Tag: Green Living

Cooking oil has a deforestation problem. A startup says it has a solution.

First there was lard. For at least 200 years, a great many Americans fried their potatoes in pork fat. Then, early last century, came the invention of Crisco, a lard look-alike made from cottonseed oil. Procter & Gamble advertised it as healthier — more digestible — than pig grease. The marketing campaign worked. Crisco took off. 

Its success gave birth to a new era of cooking fats. Americans today consume a long, golden stream of vegetable oils: soybean, palm, safflower, sunflower, peanut, avocado, coconut, canola, olive. The plants cultivated to make these oils now cover nearly a quarter of the planet’s cropland, and demand for them is still growing. That’s not good news for the Earth. To grow oil crops, particularly palm and soybeans, farming corporations are cutting down carbon-rich forests, threatening climate goals and biodiversity. 

But what if there was a cooking oil that didn’t drive deforestation? A California startup called Zero Acre Farms claims to have created just that. Zero Acre hopes its product, called Cultured Oil because it’s made by fermenting sugarcane, will shift American diets like Crisco did, but to a different end. The company says its oil requires 90 percent less land and accounts for 86 percent fewer greenhouse gas emissions than soybean oil, the most widely consumed vegetable oil in the United States. 

“If we’re going to continue to satisfy our insatiable desire for oils and fats,” said Stephen del Cardayre, Zero Acre’s co-founder and chief technical officer, “we have to do it more efficiently.”

A hand drizzle Zero Acre Farms cooking oil over a pan of carrots.
Zero Acre oil is drizzled over a pan of carrots. Zero Acre Farms

The startup’s new cooking oil is starting to gain attention. Zero Acre has raised millions of dollars from venture capital funds linked to Chipotle Mexican Grill, Richard Branson’s Virgin Group, and the actor Robert Downey Jr. In September, Shake Shack announced it would test Cultured Oil on its fries at two of its New York City restaurants. Grocery stores aren’t selling sleek stainless steel bottles of the oil yet, but you can buy one on Zero Acre’s website for $26.99. 

Cultured Oil, which has a soft yellow hue like other oils, is made by microorganisms. Add sugarcane to a vat filled with algae, and the microscopic beings convert the sugar into oil. The result, according to Zero Acre, is a liquid that’s healthier than its counterparts because it’s low in saturated and polyunsaturated fats, the sort that have given seed oils a bad (if possibly undeserved) rap for contributing to chronic inflammation and heart disease.

This probably isn’t the first time you’ve encountered a lab creation that’s advertised with a list of impressive stats about how it will save the planet. Climate-conscious eaters have been under a barrage of new choices stemming from the proliferation of products aimed at replacing cow milk, beef, and other carbon-intensive meats. Whether it’s oat milk, plant-based burgers, or lab-grown chicken, the food sector is awash with claims of sustainability, some of which don’t hold up under scrutiny. Maybe you’ve made up your mind to eat a Beyond Burger instead of a beef one, and now you’re wondering whether to sear the novel meat in novel oil.

Grist spoke with three independent experts about how to assess green claims about new food products like Zero Acre’s oil. Each stressed that the only way is to look at something called a life cycle assessment, nicknamed LCA — the analysis that a company uses to determine the land, energy, and water use associated with its product and to compare it to other products. 

“Without the LCA, I can’t make anything of it,” said Sarah Collier, an assistant professor and food sustainability researcher at the University of Washington. 

The mere fact that a life cycle assessment has been done, even by a third party (as in the case of Zero Acre), isn’t enough to inspire confidence, experts said. That’s because these analyses can be built in a way that makes a company’s product look better than its competitors’. There are a variety of ways to grow oil crops, and different growing systems use different amounts of land and emit different amounts of greenhouse gases. In the case of Cultured Oil, the kinds of soybean farms or palm plantations that you compare against the sugarcane operations that feed Zero Acre’s microbes could lead to different conclusions. 

“If you choose baselines that aren’t really equivalent, you can end up making your practice look really, really good, and you can also end up making a competitor’s practice or a legacy practice very bad,” said Mark Bomford, director of the Yale Sustainable Food Program. “If I wanted to make soy-based land look really bad, I would include the largest estimates around the worst kinds of deforestation.” 

