Thursday, May 19, 2022

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Tuesday, May 17, 2022

From Tree Hugger.

We Should Be Reforesting, Not Deforesting

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Global Anti-Deforestation Efforts Arent Enough to Tackle Forest Loss
Global Anti-Deforestation Efforts Aren't Enough to Tackle Forest Loss
Just yesterday we were here talking about being climate optimists at Treehugger, and here we are today talking about deforestation when planting trees is perhaps the single best way we have of sucking carbon dioxide out of the air. Perhaps I have to stop looking at my screen through rose-colored glasses.  
 
Quick stat: Tropical areas lost 9.3 million acres of primary old-growth forest in 2021 resulting in 2.5 billion metric tons of emissions of carbon dioxide. That's roughly 2.5 times the emissions from passenger cars and light trucks in the U.S. annually.
READ MORE
 
Massive Reforestation Might Be the Moonshot We Need to Slow Down Climate Change
Massive Reforestation Might Be the Moonshot We Need to Slow Down Climate Change
From Russell in the archives, a reminder that we are going in the wrong direction.
READ MORE
Bikes Are Evolving. When Will Bike Storage Catch Up?
Bikes Are Evolving. When Will Bike Storage Catch Up?
Architects put up 5-year-old drawings of bike storage and learn how times have changed. 
READ MORE
This Nifty Natural Bug Repellent Comes in a Metal Tin
This Nifty Natural Bug Repellent Comes in a Metal Tin
They say it works for my nemesis—the black flies we get in May and June. 
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These Bats Buzz Like Hornets To Scare off Predators
These Bats Buzz Like Hornets to Scare Off Predators
Mary Jo writes, "When you’re not dangerous, it can be lifesaving to pretend you’re something that is. There’s a behavior called Batesian mimicry, where a harmless species mimics a more dangerous one in order to try to ward off predators." Evidently bats do this, mimicking hornets, to scare off barn owls. “Imagine a predator seizing the bat,” Danilo Russo of the gloriously-named UniversitĂ  degli Studi di Napoli Federico II in Portici, Italy, says. “It will get scared by the buzz for the fraction of a second the bat needs to fly away and save its life.”
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This newsletter has been curated and edited by Lloyd Alter. We’d love to hear from you at lalter@dotdash.com. Thanks for reading. 
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Attention Prime Minister Trudeau. Forest management is needed desperately!

ll falling

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Tegan Hansen, Stand.earth action@stand.earth>

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Stand.earth

Helloi Prime Minister Trudeau!

In the last month, we renewed pressure on the government of British Columbia to protect old growth forests in a big way.

Over 13,000 emails were sent to decision makers to share Stand.earth Research Group’s research that exposed industrial logging in old growth forests that should have been protected. We received direct phone calls from politicians telling us they were receiving too many emails, so we think it’s fair to say they heard us loud and clear.

We’ll be honest with you, we may not see the changes we need immediately, but our collective actions have the B.C. government moving quicker than they ever have before on this issue. In the coming month, hundreds of residents will meet with their locally elected representatives to keep them accountable to the province’s commitments on old growth.

But even as we work together for old growth, a growing threat to forests in Canada needs our immediate attention: forest biomass a.k.a, wood pellets.

Forest biomass plant full of whole trees in B.C.Drax-Pinnacle forest biomass plant

While eyes have been turned towards the old growth crisis in B.C., the forest biomass industry has been scaling up production. In B.C., most forest-biomass, in the form of wood pellets, takes wood and turns it into fuel for electricity generation in countries like the UK and Japan. You may have seen this video narrated by Emma Thompson that we produced a couple months ago to mobilize the Stand.earth community around this issue.

The forest biomass industry got its start in B.C. by claiming to only use waste wood, but as its export market has grown internationally, the B.C. government has been handing out permits to log primary forests (natural forests that have never been logged) to meet the growing demand. Most of these forests are in the central and northern Interior.

Primary forests in the British Columbia Interior often don’t get the same attention as their coastal cousins, but these rare ecosystems are just as vital for communities, wildlife, and our global climate. But in the eyes of the B.C. government and the wood pellet industry, many of these forests are simply fibre to be extracted.

Maya, Stand forest campaigner, in a primary forest flagged for biomassPrimary forest flagged for biomass logging near Prince George, B.C.

Forest biomass has been marketed as renewable energy to replace coal overseas, but burning trees for electricity is dirtier than coal when you account for the carbon dioxide emitted at the smokestack and loss of forest carbon from logging. This is especially true when primary forests are logged to manufacture wood pellets. You can replant a tree, but you cannot replant a forest.

Drax aquired Pinnacle cut block in Norther B.C. for forest biomassDrax-Pinnacle cut block near Smithers, B.C.

The future of the industry – and many of these forests – is now in the hands of UK-based coal giant Drax, a company that has pulled in billions of public dollars in subsidies by retrofitting its plants to burn trees. After acquiring Pinnacle Renewable Energy in 2021 and more recently Pacific Bioenergy’s contracts, Drax now has a virtual monopoly in B.C., which is responsible for roughly 80% of Canada’s pellet exports. Building on this growing scandal, B.C.’s Chief Forester – a senior government staffer in charge of allocating the provincial harvest – just took a new job for Drax.

As bad as this industry is for the climate, it’s equally as worrisome for jobs. The production of wood pellets is highly mechanized. Machines have replaced humans to produce one of the lowest value products one could imagine coming from natural forests. It’s the same story with industrial resource extraction the world over. These communities are bearing the brunt of job losses, as well as the impacts of intensely degraded forests like worsening floods, slides, and megafires.

Photo with smokestack with a headline about Mackenzie mill closure

The future of forests and communities cannot continue to be in the hands of corporate interests. As we face multiple, inter-related crises from job losses to housing to climate-fuelled disasters, we must transition away from industrial logging in old growth and primary forests. This won’t be easy, but we believe in the power of the Stand community and our allies to fight for good jobs, impacted communities, and the climate. And we’ve spent the last year and a half in this battle to protect the last ancient forests in B.C. building a critical mass of people to do just that. 

Because of people like you, this community is more than 650,000 strong and growing. Together, we can take on the industry’s latest scam to log forest ecosystems to produce energy that’s dirtier than coal. 

In solidarity,

Tegan Hansen and Maya Menezes
Forest Campaigners
Stand.earth 


Stand.earth challenges corporations, industries, and governments to prioritize the well-being of people, our environment, and our climate by creating long-term, effective solutions. None of this work is possible without your support.
 
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Thursday, May 12, 2022

My Freedom Machine.

FREEDOM


        FREEDOM IS A GREAT WORD BUT THE REALITY CARRIES A PRICE.

I want to travel in North America and around the world unencumbered by travel expenses. I also do not want to spend my retirement money on Gas for a vehicle that creates Carbon Monoxide pollution everywhere I roll. I need an imaginative solution and the answer is... an ERV!

 Wouldn't it be great if I had a battery powered Electric Recreational Vehicle or ERV?!

 Would it not be fantastic if Solar Panels covered the ERV and they had the capacity to charge the ERV'S battery and to provide heating and cooling and lighting day and night! A self powered Recreation Vehicle with a bed and bathroom and small kitchenette to carry me around North America almost free of charge. I may have to stop infrequently at recharging stations but my freedom machine would provide almost limitless capacity to travel anywhere I wanted! There is that word again...FREEDOM!!        

A freedom machine!

Hey Elon Musk!

 What do you think of this idea? I'm sure you could do it but if not how about General Motors? Would they consider the concept? Ok! Hey, Volkswagen! Remember your Hippy Van with the tiny motor? We skinny and unemployed kids had to get out to push-start the motor! I made it to old age but that won't stop me from riding in a new freedom machine?

I suggest governments and large companies consider creating millions of ERV freedom machines to help the millions of homeless poor refugees now arriving from places like Ukraine. ERV'S would provide shelter and provide refugees the opportunity to spread out while locating homes and jobs.

Thanks for reading!

N.J.R.

  Hello my good friend Valdemar Oliveira! I am happy to hear you had a successfull heart operation.  I hope you live to be 110. I may not be...