This page is a subpage of www.nsforestmatters.ca/In the News
See In the News for other subpages.
New page Aug 23, 2024.
Selected news, articles etc. most not about NS but relevant
Adding older items bit by bit
Sep 26, 2025
Save the date Saturday, November 22, 2025 MTRI’s annual fall gathering Biodiversity Conservation Showease
“This year MTRI has teamed up with NSCC to host our annual fall science gathering and celebrate our good news stories. Join us as we come together to share the science, recovery, and stewardship initiatives taking place in the Kespukwitk/Southwest Nova Scotia Priority Place-and beyond. This one-day conference will showcase the efforts and successes of our community of conservation professionals, student researchers, citizen scientists, and interested members of the public. Stay tuned for further details including our call for presentations/ posters, and registration for this event. NSCC’S Centre of Geographic Sciences (COGS) Lawrencetown, NS”
Sep 24, 2025:
STATEMENT: Countries Announce New Climate Pledges at UN Summit, But Far More Action Needed
World Resources Institute “NEW YORK (September 24, 2025) — The UN Secretary-General’s Climate Summit closed today with several new climate commitments from countries setting emissions targets through 2035 — a critical waypoint on the path to net zero by mid-century. The Summit is an important milestone as the UN prepares its NDC Synthesis Report next month, which will assess the collective impact of new pledges before this year’s COP30. This statement reflects both country announcements and official NDC submissions made so far, drawing on preliminary Climate Watch data to show their potential emissions reductions in gigatons compared to countries’ 2030 targets. Following is a statement from Ani Dasgupta, President & CEO, World Resources Institute:
“We cannot sugarcoat it: these new climate plans do not put us anywhere near on track for a safe future. The lack of ambition from most major emitters so far, barring a few, underscores the immense political challenge countries face of transforming their entire economy. Yet vulnerable countries continue to step up with bold climate leadership. “Countries’ last round of NDCs put the world on track for up to 2.8°C of warming, already exposing billions of people to more frequent and intense heatwaves, wildfires, storms and floods. By 2035, the world needs to cut 31.2 gigatons of emissions to stay on track for 1.5°C, or 20.2 Gt for 2°C. The NDCs and announcements so far would reduce that by just 2 gigatons — only 6% of what’s needed for 1.5°C and 10% for 2°C… ” “
SEP 22, 2025:
– The starkest picture of wildlife loss in Canada to date: WWF’s new Living Planet Report Canada
By World Wildlife Fund Canada “World Wildlife Fund Canada’s Living Planet Report Canada (LPRC) 2025: Wildlife at Home reveals the most severe average decline in the size of monitored wildlife populations in Canada since WWF-Canada began reporting two decades ago…”
Sep 18, 2025:
– Using only genomics and a one-time tree count, a new model can accurately predict a forest’s future
by University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign on phys.org.References this paper: Genomic demography predicts community dynamics in a temperate montane forest by JP O’Dwyer et al. in Science 18 Sep 2025. From the conclusion: “Our study demonstrates that genomic demography can be used to make ecological predictions. Linkage disequilibrium correlations found within and among plant genomes record a history of past population dynamics, and this memory can then be used to make predictions for future dynamics. Notably, improvement in modeling accuracy was achieved with genetic information collected at a single time point. Given the expense of generating genetic data, only needing to collect such data once limits this potential burden. Our approach may also facilitate the incorporation of multiple other ecological processes, whenever those processes leave a detectable genomic signature.”
– Rising cost of disturbances for forestry in Europe under climate change
J.S. Mohr et al., in Nature Climate Change “Climate change has large economic costs for society. An important effect is the disruption of natural resource supply by climate-mediated disturbances such as wildfires, pest outbreaks and storms. Here we show that disturbance-induced losses for Europe’s timber-based forestry could increase from the current €115 billion to €247 billion under severe climate change. This would diminish the timber value of Europe’s forests by up to 42% and reduce the current gross value added of the forestry sector by up to 15%…We find high disturbance-related cost of unmitigated warming, highlighting that climate change adaptation in forestry is not only an ecological but also an economic imperative.”
– 2024 emissions estimate shows progress stalled, Canada’s 2030 climate target out of reach
Canadian Climate Institute on newswire.ca “Canada’s emissions progress flatlined in 2024, according to the latest Early Estimate of National Emissions (EENE) from 440 Megatonnes, a project of the Canadian Climate Institute. With emissions essentially unchanged from 2023, at 694 megatonnes of carbon dioxide-equivalent (Mt), the new data shows that previous years’ improvements have stalled…Emissions trends show Canada’s emissions are on track to be just 20 to 25 per cent below 2005 levels in 2030. This outcome falls far short of the legislated target of a 40 to 45 per cent reduction in emissions, and well below what could have been achieved if governments across the federation had implemented climate policies as announced. Achieving Canada’s 2030 target would require emissions reductions of roughly 40 Mt per year—well beyond current trends.”
– Plans Bloom for a Microforest in Princeton as New Jersey Residents Tackle Rising Heat
By Emilie Lounsberry for Inside Climate News “A trend in carefully planned super-charged plant growth is gaining interest in the United States as cities and towns battle rising temperatures and climate change..The microforest-to-be is part of an environmental trend inspired by the late Japanese botanist Akira Miyawaki, who discovered more than 50 years ago that, with proper soil preparation and a calculated mix of local plants, a clump of densely planted seedlings could grow quickly into lush compact woodlands. Microforests may well help cities and towns in danger of becoming urban heat islands as temperatures rise because of climate change.” COMMENT: So relevant and sensible ecologically…surely the concept/practice could be applied in NS, in fact I think the process occur naturally here, e.g., where you sometimes see quick growth of a cluster of species including some fast-growing trees on a piece of abandoned or neglected land.
