California I grieve every year as more of my favorite forests burn, from British Columbia to California. There is...
Tis fire season again here in North America and Europe. From my house in coastal California I grieve every year as more of my favorite forests burn, from British Columbia to California.
There is no end in sight for this transition. So what can we do to at least mitigate the worst of its effects? I think the time to play defense over pure "wilderness" is long gone. The forests that haven't burned are still beautiful, but they're riddled with disease and so overgrown the ecosystems are permanently distorted.
Every year there is less pristine forest and more burned land. I'm a fourth generation Californian and the Portuguese side of the family still owns a ranch in the foothills from 1893. But I own nothing and the prospect of being able to afford land in California has forever been beyond my reach. Burned land needs to be rehabilitated in a thoughtful manner. I'm hoping once my daughter finishes college and our life starts a new chapter, that I can find a few acres where I can make the best environmental impact, such as a headwaters, then invite experts onto the land to teach me how to best heal it.
Every year I have this idea, and every year more areas become available (in the worst sense). I don't need to live on this land. I don't expect it to be much more than grasses and saplings for 20 years. I'd get out to it one or two weekends a month, rent some equipment and hire some folks as I could. I also understand that my original thought that this would be immune from future fire seasons is wrong. But at least the land can be designed to be as fire resistant as possible, with a clear understory and single large trees. And that is another part of the allure. This acreage would come with its own challenges for sure, but in some sense it is a blank slate. The permaculture people could show us how to remediate and reconstruct the land from the bones up.
I know this project would be an aggravating money sink, and even perhaps an unrealistic and irresponsible fantasy by someone untrained in forestry management. But there is so much burned land now. Every year another giant 4% stripe of California goes up in smoke. Yet this idea just doesn't catch on. It entails a lot of patience and work. I know it's not what most people want to hear. They want their idyllic cabin in Tahoe or nothing. But that time is quickly coming to an end and learning how to revive the forests that have been devastated is our only real choice.
Whenever I've tried to get serious about this, though, I learn that there is no market in burned land because there is hardly any profit to be made. No real estate agent that I can find is specializing in this because their clients are having to sell ruined land and burned buildings for pennies on the dollar. I've been advised that the best way is to find a specific spot, do my research, and approach the owner directly. But, again, there is so much burned land now I hardly know where to start. The Santa Cruz Mountains? The Sierra adjacent to Yosemite? Crater Lake in Oregon?
Any thoughts or ideas or resources would be appreciated.
25 votes -
Could Britain's soaring taxes push energy companies to Norway? Taxes on oil and gas profits have risen from 40% to about 78%, prompting several to think about pulling out.
7 votes -
Scientists are now preparing to drill into the rock of Krafla in Iceland to learn more about how volcanoes behave
3 votes -
What if Germany had invested in nuclear power? A comparison between the German energy policy the last twenty years and an alternative policy of investing in nuclear power.
9 votes -
Form Energy to build world’s largest battery energy storage system in Maine
18 votes -
Danish wind power giant Ørsted delays major US offshore project – news follows scrapping of two other Atlantic windfarms and axing of hundreds of jobs as costs surge
7 votes -
Thousands protest against lithium mining in Serbia
21 votes -
Léna Lazare is the new face of climate activism—and she's carrying a pickax
26 votes -
Sweden has cut 80% of its net emissions since 1990 – while growing its economy twofold. How have they done it?
31 votes -
Heidelberg Materials' cement plant in Norway will be the first of a handful around the world to capture carbon in the production of cement
16 votes -
Forest Service orders Arrowhead bottled water company to shut down California pipeline
53 votes -
India elephant app: Hopes new tech can reduce human and animal deaths
7 votes -
There will be blood
16 votes -
A melting Alaska glacier keeps inundating Juneau
19 votes -
First officially approved Gen IV nuclear reactor in the US breaks ground
74 votes -
Iceland's recent volcanic eruptions driven by pooling magma are set to last centuries into the future
4 votes