Like many companies, Zero Acre has not made its assessment public, so it’s not possible to verify independently how the boundaries of the analysis were drawn. But a spokesperson for the company did say that its comparison with soybean oil relies on data from soybean production in South America, the same region where the sugarcane used to make Zero Acre oil is grown. Del Cardayre told Grist that Zero Acre plans to publicly release its results once the company is bigger and more stable but is keeping the assessment private for now because it contains proprietary information. 

“We try to be as transparent as we can,” del Cardayre said. “Our whole goal, the reason we were founded, was to make better oils and fats that were better for the planet, for the body, and for food. It’s what drives us. It’s our North Star. We have no interest in doing something that’s not doing that.”

Independent experts agreed that Zero Acre’s oil holds promise. Joseph Poore, a food sustainability researcher at the University of Oxford, said in an email that the company’s goal to minimize environmental damage and improve human health is “excellent and critical.” Vegetable oil production is a major source of greenhouse gas emissions, and rising demand for oil crops like palm has been linked to habitat destruction and biodiversity loss. But Poore and other academics also said that it’s too early to know how much better for the environment Cultured Oil will be. 

“A lot of academics are going to be skeptical because we’ve heard it before,” said Julie Guthman, a professor of social sciences who studies food systems at the University of California, Santa Cruz. 

Two years ago, Guthman co-authored a paper that investigated claims of “dematerialization” in the alternative proteins industry — referring to the idea, pushed by Silicon Valley startups, that edible protein can be made “from (nearly) nothing, drawing on abundant or mundane resources” that presumably have no environmental drawbacks. 

In the paper, Guthman and her colleague Charlotte Biltekoff found that the details of how these foods get produced “are largely black-boxed, making any claims to dematerialization appear as magic.” Food-tech companies aren’t necessarily trying to keep consumers in the dark, but they feel pressure, in their quests to woo investors and reshape the world, not to divulge trade secrets. The way they represent their products, Guthman and Biltekoff wrote, obfuscates more than it reveals and makes it “difficult, if not impossible, for the public — or anyone really — to meaningfully assess the promises and their potential consequences.”

This story was originally published by Grist with the headline Cooking oil has a deforestation problem. A startup says it has a solution. on Oct 11, 2023.

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45% of Earth’s Known Flowering Plants Could Become Extinct, Including Orchids and Pineapple

A new State of the World’s Plant and Fungi report from Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (RBG Kew), presents the current conditions of Earth’s plants and fungi.

Based on more than 25 scientific papers and the work of 200 researchers from around the world, the report looks at global biodiversity patterns and drivers, as well as identifies crucial knowledge gaps and ways to tackle them, a press release from RBG Kew said.

One of the main findings of the study was that 45 percent of the flowering plants on Earth could face extinction, including pineapple, orchids and many important crop species.

“Our fifth edition of RBG Kew’s State of the World’s Plants and Fungi focuses on the latest knowledge on the diversity and geographic distribution of plants and fungi. It relies on two major advances. Firstly, the recent release of the first geographically complete World Checklist of Vascular Plants – a landmark achievement after more than 35 years of meticulous and highly collaborative work. Secondly, the wealth of information on fungal diversity newly harnessed from the analyses of environmental DNA in soil samples across the world, integrated with other morphological and molecular evidence from fungarium specimens,” said professor Alexandre Antonelli, director of science at RBG Kew, in the press release.

Fungi and plants are essential to the functioning of ecosystems that provide humans with medicine, food, raw materials and clothing.

“When we consider that nine out of ten of our medicines come from our plants, what we are potentially staring down the barrel at is losing half of all of our future medicines,” said Dr. Matilda Brown, RBG Kew conservation specialist, as BBC News reported. “Every species we lose is a species that we don’t know what opportunities we’re losing… It could be a cancer fighting drug, it could be the solution to hunger… And so to lose that, before we get a chance to study it would be a tragedy.”

There are around 350,000 vascular plant species that have been identified, but as many as 100,000 have yet to be officially named, the press release said. According to new estimates, it is likely that as many as three out of four of these undescribed species are already under threat of extinction.

“My personal observation is that the number of threatened plants has increased shockingly in recent years,” said Dr. Martin Cheek, senior research leader in accelerated taxonomy at RBG Kew, in the press release. “When I started out as a taxonomist 30 years ago, you wouldn’t even consider that a species you were publishing might go extinct; you just assumed it was going to still be around in the wild.”