Sep 12, 2025:
N.S. government provides details about $60B ‘Wind West’ as feds give nod
Taryn Grant · CBC News “Nova Scotia is looking to Ottawa for tax credits, low-interest financing and direct investment, among other requests, to realize Premier Tim Houston’s vision for a massive build-out of offshore wind and new transmission lines that together could cost $60 billion. Those are among the details revealed in a new document released by the provincial government on the same day that Prime Minister Mark Carney indicated “Wind West” could be designated a project of national interest. On Thursday, Carney gave the designation to five projects and said six others are in the running, but need more work before they could be approved.”
Sep 11, 2025:
– Scientists Are People, Too
Nick Hilden for the Nautilus “Can humanizing scientists help win back public trust?…There are many reasons for this [loss of trust], but according to Alan Lightman and Martin Rees, much of the problem comes down to the fact that the general public simply doesn’t have a good understanding of what science is and what scientists do. With their new book The Shape of Wonder: How Scientists Think, Work, and Live, they aim to correct this…”
– Deforestation Threatens Public Health. Securing Indigenous Land Rights Can Help, Researchers Find
By Katie Surma for Inside Climate News “A new peer-reviewed study* examined the impact Indigenous territories have on human health in two categories of diseases, finding that municipalities located close to Indigenous lands with intact forests have a reduced risk…Amazonian municipalities located close to Indigenous lands with intact forest have reduced risk from two categories of health harms, the study found: fire-related illnesses and diseases spread by animals and insects…Deforestation is the root cause of the illnesses the research focused on. Forest fires, for instance, release dangerous particulate matter into the air. The particles, known as PM2.5 because they measure a tiny 2.5 microns or less, can enter the bloodstream through the lungs, leading to heart disease, stroke, emphysema, lung cancer, bronchitis, other respiratory problems and increased risk of death…A growing body of research shows Indigenous-managed lands have lower levels of tree loss, especially when Indigenous communities have secured legal title to their lands. Healthy forests are less fire-prone and help remove PM2.5 from the environment by absorbing it back into the landscape.” *Indigenous Territories can safeguard human health depending on the landscape structure and legal status, JR Baretto et al., 2025 in Communications Earth &Environment
Sep 5, 2025:
Province doubles area designated for proposed high-production forestry in Ingram River Wilderness Area
Madiha Hughees in the Hfx Examiner, Intro by Philip Muscovitvh in Morning File “The area targeted for high-production forestry (HPF) within the proposed Ingram River Wilderness Area (IRWA) has more than doubled, putting at risk the oldest documented forest in the Maritimes, a core mainland moose habitat, and several at-risk species. This means 346 hectares (854.72 acres) of the St. Margaret’s Bay watershed would be clearcut, with about 164 hectares within the proposed Ingram River Wilderness Area. Mughees speaks with forester Mike Lancaster, executive director of the St. Margaret’s Bay Stewardship Association…Lancaster and his organization have worked hard to protect that area. Part of the area slated for clearcutting is a parcel that he and the Stewardship Association have spent considerable time and money restoring.”

Saxigrage Chart 5
View chart with text comments here
Sep 3, 2025:
Canada’s out-of-control wildfire crisis in six charts
By Barry Saxifrage in the National Observer. “Fossil fuel pollution is overheating Canadian forests, spawning an out-of-control wildfire crisis. Wildfire is now incinerating four times more forest carbon than during the 1990s… Canada’s continent-spanning forest is especially vulnerable to this rising heat. Its billions of trees, spread across hundreds of millions of hectares, are overheating at two to three times the global pace. This is one of the planet’s largest terrestrial-carbon reservoirs. And the rapidly rising heat is cooking ever larger swaths of it into explosive tinderboxes. Wildfires have responded with increasing fury from coast to coast”. “Let’s look at some charts” says Saxifrage. I found his Chart 5 most revealing. View chart with text comments here. He cuts to the chase under the heading “Our peers have cut emissions. Canadians can too“: “Canada is one of the world’s all-time top-10 climate polluters. We’ve been promising to reduce our oversized climate impact for 36 years. But, as my last chart shows, Canada releases even more planet-heating gases now — 14 per cent more… Canada is one of the world’s all-time top-10 climate polluters. We’ve been promising to reduce our oversized climate impact for 36 years. But, as my last chart shows, Canada releases even more planet-heating gases now — 14 per cent more. Fortunately, we can learn from our many peers who have reduced their emissions. In fact, every one of our peer nations in the Group of Seven (G7) advanced economies has reduced their climate-destabilizing emissions since 1990.They did this using climate policies that reduced emissions across every sector in their economies. That’s what has to happen. But in Canada, we’ve allowed most of our sectors to increase emissions… Perhaps the single most effective climate policy I’ve ever come across is the U.K.’s landmark Climate Change Act of 2008. I’ve written about it many times over the years. Since they enacted that law, the British have reduced their emissions by 40 per cent. Canadians have run out of excuses for our sky-high emissions. And now our exploding fossil-fuelled wildfire crisis means we are rapidly running out of time as well. The climate beast is waking up. When will we?”
Aug 28, 2025:
– To Handle Data Centers, the Electricity System May Need New Rules. Here Is a Proposal
By Dan Gearino for Inside Climate News “There are not many desirable options for accommodating the electricity needs of data centers. And some of the possibilities are especially bad—bad for consumers, bad for the environment and even bad for data centers.Alexandra Klass, a professor at the University of Michigan Law School, and Dave Owen, a professor at UC Law San Francisco, have been thinking about whether there’s a better way, and they wrote about it in an article forthcoming in the George Washington Law Review. Their proposal calls for moving away from the idea that the grid needs to have enough power plant capacity to accommodate all users at all times, and instead take an approach in which data centers and other superusers are treated as a separate customer class with special rules and added flexibility…ICF, a research firm, stated in May that U.S. electricity demand is projected to increase by 25 percent from 2023 to 2030, and by 78 percent by 2050, with much of the growth tied to data centers. That’s a considerable increase, which contrasts with a prior period of more than a decade with almost no growth in demand.”
