This May 26 profile visits a couple who had demonstrated the case for "rewilding" and have now turned a meaningful chunk of their land into a regenerative farm.
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.
On May 27, S&P noted that the election of a climate-ambitious prime minister in Australia sent that country's carbon credit price up by at least 17% over the week.
You've got to go where the science leads you. This May 19 update encapsulates research warning that climate perturbations may be rendering trees less fit to suck up carbon at the rate the carbon market has assumed.
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.
This May 8 story, spotlighting an official pledge to sustain herd sizes and farm operations, captures Ireland's tension as the government races to meet climate goals by 2030.
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.