m (newslist template limit)
 
(84 intermediate revisions by 5 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{under construction|08:36, 2 November 2019 (UTC)}}
[[File:Greenwich park drawing1.jpg|thumb|Attribution: [[User:Philralph|Philralph]]]]
{| cellpadding="8" cellspacing="0"
|- valign="top"
| style="background:white" width="52%"|


== Natural climate solutions ==
{{Newslist|keyword=Climate solutions|limit=3}}
 
{{Read more|Climate change solutions news}}
 
== Resources ==
 
=== Networks ===
 
* [https://www.rapidtransition.org/ Rapid Transition Alliance], Rapid economic transition, including widespread behaviour change to sustainable lifestyles, is necessary to live within planetary ecological boundaries and to limit global warming to below 1.5 degrees. Rapid transition shows examples of evidence-based hope for change whose speed and potential scale will steer us towards staying within those boundaries and which advance social justice. Content published under a Creative Commons license. ''added 14:52, 22 January 2020 (UTC)''
 
=== Video ===
 
{{Video
| video = p-rTQ443akE
| title = 2040 - Official Trailer
| authors = Madman Films, Mar 14, 2019
}}
 
=== Research ===
 
==== Project Drawdown ====
 
{{Video|366804611|platform=Vimeo}}
 
* [https://www.drawdown.org/ Drawdown], 100 solutions to reverse global warming
 
Project Drawdown is a climate change mitigation project initiated by Paul Hawken and climate activist Amanda Joy Ravenhill. Central to the project is the compilation of a list of the "100 most substantive solutions to global warming." The list, encompassing only technologically viable, existing solutions, was compiled by a team of over 200 scholars, scientists, policymakers, business leaders and activists; for each solution the carbon impact through the year 2050, the total and net cost to society, and the total lifetime savings were measured and modelled.


{{#widget:YouTube|id=TL2swGjau8w}}
Paul Hawken has edited the book Drawdown: The most comprehensive plan ever proposed to reverse global warming to support the Project. {{W|Drawdown (climate)}}


{{#widget:YouTube|id=J9mjbzqqA_M}}
== Carbon literacy ==


[https://www.naturalclimate.solutions/ Natural Climate Solutions]
{{Wikipedia excerpt|Carbon literacy}}


== Open CO2 ==
== Open CO2 ==


Open CO2 is a project to help crowdsource open carbon accounts for local communities worldwide. It can also be about carbon literacy, encouraging ourselves to learn more about what the available data might show.  
Open CO2 is a project to help crowdsource open carbon accounts for local communities worldwide. It can also be about carbon literacy, encouraging ourselves to learn more about what the available data might show.
Open local carbon accounts would help make possible [[Participatory carbon budgeting]]. ''See separate article:'' [[Open CO2]]
Open local carbon accounts would help make possible [[Participatory carbon budgeting]].


[[File:PurpleLondon004.jpg|left]]<br clear=left>
* ''Main article:'' [[Open CO2]]


== Participatory carbon budgeting ==
== Participatory carbon budgeting ==


The idea is to combine two other ideas: participatory budgeting {{W|Participatory budgeting}} and a carbon budget for an area, typically a large town or city. ''See separate article:'' [[Participatory carbon budgeting]]
The idea is to combine two other ideas: participatory budgeting {{W|Participatory budgeting}} and a carbon budget for an area, typically a large town or city.


== Emissions Reduction Community based currency schemes ==
* ''Main article:'' [[Participatory carbon budgeting]]
* ''See also:'' [[List of climate assemblies]]


A community based emissions reduction currency scheme is a C4 type local currency in which local currency issues are backed by the emissions reductions of the schemes members. The local currency, when accepted for trade by other members or local businesses, thereby rewards participants for their efforts at global warming prevention. These currencies may have various degrees of convertibility into carbon saved, renewable energy, or national currency. {{W|Emissions Reduction Currency System#Community based currency schemes}}
== Nature-based Solutions ==
 
"There is no pathway to net zero that does not involve a massive scale up of Nature-based Solutions (NbS). They could provide ⅓ of the cost-effective climate change mitigation worldwide, while helping communities adapt, reverse biodiversity loss, tackling climate vulnerability around the world. Despite all this just 3% of global climate fundings is invested in nature", Zac Goldsmith, UK Minister for the International Environment and Climate<ref>quoted in Urban Nature-based Solutions in Scotland at Scale, Toward a regenerative natural asset economy, 2019- , NatureScot, [https://darkmatterlabs.org/Urban-Nature-based-Solutions-in-Scotland-at-Scale-Toward-a-regenerativ darkmatterlabs.org]</ref>
 