– Collapse of critical Atlantic current is no longer low-likelihood, study finds
Damian Carrington for The Guardian.”The collapse of a critical Atlantic current can no longer be considered a low-likelihood event, a study has concluded, making deep cuts to fossil fuel emissions even more urgent to avoid the catastrophic impact. The Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (Amoc) is a major part of the global climate system. It brings sun-warmed tropical water to Europe and the Arctic, where it cools and sinks to form a deep return current. The Amoc was already known to be at its weakest in 1,600 years as a result of the climate crisis.Climate models recently indicated that a collapse before 2100 was unlikely but the new analysis examined models that were run for longer, to 2300 and 2500. These show the tipping point that makes an Amoc shutdown inevitable is likely to be passed within a few decades, but that the collapse itself may not happen until 50 to 100 years later.”
Aug 27, 2025:
– High Production Forestry in Nova Scotia
By Becky Geneau, executive director, Canadian Woodlands Forum for pulpandpapercanada.com “In the evolving landscape of Canadian forestry, Nova Scotia is carving a bold path with the implementation of High Production Forestry (HPF) management zones. These zones are a cornerstone of the province’s Triad model of ecological forestry—a strategy designed to harmonize environmental stewardship with economic viability. As Nova Scotia sets its sights on the long-term, sustainable production of timber forest products, HPF zones are emerging as vital tools to meet both conservation and industry needs…This October, the Canadian Woodlands Forum (CWF) invites forestry professionals, landowners, and stakeholders to join the conversation on this important topic at the CWF Fall Meeting 2025, “Seedling to Success: Sustaining Timber Production in the HPF Management Zone of the Triad Model”, taking place in Truro, Nova Scotia. The two-day conference, hosted in partnership with the Nova Scotia Department of Natural Resources, BioApplied Innovation Pathways, Forest Nova Scotia, and the Association of Sustainable Forestry, offers a unique opportunity to explore the full cycle of High Production Forestry—from planning and planting to operations and regeneration…” Tip of the hat to R.S. for bring this item to our attention.
–Climate Dispute In Sweden Over Paying Forest Owners To Store Carbon
by Violet George for Carbon Herald. “A political fight has erupted in Sweden over whether forest owners should be paid to delay harvesting trees as part of the country’s contribution to the EU’s ambitious carbon removal targets.In 2022, the government commissioned a parliamentary committee to explore how to incentivize carbon storage. Its proposal: legally binding contracts offering landowners 400 SEK (~$42) per ton of CO2 if they delay felling their trees for 5 to 20 years beyond the minimum harvest age. The scheme could cost taxpayers 2.36 billion SEK (~$246.2 million) through 2030.The plan has triggered fierce opposition. The Swedish Forest Industries Federation warns that 7,200 jobs are at risk, with smaller sawmills particularly vulnerable…Supporters, however, argue that paying landowners reflects the forest’s true value. “We all benefit from the recreation, biodiversity and climate mitigation that the forest provides,” said Green Party politician Rebecka Le Moine.”
Aug 23, 2025:
– Hurricanes and offshore wind turbines in Nova Scotia
J Kapra and L Hughes in the Hfx Examiner “As conditions become more favourable for hurricanes, the impacts of hurricanes and climate change must be considered in site selection for offshore wind turbines in the Scotian Shelf.”
Aug 20, 2025:
– Environmental damage is hurting both our health and wealth
Christina Caron in the Globe and Mail Behind a paywall. Based on her academic paper, Eroding Natural Capital: An Alternative Explanation for the Secular Decline in Productivity Growth published in the International Productivity Monitor No 47, Fall 2024, pp 109-147 available in full as PDF. Some extracts from the Globe & Mail article: “In short, environmental damage is now eroding our economic prosperity. Several centuries of historically unprecedented economic growth have given way to economic stagnation. Labour productivity growth rates have been declining in advanced economies for several decades, and more recently in emerging economies as well. Multifactor productivity – a key source of improvements in standard of living – has flatlined for the past 15 years in both advanced and emerging economies. Evidence increasingly indicates that environmental deterioration has become a significant drag on economic and productivity growth.Climate change acts as a productivity shock, reducing both output and the supply of productive capital.”
– Rethinking Forestry: Bold Ideas for a Sustainable Future with Gary Bull
By Matthew Kristoff’s YourForest Podcast, Spotify “In this episode of YourForest, Matthew Kristoff discusses the future of forestry with Dr. Gary Bull, a leading expert in forestry economics, policy, and sustainability. Dr. Bull, a Professor Emeritus at the University of British Columbia, explores the evolving relationship between forest management, biodiversity, and the forest industry. He emphasizes shifting from timber-focused practices to integrating non-timber values like carbon storage, biodiversity, and ecosystem health. With decades of global experience, Dr. Bull advocates for rethinking forestry to create a more sustainable future.”
Aug 15, 2025:
– Concerned citizens attend full house meeting in Tantallon about proposed clearcutting of Ingram River Wilderness Area
Madiha Mughees in the Hfx Examiner. Intro in Morning File “About 100 people packed a Tantallon Public Library meeting space on Wednesday evening for a public awareness event about the importance of the proposed Ingram River Wilderness Area, which has been designated for high-production forestry. Organizers argued that the area provides significant economic and ecological value and should be conserved. “Over 195.65 hectares, or 483.26 acres, of High Production Forestry has been proposed for the St. Margaret’s Bay watershed,” noted a Facebook post announcing the event.”
Aug 13, 2025:
– Bending the curve of land degradation to achieve global environmental goals
Paper in Nature by Maestre et al. “Land has a vital role in sustaining human communities, nurturing diverse ecosystems and regulating the climate of our planet. As such, current rates of land degradation pose a major environmental and socioeconomic threat, driving climate change, biodiversity loss and social crises… We showcase multiple actions for tackling land degradation that also yield climate and biodiversity benefits while fostering sustainable food systems that contribute to avoiding the risk of a global food crisis. We also propose ambitious 2050 targets for the three Rio Conventions related to land and food systems. Finally, we urge collective action to acknowledge the pivotal role of land in achieving the goals of the Rio Conventions and to embed food systems within intergovernmental agreements, enabling decisive progress on the complex and interconnected global crises that we face.” From the text: “Food production is, by far, the largest human use of land, representing 34% of the available (ice-free) terrestrial surfaces of the Earth… Under current consumption trends and policies, this is projected to increase to 42% by 2050 business-as-usual scenario). Food systems contribute approximately 21% of global greenhouse gas emissions, drive 80% of deforestation, account for 70% of freshwater consumption3 and collectively are a major driver of terrestrial biodiversity loss.