Researchers made the discovery after analyzing the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List of Threatened Species, along with World Checklist of Vascular Plants (WCVP) data to find links between the year a species of plant is formally described and its risk of extinction.

The scientists discovered a clear link between the description year and extinction risk. More than 77 percent of the described species from 2020 met the criteria to be evaluated as threatened.

They also round that the more recently described species were more likely to fit into a higher threat category. In 2020, more than 59 percent of the species described were likely to meet the Endangered criteria, while 24.4 percent were likely to meet the Critically Endangered criteria.

Because of these startling findings, scientists at Kew are asking that all newly described species be treated as if they have already been assessed as threatened unless there is proof otherwise. More and more of these species are experiencing habitat or population decline and have narrow ranges.

Scientists feel that prioritizing them for full IUCN Red List assessments will help conservation efforts.

“Ideally, partnerships between taxonomists and experienced conservation assessors would aim to describe and assess species simultaneously, to maximise opportunities for effective conservation action. In the meantime, if accepted, our recommendation could aid in the protection of many tens of thousands of undescribed threatened species, by treating them as threatened as soon as they become known to us,” Brown said in the press release.

Scientists hope conservation efforts and policymakers will be guided by the new findings.

“We hope that these findings can be used to say, ‘These are the species that are predicted threatened and haven’t been assessed yet, and we are confident that they are good predictions, so we think that these should be priorities for full Red-Listing,’” said Dr. Steven Bachman, research leader in species conservation at RBG Kew, in the press release. “Then either we develop a project to assess these species or we encourage other people to carry out these assessments.”

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California enacts far-reaching climate disclosure laws

On Saturday, California Governor Gavin Newsom signed a sweeping series of climate and environmental laws into effect, cementing the Golden State’s reputation as a leader in climate action. The laws establish some of the country’s most robust rules for businesses to disclose greenhouse gas emissions, the content of their carbon offsets, and the financial risks they face due to climate change. They also hope to speed up the state’s adoption of more renewable energy, in particular offshore wind projects. Still, the governor raised some eyebrows by vetoing bills that might have sped up construction of new transmission lines — an essential complement to the buildout of renewable power — and signaled that even the bills he just signed could be revised to satisfy business interests in the coming years.

The new bills land as California communities reel from recent years’ historic fires, floods, and extreme heat. The legislation also comes a year after the state moved forward with Newsom’s plan to phase out the sale of gas-powered cars by 2035.

Perhaps the most sweeping bill signed on Saturday was SB 253, otherwise known as the Climate Corporate Data Accountability Act. It will require corporate entities that engage in business in the state of California to publicly disclose their greenhouse gas emissions — not only their direct emissions, like smoke from their factories, but also indirect or upstream emissions related to other business activities like commutes. The law covers over 5,300 companies that make over $1 billion annually. By 2025, the state’s Air Resources Board will approve new rules to implement the legislation; by 2026 the law will fully go into effect.

Big business in the Golden State has expressed opposition to the law. A letter written by the California Chamber of Commerce and undersigned by multiple growers’ associations, manufacturers’ associations, and other business coalitions urged California representatives to vote no on the bill. “Simply put, SB 253 is a reporting requirement. And, a costly reporting requirement at that and will not lead to direct emissions reductions,” the letter said. 

Newsom in turn has reassured business interests that he will amend the law next year, streamlining it to address their concerns. “I am concerned about the overall financial impact of this bill on businesses,” Newsom wrote in his signing message

The same legislative session saw a number of other notable bills signed into law, many intended to mitigate the effects of climate change and speed up the energy transition. A second bill similar to SB 253 requires companies worth more than $500 million to disclose the financial risks climate change holds for their businesses. Another law targets abandoned oil wells for faster closure and cleanup. Still others strengthen renewable energy infrastructure, though Newsom vetoed a bill to speed up the permitting process for power lines, which would speed up transmission of renewable energy.

Despite organized business opposition to some of these bills, some corporations, particularly those that already disclose their emissions, threw their support behind the proposed disclosure rules. “Fighting climate change remains one of our most urgent priorities,” wrote Apple in a letter of support to State Senator Scott Wiener, who introduced the bill after unsuccessful attempts to get it passed in two previous sessions.