== Natural climate solutions ==
 
{{Video|TL2swGjau8w}}
 
{{Video|J9mjbzqqA_M}}
 
[https://www.naturalclimate.solutions/ Natural Climate Solutions]
 
== Regenerative agriculture ==
 
{{Video
| video = 6vQW8Tl_KLc
| title = 'From the Ground Up – Regenerative Agriculture'
| authors = festival21, Jul 28, 2019
}}
 
{{Wikipedia excerpt|Regenerative agriculture}}
 
== Alternate wetting and drying ==
 
{{Newslist|keyword=Awd|year=2023}}


== Other climate change solutions ==
{{Wikipedia excerpt|Alternate wetting and drying}}
*ending subsidies for fossil fuels
*ending laws mandating car use
*meat pricing, see also [[Food activism]]
*animal husbandry
*[[Renewable energy]], see also [[Community energy]]
*[[Circular economy]]
*[[Sustainable transport]], see also [[Sustainable transport activism]]


| style="background:khaki" |
== Community based emissions reduction currency schemes ==
[[File:Greenwich park drawing1.jpg|right|424px]]<br clear=all>
__TOC__


== News and comment ==
A community based emissions reduction currency scheme is a C4 type local currency in which local currency issues are backed by the emissions reductions of the schemes members. The local currency, when accepted for trade by other members or local businesses, thereby rewards participants for their efforts at global warming prevention. These currencies may have various degrees of convertibility into carbon saved, renewable energy, or national currency. {{W|Emissions Reduction Currency System#Community based currency schemes}}


'''2019'''
== Climate-friendly gardening ==


'''Oct 28''' Technology will not save us from climate change – but imagining new forms of society will <ref>[http://theconversation.com/technology-will-not-save-us-from-climate-change-but-imagining-new-forms-of-society-will-124364 theconversation.com]</ref>
{{Wikipedia excerpt|Climate-friendly gardening}}


'''Oct 9''' Cross-sector ‘third spaces’ incubate social, climate solutions <ref>[https://www.shareable.net/cross-sector-third-spaces-incubate-social-climate-solutions/ Shareable]</ref>
== Sustainable cooling ==


== Resources ==
{{Video
| video = 557608251
| platform = Vimeo
| title =


=== Research ===
# ThisIsCool - Making Sustainable Cooling a Reality


==== Project Drawdown ====
| authors = SEforALL, June 1, 2021
}}


{{#widget:Vimeo|id=366804611}}
* [https://thisiscool.seforall.org/ This Is Cool], campaign showing what can be done across the world to make sustainable cooling a reality


*[https://www.drawdown.org/ Drawdown], 100 solutions to reverse global warming
{{Wikipedia excerpt|Air conditioning|Other techniques}}


Project Drawdown is a climate change mitigation project initiated by Paul Hawken and climate activist Amanda Joy Ravenhill. Central to the project is the compilation of a list of the “100 most substantive solutions to global warming.” The list, encompassing only technologically viable, existing solutions, was compiled by a team of over 200 scholars, scientists, policymakers, business leaders and activists; for each solution the carbon impact through the year 2050, the total and net cost to society, and the total lifetime savings were measured and modelled.
== Other climate change solutions ==


Paul Hawken has edited the book Drawdown: The most comprehensive plan ever proposed to reverse global warming to support the Project. {{W|Drawdown (climate)}}
* ending subsidies for fossil fuels
* ending laws mandating car use
* meat pricing, see also [[Food activism]]
* animal husbandry
* [[Renewable energy]], see also [[Community energy]]
* [[Circular economy]]
* [[Sustainable transport]], see also [[Sustainable transport activism]]
* [[Passive House]], [[Passive solar design]]


== See also ==
== See also ==
*[[Climate change solutions UK]]
*[[Climate action]], [[Climate news]]
*[[Measures to stop global warming]], [[:Category:Climate change mitigation]]
*[[Carbon offset]]