Related: Bending the curve of terrestrial biodiversity needs an integrated strategy
Leclere et al., in Nature “Increased efforts are required to prevent further losses to terrestrial biodiversity and the ecosystem services that it provides. Ambitious targets have been proposed, such as reversing the declining trends in biodiversity; however, just feeding the growing human population will make this a challenge. Here we use an ensemble of land-use and biodiversity models to assess whether—and how—humanity can reverse the declines in terrestrial biodiversity caused by habitat conversion, which is a major threat to biodiversity…Through further sustainable intensification and trade, reduced food waste and more plant-based human diets, more than two thirds of future biodiversity losses are avoided and the biodiversity trends from habitat conversion are reversed by 2050 for almost all of the models. Although limiting further loss will remain challenging in several biodiversity-rich regions, and other threats—such as climate change—must be addressed to truly reverse the declines in biodiversity, our results show that ambitious conservation efforts and food system transformation are central to an effective post-2020 biodiversity strategy.”
Aug 12, 2025
– Meta’s AI Forest Map: The Game-Changer for Carbon Tracking
By Jennifer L for carboncredits.com, “Recently, Meta has developed an AI-powered canopy height map that offers unprecedented detail in tracking forest health and carbon storage. This open-source tool helps project developers monitor changes, verify carbon credits, and boost climate action.”
Aug 6, 2025:
– Saving the Mainland Moose of Nova Scotia
Post on Nature Canada “Thank you to our Nature Network partner, Nature Nova Scotia, for sharing this month’s blog.”
Jul 30, 2025:
– Global wood harvest is sufficient for climate-friendly transitions to timber cities
By Alperen Yayla et al., in Nature Sustainability. ABSTRACT: Decarbonizing the economy requires a large-scale transition from fossil carbon-containing feedstocks to minerals and biomass, notably wood in buildings. Increasing harvesting is under discussion to meet the supply of wood for ‘timber cities’, with potentially negative impacts on forests and biodiversity. Here we investigate pathways to timber cities, including their impacts on land use, energy use and greenhouse gas emissions by quantifying global and regional wood cycles using Bayesian material flow analysis. We show that shifting wood fuel to industrial use and maximizing circular use of wood can make timber cities possible with the current harvest volume. Our results reveal that these pathways have better environmental performance than increased harvesting, reducing total CO2 equivalent emissions by 2100 by 40.8 Gt compared to business as usual. To achieve the wood transition, regional and cross-sectoral governance and planning are needed, addressing national-level pathways and inter-regional wood transport. The most critical actions are reducing the use of virgin wood as fuel by promoting cleaner alternatives, and using wood waste more effectively globally, rather than expanding plantation forests.
– Accountability… or Advertising? A Critical Review of Canada’s State of the Forests Report
By David Suzuki Foundation, Nature Canada, Nature Quebec, Natural Resources Defense Council, Ontario Nature, Sierra Club BC, Sierra Club Canada, Wilderness Committee (2025). 68 pages. “This report critiques Canada’s annual “State of Canada’s Forests: Annual Report” as a means of reporting to the Montreal Process Working Group regarding sustainable forest management. It provides an overview of the Montreal Process criteria and indicators, shining a light on indicators that are overlooked and giving voice to stories of forest degradation: from loss of biodiversity to deteriorating human health to impaired climate resilience. It questions who has the most say in forestry laws, who benefits most, and who is being impacted. It also emphasizes that the SOF falls short of meeting Canada’s international commitments to report on sustainability metrics.”
Jul 29, 2025:

From NS Gov News Release
– Canada’s first offshore wind areas designated off Nova Scotia
By Francis Campbellin the Chronicle Herald “…Three of the designated areas are south of the eastern mainland portion of the province, and the other is located east of Cape Breton Island…The square-kilometre size of the four designated areas are French Bank, 3,125 square kilometres; Middle Bank 2,289; Sable Island Bank, by far the largest, at 5,850 square kilometres; and Sydney Bight 1,285.The total designated area is 12,549 square kilometres. Doane said the process began with a March 2023 regional assessment, a joint federal-provincial project to assess offshore areas that could sustain wind energy projects. The assessment concluded in January 2025 with a final report…The aim is to license five gigawatts of offshore wind by 2030. Doane said there is recognition that the development will have to be phased in so that the supply chain can keep up…The premier is confident that there will be bids to build the offshore wind farms. Iain Rankin, the former Liberal premier and the MLA for Timberlea-Prospect, said calling for bids for the construction of offshore wind turbines without a transmission line is putting the cart before the horse…While the premier says the project positions Nova Scotia to “become a clean energy superpower,” Rankin said he would like to see proven interest from other markets.
“I don’t buy that we would export energy to the tune of 27 per cent of Canadians’ energy demand, when we see central Canada, especially Quebec, producing their own tenders on onshore wind.”Rankin said the Liberal party is supportive of any increased renewable energy supply for the Nova Scotia grid. “I would like to see a strong application to the federal government as to why the energy connection in Atlantic Canada is the first step to a national energy grid,” he said. “That’s the strength of how we can leverage federal funds to build that transmission line. Without that, I don’t see a viable path.”..Most of the designated areas are at least 25 kilometres from shore with the exception of French Bank, certain portions of which are closer to 20 kilometres offshore.Doane said all the post-licensing construction work likely won’t begin until sometime around 2033.”
