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The concentration of carbon dioxide in Earth’s atmosphere grew at the fastest rate ever recorded in 2024, reaching a record high of approximately 422–424 parts per million (ppm).

The growth rate for that year reached 3.73 parts per million per year — a figure that surpassed the previous record, set during the powerful 2015/16 El Niño event, by a significant margin. To ...


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“It’ll never work on my farm.” — It’s a phrase often heard from farmers sceptical of regenerative agriculture. But as Tom Edmondson and James Johnson have discovered, regen can lead somewhere remarkable — to farms that are healthier, more resilient, and more profitable than before.

Both farmers began their careers in conventional, high-input agriculture. James Johnson ...


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A study of the Loess Plateau finds that restoring vegetation has increased precipitation — but the mechanism is not the one most people assumed.

For decades, the conventional science and policy wisdom about planting trees in dry places contained a quiet paradox. Yes, reforestation improves soils, reduces erosion, and restores degraded landscapes. But trees als...


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Invasive species, introduced accidentally or purposefully outside their original range, can wreak havoc in their new environments, contributing to 60% of global wildlife extinctions and costing $423 billion per year.

A new report from World Wildlife Fund (WWF) explores how, when eradication is not possible, developing commercial uses for these pests can help manage the...


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For decades, researchers studying how livestock grazing affects the land have faced a frustrating paradox. The more controlled an experiment, the less it resembles what actually happens on a working ranch. A tightly managed trial plot with a handful of cattle tells you something precise but narrow; a real ranch tells you something messy but true. A landmark new study publishe...


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