Big Business is Investing in Water Banks

“Water banking” is an emerging practice in the west as water planners work to develop concepts to protect water resources in the face of long-term drought, increasing demand, and a changing climate. In summary, water banking is a voluntary, market-based tool that could facilitate water transactions between willing sellers and buyers. Through water banking, water rights owners are able to temporarily lease their water to those who are willing to pay a premium for it.

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waterDarah Fuller
Fleeing the Coming Storm: The Guiding Principles as a Roadmap for Climate Displacement

On Sunday, August 29, 2021, Hurricane Ida struck Louisiana as a Category 4 Hurricane, tearing through southern Louisiana towards Baton Rouge and New Orleans with over 150mph winds. By the next day, more than one million Louisianians were without power. The storm killed 82 people across 8 states and left destruction in its wake, like on Grand Ilse, Louisiana where 40-50% of houses disappeared.

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Starving Sea Cows & the Legal Frameworks Meant to Protect Them

“A manatee was floating sideways, drifting as it stared helplessly up at her. ‘That happens when they are starving and lacking energy,’” said Monica Ross, a senior research scientist at the Clearwater Marine Aquarium. This is the reality of many manatees in Florida’s waters. They’ve run out of their primary food source, seagrass, and are starving to death.

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Unplugging the Global E-Waste Crisis

Electronics have supercharged our lives, making it easier to stay in touch with loved ones, keep our homes clean with ease, and quickly access important blog posts – like this one. However, a crisis has emerged parallel to our increasingly electrified society, as e-waste the world’s “fastest-growing solid-waste stream.”

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How Laundry has Become the Predominant Source of Global Microplastic Pollution

That’s right, 35% of the microplastics in the ocean are microfibers from domestic laundry. Microfibers are primary microplastics , meaning that they are created to be small in size, similar to microbeads, rather than secondary microplastics which are microplastics that have fragmented from larger plastic items due to damage and weathering (usually from food containers, disposable utensils, and fishing equipment). Microfibers are created by the polymerization of oil monomers to create plastic polymers .

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Community Choice Aggregation: from California to Colorado?

Energy production is one of the most significant sources of greenhouse gases in America, making it a vital policy area in the transition away from a carbon-based economy. Most American residences and businesses buy their electricity from investor-owned utilities, which are generally government-sanctioned monopolies. Even as the cost of wind and solar energy plummets, many investor-owned utilities (IOUs) have been slow to make firm commitments to shift to renewables, often due to existing investments in oil and gas.

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Agrivoltaics: Combining Food and Electricity Production to Save the Planet

Nearly 270 million people face food shortages globally; this number has doubled since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Nine million people die every year from hunger and hunger-related diseases. In the United States, more than one in seven children live in a household facing food insecurity and are not afforded the adequate nutrition needed to grow and develop. The impacts of food shortages are very real

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Green Gentrification

Green spaces and green infrastructure such as parks, bike trails, and greenways are vital for livable cities. Access to high-quality outdoor green spaces has significant impacts on the health of individuals and communities alike. These areas also increase biodiversity, manage stormwater, prevent heat islands, regulate emissions, foster social connections, and encourage healthy lifestyles. Some green spaces filter air, reduce noise, replenish groundwater, and even provide food. Urban trees absorb airborne pollutants from the atmosphere and provide shaded, cooler areas that reduce heat-related risks for city residents.

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All Eyes on Utah Part II: HB 297- Colorado River Amendments

After the other basin states made their concerns clear over the Lake Powell Pipeline, the Utah State Legislature stepped in to try to ensure water delivery to St. George. Recently passed legislation created the Colorado River Authority of Utah, a group charged with a mission to ‘protect, conserve, use, and develop Utah’s waters of the Colorado River System.” Although it is not uncommon for states to have such a commission, Utah is getting attention for the creation of its commission because of its timing, legislative rhetoric, and intent.

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waterDarah Fuller
Beef: Just Bad, or Can Regenerative Grazing Make it Beneficial?

“Beef is bad.” We’ve all heard it, and the statistics show that meat, and especially beef, is a major contributor to greenhouse gas emissions and climate change. Agriculture broadly accounts for about 10% of the United States’ greenhouse gas emissions. Globally, animal agriculture accounts for an estimated 14.5% of emissions, and beef alone accounts for around 41% of that 14.5%. Ranching is incredibly resource-intensive, especially when the need for pastureland is added into the equation.

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land useDarah Fuller