“This legislation will support those companies doing their part to tackle the climate crisis and create accountability for those that aren’t,” Wiener said in a statement.

This story was originally published by Grist with the headline California enacts far-reaching climate disclosure laws on Oct 10, 2023.

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Stockholm to Ban Gas, Diesel Cars From City Center

Sweden’s Vice Mayor for Transport and Urban Environment Lars Strömgren said Stockholm will ban gas- and diesel-powered cars from parts of the city center beginning in 2025 to improve air quality and reduce noise pollution from traffic.

A 20-block environmental zone that includes some of the priciest real estate in the country is included in the new plan, reported Reuters.

“Nowadays, the air in Stockholm causes babies to have lung conditions and the elderly to die prematurely. It is a completely unacceptable situation,” Strömgren, a member of the Green Party, said in a statement, as Reuters reported.

The Green Party has hopes that the new ban will accelerate the pace at which people trade in their gas-powered cars for electric vehicles (EVs).

“We need to limit the dangerous emissions from petrol and diesel cars, and that’s why we’re introducing a class three environmental zone in one part of the city centre,” Strömgren said, as reported by The Local.

Under the new regulation, EVs will be the most predominant vehicles permitted in the planned class-three environmental zone, but exceptions will be made for larger plug-in hybrid vans, Reuters reported.

“We want to create a better living environment for the people who live and work here,” Strömgren told the state broadcaster, as reported by Bloomberg.

Police vehicles and ambulances are exempt from the new regulation, as well as vehicles with a driver or passenger that has a documented disability, Reuters reported.

Transportation companies have said the city’s focus should be on more investment in electric charging stations to encourage voluntary change.

“Since 2010, we have reduced emissions by 34%. But the Green Party and their colleagues in the city of Stockholm are now in far too much of a hurry,” said the Swedish Confederation of Transport Enterprises, as reported by Reuters.

Stockholm is the first Swedish city to propose a class-three environmental zone.

The new regulation is more strict than diesel car bans in Athens, Paris and Madrid, Bloomberg reported. Other cities like London have instituted low-emission zones that charge daily fees for gas-powered vehicles entering the city center.

“The environmental zone is being introduced in an area where there are a lot of pedestrians and cyclists, where the air quality needs to improve. It’s also an area of the city centre where we can see high commitment to electrification, where there are key actors who can be a driving force in this transition,” Strömgren said, as reported by The Local. “That’s why this is a good place to start.”

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Why Indigenous youth are gathering in Oslo to fight a green energy project

The lavvu is set up in the traditional way: three, debarked birch rods holding up a cloth exterior. The lavvu, a traditional Sámi structure that resembles a teepee or a tent, is insulated with reindeer skins, and in the center, on a floor of twigs, a hearth. Typically a fire would be burning, but for now, a plant stands.

Traditionally, one doesn’t stand inside a lavvu save to enter and sit, so Mihkkal Hætta, the 22-year-old Sámi organizer from the village of Kautokeino, Norway, gestured to me to sit on the soft reindeer pelts.

“Welcome,” said Hætta. “I’ve been staying here for three weeks now.”

With the door closed, fresh air circled through the dwelling from an opening at the top of the lavvu. It was remarkably quiet inside, and soothing. 

Outside stood the Norwegian Parliament. Street musicians busked for tourists, scooters and cars flew by, and dog walkers filed past Hætta’s temporary home. A cluster of Sami youth and other environmental activists also gathered. Curious passersby stopped to ask what was going on. Most asked what a lavvu was doing on official government property.

“I came here on September the 11th because it’s been 700 days since the Supreme Court ruled in favor of [the Sámis from Fosen],” Hætta would explain. “It’s quite unbelievable that a state like Norway lets human rights violations continue for 700 days. And it’s still ongoing.” 

Hætta said most people from Oslo who come to the lavvu say they support him, but in the early days of his protest, there were several incidents: a rock band tried to break in one night and another time, someone stole some of his clothing.

Hætta’s presence in Oslo is becoming a familiar one — as are his comrades, and their attempts to bring attention to the Fosen case. On October 11, 2021, Norway’s Supreme Court ruled that the Fosen wind farm near the city of Trondheim, on the nation’s central-west coast, violated the rights of Sámi reindeer herders, the cultural rights of the Sámi people, and were constructed illegally. 