Jul 24, 2025:
For 1st Time, Fires Are Biggest Threat to Forests’ Climate-Fighting Superpower
By Sachi Kitajima Mulkey and Harry Stevens, The New York Times Summary from TreeFrog Forestry News: “In 2023 and 2024 the world’s forests absorbed only a quarter of the carbon dioxide they did in the beginning of the 21st century, according to data from the World Resources Institute’s Global Forest Watch. Those back-to-back years of record-breaking wildfires hampered forests’ ability absorb billions of tons of carbon dioxide, curbing some of the global warming caused by fossil fuel emissions. Those two years also marked the first time wildfires surpassed logging or agriculture-driven deforestation as the biggest factor lowering forests’ carbon-capturing ability. It’s an emerging pattern that’s different from the last big drop, in 2016 and 2017, which was largely the result of increased deforestation for agriculture. …Other recently published studies suggest that climate change is making extreme-forest-fire years more common, and the worst events more frequent and intense. …“We’re reaching the point where global warming is feeding the warming,” said Werner Kurz, an emeritus scientist for the Canadian Forest Service. [A subscription to the New York Times is required to access the full story]” View WRI/GFW story: The Latest Data Confirms: Forest Fires Are Getting Worse (Jul 21, 2025)
Jul 23, 2025:
Landmark court ruling a stark rebuke of Canadian position on climate change
John Woodside in the National Observer “A landmark finding from the International Court of Justice (ICJ) on Wednesday is reshaping international law by confirming that countries are legally bound to slash carbon pollution or risk paying billions in compensation to communities bearing the brunt of climate change. David Boyd, an associate professor with the University of British Columbia and former UN Special Rapporteur on human rights and the environment, told Canada’s National Observer those findings “should send shivers down the spine” of the fossil fuel industry and governments that support it. “It’s the clearest statement we’ve had from an international court that we have to get off fossil fuels,” he said. While the advisory opinion itself is non-binding, it is an authoritative statement on international laws which are binding on countries including Canada. “Failure of the state to take appropriate action to protect the climate system from GHG emissions including through fossil fuel production, fossil fuel consumption, the granting of fossil fuel exploration licenses, or the provision of fossil fuel subsidies may constitute an internationally wrongful act which is attributable to that state,” Judge Iwasawa Yuji said Wednesday as he read the court’s advisory opinion. The ICJ findings mean that countries’ legal obligations to respond to climate change reach further than their duties under climate treaties like the Paris Agreement, reflecting a strong rebuke of Canada’s position…The findings could upend Prime Minister Mark Carney’s plans to nation-build. As recently reported by Canada’s National Observer, several fossil fuel megaprojects are actively being considered to receive the greenlight from the federal government — paving the way for their construction, which would boost global greenhouse gas emissions and inflict harm on communities here and abroad by violating international laws requiring the prevention of transboundary harm.”
Jul 20, 2025:
– Maine Enacts New Reporting Requirement for Landowners Enrolled in Forest Carbon Credit Initiatives
By Brook Letterman & Joseph Ruggiero, The Law Review “…Maine’s new carbon credit reporting law is part of a growing trend towards greater disclosure of carbon credit generation and use as states and other governments grapple with the greenhouse gas accounting impacts of such projects, along with their potential economic benefits or impacts.”
– Find some respect for endangered species that share this province with humans’: Nature Nova Scotia pens letter to premier
Jennifer Hefderson in the Halifax Examiner,m Intro in Morning File “Jennifer Henderson reports on a letter Nature Nova Scotia has written to Premier Tim Houston. In the letter, Nature Nova Scotia asks Houston to stop a proposed clearcut where there’s a breeding population of endangered mainland moose.”
– ‘A very large step backwards for conservation for Nova Scotia:’ Q and A with Mike Lancaster on ‘final felling’ forestry harvesting plans in proposed Ingram River Wilderness Area
Joan Baxter in the Halifax Examiner, Intro in Morning File.“Joan Baxter has this interview with Mike Lancaster, executive director with the St. Margaret’s Bay Stewardship Association (SMBSA) about harvesting plans for the proposed Ingram River Wilderness Area.”
Jul 12, 2025:
Nova Scotia nature reserve gets bigger thanks to new partnership with climbing group
By Sean Mott for CTV News “There aren’t many outdoor climbing sites in Nova Scotia, so when a group of dedicated climbers found one in Musquodoboit Harbour, they wanted to make sure it would stay open and protected. Jamie Simpson, board member with Climb Nova Scotia, said the people often use the Musquodoboit trails to reach the climbing rocks, and the group wanted to preserve the area. “We were concerned it could be bought up and developed,” Simpson said. “We were quite concerned the climbers would lose access to this property.” Simpson reached out to the Nature Conservancy of Canada about a possible partnership over the land, which ultimately led to the expansion of the Musquodoboit River Valley Nature Reserve.”
Jul 9, 2025:
– The plain truth is that the Houston government doesn’t care about climate change
Tim Bousquet in Morning File (Hfx Examiner) “You can’t have it both ways. You can’t both say you have a pathway to reaching the province’s greenhouse gas emission reduction goals and increase the mining of fossil fuels. The math doesn’t math.”
Jun 16, 2025:
We don’t have to tear down nature to ‘Build Canada’
By World Wildlife Fund Canada for Cision Newswire “The federal government’s proposed Build Canada Act, a plan to fast-track “nation-building” development projects, from critical minerals mines and oil and gas pipelines to habitat-fragmenting highways and Arctic deep-water ports, risks damaging the nature that is at the core of Canada’s economy and identity — threatening the wealth of the nation it is supposed to defend. World Wildlife Fund Canada is deeply concerned about the bill, which would allow Cabinet to override key environmental protections, such as the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, the Fisheries Act, the Species at Risk Act, and the Migratory Birds Convention Act, for projects deemed in the national interest.”
June 10, 2925:
– Global forestry sector welcomes new ISO standard
By the International Sustainable Forestry Coalition on EIN Presswire “Internationally agreed global accounting approach for biogenic carbon emissions and removals applauded as important piece of the puzzle to reach net zero. EDINBURGH, SCOTLAND , UNITED KINGDOM, June 10, 2025 /EINPresswire.com/ — The International Sustainable Forestry Coalition (ISFC) welcomes the release by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) of its new Standard covering the way greenhouse gas accounting should be applied to wood and wood-based products.Until the publication of this Standard, there had not been an internationally agreed upon accounting approach for biogenic carbon emissions and removals – an important piece of the puzzle to support corporate climate action and reach global net zero targets.”
