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Pond Scene With Bugs At Dusk
Andrew Burton / Getty Images

Federal Judge: Pipelines Must Not Cross Streams Without Considering Endangered Species

“A federal judge upheld his April 15 ruling Monday, tossing a key permit required by the Keystone XL and other pipeline projects to cross streams and wetlands.

Montana U.S. District Judge Brian Morris affirmed that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers cannot use a blanket water-crossing permit to approve new oil and gas pipelines without considering their impacts on endangered species.

“The court rightly ruled that the Trump administration can’t continue to ignore the catastrophic effects of fossil fuel pipelines like Keystone XL,” Center for Biological Diversity (CBD) senior attorney Jared Margolis said in a press release…”

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Agrivoltaics
University of Arizona

Agrivoltaics proves mutually beneficial

Land trusts will want to draft conservation easements to allow for co-usage of solar and agricultural lands. Technology is changing quickly to allow for co-benefits—and to help slow down climate change. In a changing climate, many farmers find this income critical.

Building resiliency in renewable energy and food production is a fundamental challenge in today’s changing world, especially in regions susceptible to heat and drought.

Agrivoltaics, the co-locating of agriculture and solar photovoltaic panels, offers a possible solution, with new University of Arizona-led research reporting positive impacts on food production, water savings, and the efficiency of electricity production…

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The Coal Burning Plant Scherer In Juliette GA
Branden Camp/Associated Press

Scientists Fear Trump Will Dismiss Blunt Climate Report

“WASHINGTON — The average temperature in the United States has risen rapidly and drastically since 1980, and recent decades have been the warmest of the past 1,500 years, according to a sweeping federal climate change report awaiting approval by the Trump administration.

The draft report by scientists from 13 federal agencies concludes that Americans are feeling the effects of climate change right now. It directly contradicts claims by President Trump and members of his cabinet who say that the human contribution to climate change is uncertain, and that the ability to predict the effects is limited…”

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Red Barn Chicken Coop
Judy Anderson

Solar energy, farming, and the future in New York

It's time to help position farmers and ranchers as key components of the climate change solution. Your land trust can do this too.

American Farmland Trust (AFT) continues to expand its partnerships, collaborative training, and thinking and is working to serve communities and farmers and ranchers around climate change.

Here’s an example of an upcoming workshop they are hosting. Perhaps your land trust could host a similar workshop or partner with an organization like AFT…

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Broadway Green Alliance
BGA

About the Broadway Green Alliance

The Broadway Green Alliance (BGA) is an industry-wide initiative that educates, motivates, and inspires the entire theatre community and its patrons to implement environmentally friendlier practices on Broadway and beyond.

As a community of industry and environmental professionals connected by the shared goal of normalizing greening practices on Broadway and beyond, the BGA has successfully implemented significant sustainability reform at the forefront of the industry since its inception in 2008.

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Gozelles Go Green
Broadway Green Alliance

Theater projects help people reflect on their experiences of climate change

Meet people where they are, and find shared values. Recognize that conservation is more than transactions—it's relationships, inspiration, and connecting the dots.

Since its inception, the Broadway Green Alliance‘s (BGA) mission has been to educate, motivate, and inspire the entire theatre community and its patrons to adopt environmentally-friendlier practices. This is a seemingly immense undertaking. But the BGA’s work is built on the recognition that environmental issues are caused by the cumulative effect of millions of small actions and that effective change comes from each of us doing a bit better every day.

We don’t aim to be fully “green,” but rather work to be “greener” than we were yesterday…

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Soil For Agriculture
Judy Anderson

For climate-smart farmers, carbon solution is in the soil

If your land trust works to conserve farm and ranchlands, what could you do to help support the landowners' transition to carbon farming? One step is to spread the word...

There’s a new agricultural commodity that farmers, food giants, and grassroots groups are all rallying behind: carbon.

Proponents say that if the United States’ 20th-century success as a global agricultural power was measured by how much food came from American soil, the 21st century offers a new paradigm: measuring how much carbon dioxide American farmers can retain in the soil while still producing food…

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Wetlands Sunset
Myer Bornstein

Mass Audubon & climate change

“Climate change requires us to boldly and urgently act to protect the wildlife and people we love. In response, Mass Audubon has committed to achieving a carbon neutral future in Massachusetts by 2050.

Carbon neutrality, or net zero emissions, means that we don’t emit any greenhouse gasses that we can’t soak back up out of the atmosphere. To do so entails protecting and conserving natural climate fighting tools, mitigating climate change by reducing and eliminating our greenhouse gas emissions, and amplifying nature’s resilience to climate impacts…”

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Emily Hague

Interns present climate change solutions to the community

Finding compelling, relatable, messengers to communicate about climate change and its relationship to the lands and waters people love—is one of the most important things you can do. Providing suggestions on what people can do to slow down climate change (beyond donating money) will be key to your success.

Jonah Raether is from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and is a graduate student at Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts studying health science and community health. His research project studied the relation between environmental connection and its impact on human health.

“I knew that I did not just want to work on building trails,” said Raether. “I wanted to get to know the people living here—I came in with that goal.”

Through his research project, Raether created a booklet of interviews sharing the stories of local connections to nature…

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Tree Climbers Screen Grab

Is a solution to climate change at the top of centuries-old trees? (Part one-video)

This past month, researchers from a UN panel on climate change recommended a simple strategy to help stem climate change: planting trees around the globe. The Milarch family has been doing its part by running Archangel Ancient Tree Archive, where David Milarch and his son Jake collect samples from tall “champion” trees to grow and replant…

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