== Interwiki links ==
* [[Climate change solutions UK]], [[Climate action UK#Climate emergency centres|Climate emergency centres]]
Carbon price {{W|Carbon price}}
* [[Carbon literacy]]
* [[Climate action]], [[Climate news]]
* [[Measures to stop global warming]], [[:Category:Climate change mitigation]]
* [[Carbon offset]]
 
{{Localtopic}}
 
{{CASwiki menu}}


== External links ==
== External links ==


=== United Kingdom ===
* [[Wikipedia:Carbon price]]
*Ten bold Ideas [https://static1.squarespace.com/static/5d30896202a18c0001b49180/t/5d9c86f8a4bd392d8c56c547/1570539338734/Ten+Bold+Ideas] from [https://www.wearepossible.org/ Possible]
* [[Wikipedia:Passivhaus]]
* [https://permies.com/f/238/ Carbon Farming forums] at [https://permies.com Permies.com]
* [https://permies.com/t/scale Wheaton Eco Scale]at [https://permies.com Permies.com]


== References ==


{{scaendmenu}}
<references />


|}
{{Page data}}
[[category:Climate change solutions]]
{{stub}}


'''References'''
[[Category:Climate change]]
<references/>
[[Category:Climate action]]

Latest revision as of 17:53, 22 March 2024

Attribution: Philralph
  • News ‘It’s almost carbon-negative’: how hemp became a surprise building material, theguardian.com (Feb 15, 2024)
  • News I was a kitchen snob who would only cook on gas. Now an induction hob is my new flame, theguardian.com (Feb 05, 2024)
  • News Parisians vote in favour of tripling parking costs for SUVs, theguardian.com (Feb 04, 2024)

Read more

Resources[edit | edit source]

Networks[edit | edit source]

  • Rapid Transition Alliance, Rapid economic transition, including widespread behaviour change to sustainable lifestyles, is necessary to live within planetary ecological boundaries and to limit global warming to below 1.5 degrees. Rapid transition shows examples of evidence-based hope for change whose speed and potential scale will steer us towards staying within those boundaries and which advance social justice. Content published under a Creative Commons license. added 14:52, 22 January 2020 (UTC)

Video[edit | edit source]

mqdefault.jpgYouTube_icon.svg
2040 - Official Trailer
Authors: Madman Films, Mar 14, 2019

Research[edit | edit source]

Project Drawdown[edit | edit source]

366804611.jpgVimeo_play_button.png
  • Drawdown, 100 solutions to reverse global warming

Project Drawdown is a climate change mitigation project initiated by Paul Hawken and climate activist Amanda Joy Ravenhill. Central to the project is the compilation of a list of the "100 most substantive solutions to global warming." The list, encompassing only technologically viable, existing solutions, was compiled by a team of over 200 scholars, scientists, policymakers, business leaders and activists; for each solution the carbon impact through the year 2050, the total and net cost to society, and the total lifetime savings were measured and modelled.

Paul Hawken has edited the book Drawdown: The most comprehensive plan ever proposed to reverse global warming to support the Project. W

Carbon literacy[edit | edit source]

Wikipedia W icon.svg

Carbon Literacy is the awareness of climate change and the climate impacts of humankind's everyday actions. The term has been used in a range of contexts in scientific literature and in casual usage (see Research), but is most associated with The Carbon Literacy Project (CLP).

Open CO2[edit | edit source]

Open CO2 is a project to help crowdsource open carbon accounts for local communities worldwide. It can also be about carbon literacy, encouraging ourselves to learn more about what the available data might show. Open local carbon accounts would help make possible Participatory carbon budgeting.

Participatory carbon budgeting[edit | edit source]

The idea is to combine two other ideas: participatory budgeting W and a carbon budget for an area, typically a large town or city.

Nature-based Solutions[edit | edit source]

"There is no pathway to net zero that does not involve a massive scale up of Nature-based Solutions (NbS). They could provide ⅓ of the cost-effective climate change mitigation worldwide, while helping communities adapt, reverse biodiversity loss, tackling climate vulnerability around the world. Despite all this just 3% of global climate fundings is invested in nature", Zac Goldsmith, UK Minister for the International Environment and Climate[1]

Natural climate solutions[edit | edit source]

mqdefault.jpgYouTube_icon.svg
mqdefault.jpgYouTube_icon.svg

Natural Climate Solutions

Regenerative agriculture[edit | edit source]

mqdefault.jpgYouTube_icon.svg
'From the Ground Up – Regenerative Agriculture'
Authors: festival21, Jul 28, 2019
Wikipedia W icon.svg

Regenerative agriculture is a conservation and rehabilitation approach to food and farming systems. It focuses on topsoil regeneration, increasing biodiversity, improving the water cycle, enhancing ecosystem services, supporting biosequestration, increasing resilience to climate change, and strengthening the health and vitality of farm soil.