June 5, 2025:
– Passage of Bill 5 Deals a Grave Blow to the Rule of Law and to Endangered Species
Statement by Phil Pothen, Counsel and Ontario Environment Program Manager, Environmental Defence “By voting “yes” to Bill 5 on its third and final reading, the Ontario government has knowingly inflicted a grievous blow against the rule of law, and likely condemned many of the province’s endangered and threatened species to extinction or extirpation (which is when a species disappears completely from a part of its former range)…Bill 5 was presented to the public, and to many of the MPPs who voted for it, as a targeted emergency law focused on speeding up approvals for northern mines, and for infrastructure and special critical industries required to decouple Ontario’s economy from the United States. However legal and technical experts – have made it clear that Bill 5 powers can be used for any purpose, and applied to laws with no direct connection to mining or nation-building infrastructure – from minimum wages and collective bargaining to protections against trespass and the contamination of water.”
– VOICE OF THE PEOPLE: Log now, protect later makes no sense
By Nina Newington in the Chronicle Herald. “To its credit, the Houston government is standing by its commitment to protect 15 per cent of Nova Scotia’s lands and waters by 2026, and 20 per cent by 2030. Meeting those targets is going to take a concerted effort by the departments charged with making it happen: the Department of Natural Resources and the Department of Environment and Climate Change. Ministerial letters assure us they are working together towards this goal, but are they?…” View full text here (on this website)
Jun 4, 2025:
The forest industry’s conundrum: What does measurement have to do with it? The case of the Swedish forestry industry
Skriva ut for www.deloitte.com “To combat the growing risks from unsustainable business practices, governments and regulators worldwide require corporates to bring greater transparency and reporting to their sustainability impact.”
June 3, 2025:
– ‘Half the tree of life’: ecologists’ horror as nature reserves are emptied of insects
Tess McClure In The Guardian “A new point in history has been reached, entomologists say, as climate-led species’ collapse moves up the food chain even in supposedly protected regions free of pesticides.”
June 2, 2025:
–New Maine law will require landowners to report enrollment in forest carbon programs
By Kate Cough for The Maine Monitor “A law signed by Gov. Janet Mills last week requires landowners who are participating in the forest carbon credit market to report basic data — including a landowner’s name, contact information, date of enrollment and total enrolled acreage — to the state on an annual basis, information the state will use to create a database and track the impact of carbon credits on Maine’s forests.”
May 30, 2025:
– Beyond timber, EU eyes profit potential of sustainable forests
Xhoi Zajmi Euractiv’s Advocacy Lab. “As efforts to combat deforestation intensify, attention is shifting to the sustainable use of forests. In Europe, non-wood forest products (NWFPs) are emerging as valuable, biodiversity-friendly alternatives.”
May 29, 2025:
Does planting trees really help cool the planet?
By Julie Bernstein, University of California, Riverside “…In a new study published in Communications Earth & Environment, researchers at the University of California, Riverside, showed that restoring forests to their preindustrial extent could lower global average temperatures by 0.34 degrees Celsius. That is roughly one-quarter of the warming the Earth has already experienced. The study is based on an increase in tree area of about 12 million square kilometers, which is 135% of the area of the US. …It is believed the planet has lost nearly half of its trees since the onset of industrialized society. “Reforestation is not a silver bullet,” said Bob Allen, at UC Riverside and the lead author. “It’s a powerful strategy, but it has to be paired with serious emissions reductions.”
May 22, 2025:
If all else fails, there’s still coal
Larry Hughes in Hfx Examiner “Nova Scotia Power’s first quarter Management Discussion and Analysis for 2025 offered some surprising news, high energy costs, supply chain issues, and global demand for wind turbines saw the company return to an old energy source to help it get through the winter, coal. As the following chart shows, the province’s demand for electricity has grown by almost 12% over the past five years, from 2,986 gigawatt-hours in the first quarter of 2021 (Q1-21) to 3,333 gigawatt-hours in the first quarter of 2025 (Q1-25). Most of this growth can be attributed to a 20% growth in residential sector load, the result of increases in the province’s population (between the first quarters of 2021 and 2025, Nova Scotia’s population grew by 89,602) and colder than average winters in the first quarters of 2022 and 2025.”
May 20, 2025:
Gold mining company purchases parcel of land for conservation
CBC News “St Barbara was required to conserve land to offset the impacts of its mining operations
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May 16, 2025:
– Applying CATF’s Ground-Truth Forest Carbon Protocol Assessment to California
Clean Air Task Force (USA) “The assessment examines rules of the road for quantifying carbon credits and identifies what works well, where there are weaknesses, and opportunities for improvements to ensure that forest carbon credits achieve their promised climate benefits.”
– Georgia offers carbon credits for mass timber projects. How it works.
By Margaret Walker for www.macon.com “Georgia is the first state in the nation to create a carbon registry program that rewards sustainable building practices with carbon credits, with goals to boost both the state’s environment and economy equally.”
Read more at: https://www.macon.com/news/environment/article306480376.html#storylink=cpy
May 15, 2025:
– NOW OR NEVER: CBC Radio interview with Nina Newington and Lisa Proulx at the Lichen Camp in the Goldsmith Lake area of Annapolis County, NS. (audio)
CBC, Now or Never with Ify Chiwetelu, Trevor Dineen “Your long weekend just got better, because Now or Never’s latest podcast just dropped and we’re taking you on adventures across the country….In a Nova Scotia forest, Nina Newington and Lisa Proulx are putting up tents, turning on camp stoves, and settling in for a summer of trying to protect the forest from logging. Their tools are tiny endangered lichens almost imperceptible to the naked eye — but their love for the forest is big, and determination is growing by the day.” The interview starts around the 41 minutes 45 seconds point on the May 15th edition. Tip of the Hat to Bev W for passing this one on. View Rough Transcript (on this website)
– Do Forest Carbon Credits Work and Actually Help the Environment?
