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5 votes
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Following its Singaporean pilot project, carbon sequestration start-up Equatic aims to build a massive plant in Quebec
9 votes -
The carbon tax is good for Canadians. Why axe it?
17 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 -
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 -
Firefighters in Canada battle to save Jasper's buildings, infrastructure as wildfire engulfs town
23 votes -
Anti-whaling activist Paul Watson arrested on an international arrest warrant issued by Japan in Greenland
33 votes -
Nova Scotia’s billion-dollar lobster wars
10 votes -
Canada’s fire season erupts, sending harmful smoke into United States
20 votes -
Canada to expedite approval of new nuclear projects, energy minister says
19 votes -
What one researcher learned studying grizzlies for nearly forty years
8 votes -
Helping bison find their way home to tribal lands
10 votes -
The neglected clean heat we flush down the drains
37 votes -
The race to mine the bottom of the ocean
13 votes -
‘We can’t drink oil’: How a seventy-year-old pipeline imperils the Great Lakes
31 votes -
British Columbia declares state of emergency amid ‘devastating’ wildfires
35 votes -
The entire capital city of Canada’s Northwest Territories has been ordered to evacuate as hundreds of wildfires scorch the region
31 votes -
Canadian smoke reaches Europe - NASA Terra satellite
16 votes -
Smoke will keep pouring into the US as long as fires are burning in Canada. Here’s why they aren’t being put out.
25 votes -
It’s Canada’s worst fire season in modern history, as smoke fills skies
44 votes -
Heat and smoke are smothering most of the US, putting lives at risk
14 votes -
Smoke from Canadian wildfires engulfs East Coast, upending daily life
39 votes -
Denmark is getting off fossil fuels. Are there lessons for Canada?
5 votes -
Cheap, renewable, clean energy. There's just one problem.
5 votes -
Why the US Army electrifies this water
7 votes -
Beloved monarch butterflies now listed as endangered
27 votes -
Canada’s boar war - Wild pigs are invasive, destructive and dangerous, and their populations in Canada are exploding out of control. How can we fight back?
12 votes -
Four Canadian provinces push ahead with plan to build small nuclear reactors to supply power
17 votes -
Flood damage cuts all rail access to Canada's largest port of Vancouver
15 votes -
'Forest gardens’ show how Native land stewardship can outdo nature
12 votes -
Groundwater expert Dr. John Cherry wins 2020 Stockholm Water Prize – his research has raised awareness of how groundwater contamination is growing across the world
5 votes -
Don't buy new, fix the old: The repair business is booming
20 votes -
Norway adopts initiative for sustainable mining – TSM requires mining companies to annually assess their facilities' in areas including energy use and greenhouse gas emissions
3 votes -
When it comes to climate hypocrisy, Canada's leaders have reached a new low
7 votes -
Group of Canadian premiers will work together to research and build small modular nuclear reactors
11 votes -
We asked 3 companies to recycle Canadian plastic and secretly tracked it. Only 1 company recycled the material
18 votes -
Biodiversity is the highest on Indigenous-managed lands
7 votes -
Alarm over North Atlantic right whale's survival after recent deaths
5 votes -
Human friends of Canada geese sue federal government for helping Denver turn the birds into food
5 votes -
Death and broken livelihoods: Farmers and wildfires in British Columbia
4 votes -
This house was built using 600,000 recycled plastic bottles
11 votes -
This young arctic fox walked 2,700 miles from Norway to Canada
8 votes -
How a grocery store's plan to shame customers into using reusable bags backfired
14 votes -
Denver is capturing geese from city parks to be killed and given to hungry families
16 votes -
Canada’s chance for a Green New Deal
4 votes -
Canada passes Bill C-68, overhauling the Fisheries Act and banning import and export of shark fins
9 votes -
Scientists amazed as Canadian permafrost thaws seventy years early
10 votes -
Canada to ban single-use plastics as early as 2021
13 votes -
Canadian government to ban single-use plastics as early as 2021
10 votes -
Malaysia returning unwanted Canadian plastic
5 votes