Now, on the eve of the two-year anniversary of the court’s ruling, Hætta’s one-month protest serves as a reminder that despite Norway’s international renown for human rights advocacy and standards, Indigenous peoples inside the country’s borders still have no recourse to justice. 

“I became really angry, losing more and more hope and losing more and more faith with the government,” said Hætta. “So I decided to put up a lavvu here outside the Norwegian Parliament to remind them that this is still ongoing.”

While Hætta’s protest has gone on for a full month, he’s not alone, and it’s not his first. By night, allies and friends look out for him, taking turns on night watch shifts outside the lavvu to keep him safe. And with the exact anniversary of the court ruling only one day away, more and more supporters are arriving to support, with buses coming from Sámi villages and communities across Sápmi — the traditional territory of the Sámi stretching from Russia across northern Finland into Sweden and Norway. 

“I’m never alone here,” he said. “I couldn’t do this if I was alone. I have a lot of people around me.” 

Hætta first became involved with the Fosen case earlier this year. On February 23, exactly 500 days after the court’s ruling, the Norwegian Sámi Association’s Youth Committee, also known as NSR-N, began occupying the Ministry of Petroleum and Energy in protest of the Norwegian government’s inaction after the verdict. Hætta took part. 

During the protest, nearly 30 demonstrators, including Hætta, were arrested and another 90 removed from the Ministry’s property by police. Over the course of a week, Sámi youth organizers were joined by land and rights defenders from Young Friends of the Earth Norway, Greenpeace, Greta Thunberg, and nearly 2,000 additional supporters. Human rights campaigners eventually shut down 10 ministries and ended their protest outside Norway’s royal palace.

In the wake of the actions, the Minister of Petroleum and Energy delivered an official apology to reindeer herders in Fosen and acknowledged that the wind park constituted a human rights violation, while the Sámi Parliament of Norway demanded the windmills be demolished and the area restored to reindeer grazing land. Instead, however, Norwegian officials have attempted to negotiate with reindeer herders in order to keep the Fosen wind park operational.

Much of the energy produced at the $1.3 billion Fosen wind park will be part of Norway’s green transition — approximately 98 percent of the country’s electricity comes from renewable sources. However, in 2021, almost 17 percent of that electricity was exported to other European countries. There are nearly 53 wind farms operating, or under construction, in Norway right now, and it’s estimated that another 100 licenses have been granted by the government with many slated for construction in Sápmi. 

“By failing to enforce a judgment by its highest Court, the Norwegian government is denying the rights of Indigenous Sámi to their cultural heritage and livelihoods,” said Carla Garcia Zendejas, Director of the Center for International Environmental Law’s People, Land and Resources Program in Geneva, Switzerland. “Sámi leaders should not need to put themselves at risk to ensure that effective justice is carried out. Not only does this cast a shadow on the Norwegian government’s commitment to upholding human rights obligations, it questions the rule of law.”

In June of this year, Hætta marked 600 days of inaction by joining with NSR-N and Motvind Norge, an organization that opposes the construction of wind turbines on conservation grounds, to demonstrate outside the Norwegian Parliament again, while activists blockaded the entrance to the wind park at Fosen.

Recently, 24-year-old cultural worker Emily Cottingham from Tønsberg and 26-year-old Daniel Fuller were guarding the lavvu. Fuller, who is Irish-British, works at a nearby cafe and became involved when he began offering coffee to Hætta and other activists outside the Parliament. 

“I have always been interested in decolonization, having studied this,” said Fuller. “When I saw that Mihkkal moved into the lavvu, I realized that it was time to put my theory into practice.”

Then there’s Israel Nebeker, an American musician from Oregon who has come to Norway to trace his Sámi roots. When Nebeker heard about the Fosen case, and the actions taking place, he extended his trip.

“It feels important to be at this demonstration, to show my support for the Sámi at Fosen, and to hold the government accountable to its own laws,” said Nebeker. “It’s time for the government of Norway to protect the rights of Sámi, instead of continuing a history of brutal injustice.”

In 1981, Sámi organizers began demonstrations in Oslo to protest a proposed hydroelectric dam in Sápmi. Known as the Alta Action, Indigenous leaders occupied a government building and began hunger strikes. While efforts were unsuccessful in stopping the dam from being built, the moment marked a major turning point in Indigenous resistance in the region.