Boston university “… A new study coled by researchers at Boston University and the nonprofit Clean Air Task Force has found some of these efforts, known as forest carbon credit schemes, might not be doing much good. After examining the standards-governing programs, which are typically certified by governments or independent regulators, they concluded there could be more solid checks to help ensure that they’re delivering any climate benefits. Writing in the journal Earth’s Future, the researchers recommend a series of new guidelines and improvements to “the carbon market system that would promote reliably high-quality forest carbon credits.”
May 9, 2025:
– Southwest Nova Scotia island a newly protected habitat
Anjuli Patil · CBC News “Nature Trust of Nova Scotia says Johns Island will provide 68 hectares of land to migratory birds”
May 8, 2025:
– Even as emissions level off, carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is growing faster than ever. Here’s why
by Issy Borley, Cathy Trudinger and Ray Langenfelds, The Conversation on phys.org “Recent research suggests a weakened biosphere has strongly contributed. Severe droughts across the northern hemisphere in 2024 cut the ability of the planet’s soils and plant life to soak up and store CO₂.” Low latency carbon budget analysis reveals a large decline of the land carbon sink in 2023, Piyu Ke et al., manuscript on arxiv.org “… Land regions exposed to extreme heat in 2023 contributed a gross carbon loss of 1.73 GtC yr-1, indicating that record warming in 2023 had a strong negative impact on the capacity of terrestrial ecosystems to mitigate climate change.”
Apr 28, 2025:
– Canada’s deforestation tracking ignores logging’s contribution to climate change and forest degradation, researchers say
Olivia Piercey in Hfx Examiner (Subscription required) “Forestry researchers say Canada’s logging industry is more harmful for the environment than is reported by the government. A report released this month by the National Resources Defense Council (NRDC) and the David Suzuki Foundation detailed ways in which logging makes Canada’s forests more vulnerable to natural disasters, diminishes biodiversity, and releases sequestered carbon…”
Apr 23, 2025:
Biomass, a satellite to look inside the world’s forests like never before
on www.airbus.com/ “The Biomass satellite will accurately map aboveground biomass (AGB) over large areas using a synthetic aperture radar (SAR). What’s unique about this SAR is that it operates in the P-band wavelength, a first for use in space. The 12-metre-wide wire mesh reflector is provided by L3Harris. Unlike commonly used X-, C-, and L-bands, P-band’s 70 cm wavelength offers distinct advantages. Its longer wavelength enhances the SAR signal’s ability to penetrate the vegetation canopy down to the ground. An electromagnetic wave only interacts with objects of roughly the same size as its wavelength. So, with the P-Band, SAR can “see” all objects of 70 cm and more but not the smallest ones, such as leaves. Biomass waves will therefore pass “through” the foliage, interacting with the larger woody components, including trunk and branches, thus enabling accurate measurements of tree height, structure and density, even in dense forest.” Also view related post below for Apr 7, 2025.
Apr 15, 2025:
– Why the Forest Service is logging after Hurricane Helene — and why some say it’s a mistake
Katie Myers for Grist.org “Volunteers, scientists, and hikers are asking for transparency in a process they say could prioritize profit over ecosystems.”
Apr 15, 2025:
Fed’s cuts to climate research travel funds ‘mind boggling,’ May says
By Natasha Bulowski in the National Observer “In early 2025, Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) decided it would not commit to providing long-term travel funding for all academics selected to author the IPCC’s next major report, according to an emailed statement from department spokesperson Samantha Bayard…Compared to the $34-billion Trans Mountain pipeline expansion, $680,000 for travel over several years is mere “breadcrumbs spilt at the cabinet table,” May said.Prime Minister Mark Carney did not respond to a request for comment…Canada gets a lot of value out of its IPCC authors for the low price of approximately $680,000, Bataille said. “We represent Canada at all these meetings, we bring it back, we engage with the media, we engage with policymakers and we do this voluntarily,” he said. “
Apr 11, 2025:
– The tax has been axed, but Nova Scotia still has emissions targets
Larry Hughes in the Hfx Examiner “The shortcomings of Canada’s entire carbon-pricing system can be revealed by taking a quick glance at Canada’s emissions data for 2005 to 2023 (published late last month by Environment and Climate Change Canada and summarized in the chart below). The data highlights the fact that the biggest ever drop in emissions occurred in 2020 solely because of the pandemic. Since then, emissions have been greater than the pandemic low of 682 megatonnes of CO2e (carbon dioxide equivalent). The range of Canada’s 2030 targets—from 455 megatonnes (a 40% decline from 2005) to 417 megatonnes (a 45% decline from 2005)—would take a superhuman effort to achieve. Reaching the 40% and 45% targets requires a reduction of 34 and 40 megatonnes, respectively, between 2024 and 2030. No other developed country has ever sustained such a massive reduction in emissions.
Apr 10, 2025:
– What is getting in the way of protecting 20% of our lands and waters?
Post by Nina Newington on Healthy Forest Coalition website.“Shortly after coming to power in 2021, Tim Houston’s government tabled the Environmental Goals and Climate Change Reduction Act (EGCCRA). To their credit, it incorporated one of the election pledges the PCs ran on: to protect 20% of Nova Scotia’s lands and waters by 2030. In October 2023 the Canada-Nova Scotia Nature Agreement introduced an interim target of protecting 15% by 2026. It also gave Nova Scotia $28.5 million to help it get moving on meeting these protection goals…Back when EGCCRA was passed, at the end of 2021, 13% of our lands and waters had been protected. As of March 31st 2023, the grand total was 13.2%. At the end of March 2024, the total was 13.6%. At the end of 2024, the grand total so far protected stood at 13.7%. The next report is due in July. Tracked in the annual reports required by EGCCRA, reports titled Urgent Times, Urgent Action, this progress is, to put it mildly, underwhelming…”
Apr 8, 2025:
Shock and Awe (podcast)
National Observer. “Canada’s National Observer teamed up with DeSmog, an online investigative outlet that describes itself as an antidote to science denial and misinformation, on The Takeover project. We went to the Alliance for Responsible Citizenship conference in London, U.K., a right-wing networking event organized by former University of Toronto professor Jordan Peterson. We observed how speakers spread anti-net-zero strategies across a growing conservative network that includes the U.S., the U.K. Europe, Australia and Canada.” (Subscription may be required)
Apr 7, 2025:
– All you need to know about the space mission spotting forests
bbc “The European Space Agency (ESA) is preparing to launch its newest space satellite later this month, called Biomass.