Regenerative agriculture is not a specific practice itself. Rather, proponents of regenerative agriculture use a variety of sustainable agriculture techniques in combination. Practices include recycling as much farm waste as possible and adding composted material from sources outside the farm. Regenerative agriculture on small farms and gardens is often based on philosophies like permaculture, agroecology, agroforestry, restoration ecology, keyline design, and holistic management. Large farms are also increasingly adopting regenerative techniques and often use "no-till" and/or "reduced till" practices.

As soil health improves, input requirements may decrease, and crop yields may increase as soils are more resilient against extreme weather and harbor fewer pests and pathogens.

Regenerative agriculture mitigates climate change through carbon dioxide removal, i.e. it draws carbon from the atmosphere and sequesters it. Along with decreasing carbon emissions, carbon sequestration practices are gaining popularity in agriculture, and individuals and groups are taking action to fight climate change.

Alternate wetting and drying[edit | edit source]

  • News Is it time to choose sustainable rice?, Wicked Leeks (Jul 17, 2023) — You might not know it, but traditional rice cultivation emits serious levels of greenhouse gases. Clare Hargreaves interviews a man working with rice farmers to get climate-friendlier rice onto British dinner plates.
Wikipedia W icon.svg

Alternate wetting and drying (AWD) is a water management technique, practiced to cultivate irrigated lowland rice with much less water than the usual system of maintaining continuous standing water in the crop field. It is a method of controlled and intermittent irrigation. A periodic drying and re-flooding irrigation scheduling approach is followed in which the fields are allowed to dry for few days before re-irrigation, without stressing the plants. This method reduces water demand for irrigation and greenhouse gas emissions without reducing crop yields.

Community based emissions reduction currency schemes[edit | edit source]

A community based emissions reduction currency scheme is a C4 type local currency in which local currency issues are backed by the emissions reductions of the schemes members. The local currency, when accepted for trade by other members or local businesses, thereby rewards participants for their efforts at global warming prevention. These currencies may have various degrees of convertibility into carbon saved, renewable energy, or national currency. W

Climate-friendly gardening[edit | edit source]

Wikipedia W icon.svg

Climate-friendly gardening is a form of gardening that can reduce emissions of greenhouse gases from gardens and encourage the absorption of carbon dioxide by soils and plants in order to aid the reduction of global warming.To be a climate-friendly gardener means considering both what happens in a garden and the materials brought into it as well as the impact they have on land use and climate.It can also include garden features or activities in the garden that help to reduce greenhouse gas emissions through processes not directly related to gardening.

Sustainable cooling[edit | edit source]

557608251.jpgVimeo_play_button.png
# ThisIsCool - Making Sustainable Cooling a Reality
Authors: SEforALL, June 1, 2021
  • This Is Cool, campaign showing what can be done across the world to make sustainable cooling a reality
Wikipedia W icon.svg

Buildings designed with passive air conditioning are generally less expensive to construct and maintain than buildings with conventional HVAC systems with lower energy demands. While tens of air changes per hour, and cooling of tens of degrees, can be achieved with passive methods, site-specific microclimate must be taken into account, complicating building design.

Many techniques can be used to increase comfort and reduce the temperature in buildings. These include evaporative cooling, selective shading, wind, thermal convection, and heat storage.

Other climate change solutions[edit | edit source]

See also[edit | edit source]

local information can be found, or shared, via our many location pages

External links[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]

  1. quoted in Urban Nature-based Solutions in Scotland at Scale, Toward a regenerative natural asset economy, 2019- , NatureScot, darkmatterlabs.org
FA info icon.svg Angle down icon.svg Page data
Authors Phil Green
License CC-BY-SA-3.0
Language English (en)
Related 0 subpages, 15 pages link here
Impact 666 page views
Created November 2, 2019 by Phil Green
Modified March 22, 2024 by Phil Green
Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies.