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Can Wild Horses Fight Global Warming?

Published September 6, 2011 in We Love Gaia |
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According to Russian scientist Sergey Zimov, reintroducing wild horses to the icy Siberian landscape where they once roamed in droves, will begin to repair the ecological damage brought about by global warming.

Forbes article (via Straight From The Horses Mouth) elaborates on Zimov’s theory to fill the vast barren lands of Siberia with grass-eating animals in the hope that it will eventually slow global warming. “Some people have a small garden. I have an ice age park,” says Zimov.

How can wild horses effect climate change?

By recreating an ecosystem that disappeared thousands of years ago, Zimov believes that herds of wild animals can turn these frigid areas into grassland. When the wild horses graze on wild grass, the grass stays healthy and their manure nourishes the ground cover. “In winter, the animals trample and flatten the snow that otherwise would insulate the ground from the cold air. That helps prevent the frozen ground, or permafrost, from thawing and releasing powerful greenhouse gases.”

Why wild horses?

The park originated with a herd of 40 Yakutian horses, a semi-wild breed. They are able to survive harsh Siberian winters with the help of their very warm, furry hide. With the reintroduction of the wild horses came the predators. “The challenge is to find the right balance between grazers and predators.”

What is rewilding?

According to The Rewilding Institute, “Rewilding is the scientific argument for restoring big wilderness based on the regulatory roles of large predators.” The objective of rewilding Siberia with wild horses is, “To see whether a thriving population of grazing animals will regenerate grasslands that disappeared long ago, which would slow and even halt the accelerating pace of permafrost thaw.” According to the article, the results are encouraging.

Why introduce rewilding to the Arctic?

Climate change effects areas where temperatures are warming fast. “Most climate scientists say human activity, especially industrial pollution and the byproducts of everyday living like home heating and driving cars, is triggering an unnatural warming of the Earth.”

What are your thoughts about reintroducing wild horses into lands where they once roamed? What do you think about rewilding?

Read the full article to learn more about how this project works.

Adapted from an article by Ronnie Citron-Fink, a writer and educator who regularly writes about sustainable living for online sites and magazines.


Diet For A Cool Planet

Published August 28, 2011 in We Love Gaia |
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What does the food in my plate have to do with global warming? The short answer is “everything”, if you subscribe to the prevailing scientific view that climate change is caused by man-made greenhouse gas emissions.

According to United Nations reports, agriculture worldwide is responsible indeed for about 30% of greenhouse gas emissions. Pesticides and fertilizers are brewed using highly polluting processes, industrial farms spare no energy-intensive machinery to tend to their crops (including planes), while the burning of crop residues is a widespread practice on most continents.

Meanwhile, rice fields and cattle emit vast quantities of methane (CH4), a gas that is 23 times more potent than carbon dioxide (CO2). Livestock alone accounts for 18% of greenhouse gas emissions. Last but not least, our food routinely travels at least 2,414 kilometres to reach our table.

In how many words can you say: our food chain, that relies heavily on industrial farming and international trade, is bad news for the planet?

Now, here is the best kept secret in today’s public debate about global warming: agriculture is actually the cheapest and most accessible tool at our disposal to significantly lower greenhouse gas emissions in the short term. Regenerative, sustainable farming practices shrink the carbon footprint of agriculture AND help reduce the amount of carbon already present in the atmosphere. According to conservative estimates, land farmed sustainably can store 10% to 15% of the carbon emissions we produce each year.

All of us should care deeply about this piece of data even if we are no farmers, for all of us eat and — hopefully — more and more of us are discovering the great joy of sharing delicious meals with our loved ones. More carbon in the soil means a richer soil with a denser microbial life, which translates into healthier and tastier plants and animals, in other words better food on our plates.

That is what chef and environmental activist Laura Stec calls the “culinary perspective on global warming”. She made the point to make sure people who come in contact with her know how to green their eating habits: eating less meat; not buying food grown with petroleum-based fertilizers, raised in oil-powered greenhouses, or flown in from at least 2,414 kilometres away; favouring locally-produced food as much as possible by supporting local farms and patronizing farmers’ markets; not wasting food but composting it; minimizing our oil-powered food-shopping trips; drinking home-filtered tap water.

Truth be told, this list of “dos” and “don’ts” is not likely to rally the crowds to the cause. However, “eaters are motivated by taste and pleasure”. Hence her focus on giving people what they want as opposed to telling them what they need to do. The latter is the scientist’s responsibility while the former is the chef’s pregorative. For instance, think of soil as seasoning and grass as marinade: vegetables grown on a vibrant, carbon-rich soil (which she calls “High Vibe Food”) will surprise and delight your taste buds used to today’s standard produce; and you will find that pasture-raised beef is flavoured by the various grasses available to the animals throughout their life.

The outcome of her vision is “Cool Cuisine”, a book co-authored with climate change expert Dr. Eugene Cordero of San José State University. It draws the relationship between our food and climate change in didactic, attractive pages, and offers recipes to help us promote a green food chain.

Her bet is that, as we educate ourselves to the superior taste and experience of food produced with no harm to the planet, the Epicureans in us will choose this food over the run-of-the-mill supermarket fare any day, global warming aside. Out of sheer enjoyment. Contrary to popular belief, she stresses, we do not have to break the bank either — especially since the shift typically entails cooking at home more often as opposed to eating out, and cutting down on meat consumption.

In her view, it is mostly a matter of learning a few tricks in the kitchen since this is where it all starts. “It’s imperative that we learn how to cook again and relate to the food as energy”, she said. “So that we can discover, or rediscover, that eating is not just about satisfying our stomachs, but our heads and our hearts as well.”

Adapted from an article by Laetitia Mailhes

Laetitia Mailhes is a French-born journalist. After many years as the technology and innovation correspondent of the French “Financial Times” in San Francisco, she decided to focus on what truly matters to her: sustainable food and farming.