Its five-year mission is to provide detailed 3D maps of the world’s most dense and remote tropical forests.Biomass is the first space satellite to carry a long wavelength radar, called P-band. This special radar means that it can scan deep through the forest canopy and collect information on different parts of the forest, such as tree trunks, branches and stems, where trees store most of their carbon.”
– Canada’s 2025 federal election: where have all the climate issues gone?
Joan Baxter in Hfx Examiner “Using threats to Canada from U.S. President Trump as a pretext, the fossil fuel industry is shaping the narrative, influencing politicians, and pushing pipelines, but voters can counter all of that.”
– Corgan offers a tool to measure mass timber’s real production carbon footprint
By John Caulfield for Building Design & Construction. “Its calculator accounts for “overlooked” factors, like harvesting residue and tree species…Global demand for wood as a building material is expected to quadruple by 2050. Demand is being driven in part by the rising popularity of mass timber for its aesthetics and eco friendliness. One of the perceived advantages of choosing mass timber panels and components for construction and renovation is their lower production-related greenhouse gas emissions vis-a-vis conventional wood products and other building materials like steel or concrete. But the notion that producing mass timber is carbon neutral—one of its key selling points for developers and AEC firms looking to reduce a project’s carbon footprint—has come under greater scrutiny, and has led one firm, Corgan, to develop a tool that calculates CO2 from mass timber, including the harvesting and transporting processes that, according to a recent paper published by Nature, could add between 3.5 billion and 4.2 billion metric tons of GHG emissions annually to the atmosphere by 2050, the equivalent of roughly 10% of recent CO2 emissions.”
Apr 2, 2025:
Global impoverishment of natural vegetation revealed by dark diversity
M. Partel et al., in Nature. From Estonian Research Council on Phys.org: “A study recently published in Nature indicates that human activities have a negative effect on the biodiversity of wildlife hundreds of kilometers away. A research collaboration led by the University of Tartu assessed the health of ecosystems worldwide, considering both the number of plant species found and the dark diversity—the missing ecologically suitable species.”
Mar 27, 2025:
– Losing forest carbon stocks could put climate goals out of reach
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research “In the past, intact forests absorbed 7.8 billion tonnes of CO₂ annually – about a fifth of all human emissions – but their carbon storage is increasingly at risk from climate change and human activities such as deforestation. A new study from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) shows that failing to account for the potentially decreasing ability of forests to absorb CO₂ could make reaching the Paris agreement targets significantly harder, if not impossible, and much more costly…According to the study, postponing action to reduce emissions and to protect and monitor forests could jeopardise climate targets. “We must act immediately to safeguard the carbon stored in forests,””
– Dead Trees Keep Surprisingly Large Amounts of Carbon Out of Atmosphere: Study
By Lauren Milideo, The University of Vermont “New research from UVM suggests that fallen logs in streams are unsung climate heroes, locking up heretofore-unrecognized stores of climate-warming carbon.” Cites this paper: An Emerging Carbon Sink in Headwater Streams and the Role of Large Wood and Riparian Forest Structure, Stephen Peters-Collaer 2025 in Ecosystems
Mar 21, 2025:
– Ocean dumping – or a climate solution? A growing industry bets on the ocean to capture carbon
By Helen Wieffering, The Associated Press on halifax.citynews.ca ” From the grounds of a gas-fired power plant on the eastern shores of Canada, a little-known company is pumping a slurry of minerals into the ocean in the name of stopping climate change…”
– Parks Canada braces for $450 million in cuts and lapsed funding
By Cameron Fenton for National Observer. “Budget documents show Parks Canada is bracing for $450 million in cuts and lapsed funding over the next two years — reductions that it says “could put the department “at risk of not being able to deliver the services that matter most to Canadians.” According to department plans, more than 800 full time positions are slated to be eliminated.The cuts listed on Parks Canada’s website also leave more than $300 million unaccounted for. According to department plans, the difference will come from expiring spending programs like the Enhanced Nature Legacy Fund. Created in 2021, this $2.5 billion fund was tied to the government’s promise to protect 30 per cent of Canada’s lands and waters by 2030. The Parks Canada funding supports the goal of establishing new national parks and marine protected areas; it’s tied to a five-year commitment that runs out at the end of 2026. “I am worried that cuts to Parks Canada would make it harder than it already is to live up to the 30-by-30 promise,” said Joe Foy, protected areas campaigner with the Wilderness Committee. “Failure to do so is going to result in the loss of some beautiful places, and also will accelerate the extinction crisis.”
Mar 20, 2025:
– Ottawa, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia strike deal on Chignecto funding
Jacques Poitras · CBC News “The federal, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia governments have reached a deal on a major infrastructure project to protect the low-lying Chignecto Isthmus from the effects of climate change.”
March 19, 2025.
Widespread slow growth of acquisitive tree species
Augusto, et. al. in Nature. Abstract
Trees are an important carbon sink as they accumulate biomass through photosynthesis1. Identifying tree species that grow fast is therefore commonly considered to be essential for effective climate change mitigation through forest planting. Although species characteristics are key information for plantation design and forest management, field studies often fail to detect clear relationships between species functional traits and tree growth2. Here, by consolidating four independent datasets and classifying the acquisitive and conservative species based on their functional trait values, we show that acquisitive tree species, which are supposedly fast-growing species, generally grow slowly in field conditions. This discrepancy between the current paradigm and field observations is explained by the interactions with environmental conditions that influence growth. