In this May 27 newsletter, below some pungent observations about flood insurance policy, you'll find some notes on agriculture's cachet at this year's World Economic Forum.
On May 27, Grist noted the formation of a new coalition to invest in direct air capture- and took a walk through the concept's promise and potential moral hazards.
The Defense Department helps this Minnesota wolf defend its turf. (Photo by Julie DeJong, Minnesota DNR, via the US Army Flickr feed.)
The United States' military apparatus depends on stable land for security at its sites. A partnership with land trusts and other stewards makes conservation hay from that conviction.
Rachel Kyte, who helped hammer out the Paris agreement, talks through techniques to deliver robust carbon markets before (or instead of waiting until) governments make the rules. The interview requires a 7-day free trial.
This All Things Considered story from April 28 situates carbon removal in the forefront of many popular science-aligned strategies for climate survival.
This April 12 press release details a partnership among Burger King, Cargill, and the National Fish & Wildlife Foundation to send up to $10 million in grants over five years to support regenerative practices across the United States' Great Plains.
A reporter from a leading Canadian paper sizes up the "beta" framework from the Task Force on Nature-Related Financial Disclosure.
The International Society for Tropical Forestry’s 2022 conference at Yale emphasized scale and the importance of COVID-19 recovery efforts for the “Decade on Ecosystem Restoration.”
In looking at forest restoration finance in a tropical context, three experts at a Yale-sponsored panel spoke of clearer images from space and more inclusive planning on the ground.