“When my father lived in Oslo as a young man, he attended the Alta demonstrations,” said Nebeker. “The Sámi have been fighting for far, far too long.”

Demonstrations are expected to begin tomorrow as more human rights campaigners make their way to Oslo. Sámi people that have worn Gaktis, traditional clothing, are wearing them inside out — an old Sámi tradition that communicates protest. When Sámi people turn their Gaktis inside out, it signifies resistance.

“It’s completely despicable for a country like Norway to ignore its own courts and laws,” said Hætta. “It’s a human rights violation, and it’s been going on for 729 days.”

This story was originally published by Grist with the headline Why Indigenous youth are gathering in Oslo to fight a green energy project on Oct 10, 2023.

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The Great Barrier Reef Is Being Polluted Largely by Groundwater, Study Finds

Groundwater is carrying a significant portion of the pollutants coming into the Great Barrier Reef, a recent study has found. According to the study, previously unquantified nitrogen and phosphorus have been discharging into and impacting the reef system, and researchers have now found that groundwater is responsible for about one-third of new nitrogen and two-thirds of new phosphorus coming into the Great Barrier Reef.

These findings, published in the journal Environmental Science & Technology, show that about twice as much nitrogen is coming into the world’s largest reef system from groundwater compared to rivers.

Researchers from Southern Cross University in Australia, Australia’s Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), the Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) and Gothenburg University in Sweden, collaborated on the study. Researchers used radium isotopes to test reef water samples and collected data from an area stretching from south of Rockhampton to north of Cairns in northeastern Queensland, Australia.

The study shows that groundwater was discharging into the reef about 10 to 15 times more than rivers were. Groundwater as a significant carrier of pollution to the Great Barrier Reef hasn’t been accounted for in previous studies. Instead, efforts to minimize pollution have primarily focused on rivers rather than groundwater.

“Nutrients are essential to support the incredible biodiversity of the Great Barrier Reef. However, an excess of nutrients can lead to detrimental issues such as harmful algal blooms, crown-of-thorns starfish outbreaks, and fish diseases, which have been on the rise in the Reef over the past few decades,” said Douglas Tait, lead author of the study. “Our study underscores the need for a strategic shift in management approaches aimed at safeguarding the Great Barrier Reef from the effects of excess nutrients.”

Although the research team didn’t follow the pollution to identify the original sources, they did note that groundwater pollution can spend many years underground before it discharges into the ocean. 

“This could just be the start of the front [of pollution] that is coming through,” Tait told The Guardian. “We could have a significant problem realized in the coming decades.”

Because of this factor of groundwater pollution, it will be important for policymakers to consider long-term strategies to mitigate groundwater pollution into the reef. Further, this research reveals more studies are needed to examine exactly how the pollutants are moving through groundwater to the reef system.

“This study sheds new light on the complex nutrient dynamics within the Great Barrier Reef,” Tait said in a statement. “Our understanding and ability to manage the sources of nutrients is pivotal in preserving the Reef for generations to come.”

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Prescribed Burns Can Help Prevent Wildfires, but the Climate Crisis Is Making It Harder to Light Them Safely

Controlled burns or “prescribed fires” are used by trained firefighters to prevent wildfires in the Western United States by clearing away dried plant material that could potentially feed a natural, healthy fire.

Certain weather conditions are necessary for firefighters to execute controlled burns safely. They must be dry enough that fires can ignite, but not so windy or dry that more vegetation would catch fire than intended, a press release from University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), said.

Daniel Swain, a UCLA climate scientist, led a new study that discovered that the times of year and overall number of days when firefighters can safely implement prescribed fires is being reduced by climate change.

The study, “Climate change is narrowing and shifting prescribed fire windows in western United States,” was published in the journal Communications Earth & Environment.

“Escalating wildfire activity in the western United States has accelerated adverse societal impacts… However, the intentional use of fire as a vegetation management tool, known as ‘prescribed fire,’ can reduce the risk of destructive fires and restore ecosystem resilience,” the study said. “Prescribed fire implementation is subject to multiple constraints, including the number of days characterized by weather and vegetation conditions conducive to achieving desired outcomes.”

Scientists’ current projection for planetary warming is two degrees Celsius by 2060, which Swain called “optimistic” considering the current trajectory, according to the press release. However, if the projections turned out to be correct, the number of days that would have favorable weather and vegetation conditions for prescribed fires would be reduced by an average of 17 percent across the Western U.S.

Most of the reductions in favorable conditions would be in the spring and summer, which is when most controlled burns are being done currently. The study also found that there would be a four percent increase in days that were favorable for prescribed fires in winter.

Kristen Shive, co-author of the findings and an expert on forests, prescribed fire and wildfires at University of California, Berkeley (UC Berkeley), said the prescriptions for specific burns vary by type of vegetation and location, but the target temperatures usually range from 50 to 70 degrees Fahrenheit with a relative humidity of 10 to 20 percent.

Swain said the agencies that carry out prescribed fires will have to adjust to climate change, since most of the seasonal workers who prepare for and manage controlled burns only work until mid-autumn.

“Global warming will reduce the number of favorable days for prescribed fires throughout the American West, but winter in particular may emerge as an increasingly favorable time for prescribed burns if the relevant policy and staffing changes can be made,” Swain said in the press release.

The study found regional variation as well. The changes were most noticeable in the southern and coastal regions of California, with many locations losing a month’s worth of days that were favorable for controlled burns annually. In the northern Rocky Mountains, however, there could be a small increase in days that are safe for prescribed burns.

“We’re just not doing a lot of prescribed fire compared to what is needed, at scale, to really address the escalating wildfire crisis,” Swain said.

The study compared climate conditions as well as vegetation dryness from 1980 to 2020 and 2020 to 2060.

Wildfires in the Western U.S. have increased markedly due to factors like human development in areas susceptible to fire and climate change, making controlled burns even more important.

“This paper is giving us advanced warning,” Shive said. “Hopefully we can change policies to either extend those folks or create winter-specific crews.”

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Feeding Cows Seaweed Could Reduce Methane Emissions Significantly, Study Finds

Sweden has been investigating the use of feed additives for cows to reduce methane. A new report by the country’s Environmental Protection Agency found that the chemical 3-nitrooxypropanol (3-NOP) and red algae seaweed are two of the additives “with higher potential.”

Adding red algae to the feed of farm animals each day could reduce methane emissions by as much as 90 percent, according to manufacturers, as The Guardian reported.

However, the Swedish Environmental Protection Agency said additional investigation was needed.

“More research and analysis is required both in terms of today’s marketed products and to develop alternative, future feed additives,” the report said.

In the European Union, 3-NOP was approved for dairy cows early last year. According to the report, the chemical can reduce methane emissions by about 30 percent on average in dairy cows and by 45 percent in cattle raised for consumption by humans.

The ability of seaweed fed to cows to keep microorganisms in their first stomach from producing the greenhouse gas was first discovered by Australian researchers.

The Swedish study recommended that the government commission further investigation into the potential of additives in feed to reduce methane. They advised more collaboration, research, initiatives to encourage innovation and support for farmers. The report also recommended looking at breeds’ genetic variations.

The extra costs of additives for feed would be a big expense for farmers.

“We were happy with the proposal for financial compensation for farmers to invest in methane-reducing feed additives in the report and we will support the government to turn this proposal into reality,’’ said Cora Taylor, business developer at land-based seaweed factory Volta Greentech, as Volta Greentech posted on Medium.

Animal digestion is responsible for about 70 percent of the methane emissions produced in Sweden.

“We believe that this [methane-reducing feed additives] can be a measure to reduce the methane from cattle in Sweden. We don’t have very many other measures that can have this [effect] within current production level. But we also believe it’s still quite new and there’s still more research to be done before we can really come in with a clear policy measure,” said climate analyst Emma Carlen, who works at the Swedish Environmental Protection Agency, as reported by The Guardian.

A seaweed factory to make cattle feed is being developed on Sweden’s west coast by Volta Greentech. Pilot projects by the company at two farms in Sweden had been able to reduce methane emissions by cows by 80 percent a day, said co-founder and CEO of the company Fredrik Åkerman.

Volta Greentech has plans for a pilot project at a UK commercial beef farm next year.

“We have developed a strategy that makes cows burp and fart less methane emissions. So the additive is included into the cow feed and we have now been able, in several commercial pilot projects, to reduce 80% of emissions per day that the cows emit, which is of course making a big positive impact on climate change and agriculture,” Åkerman said, as The Guardian reported.

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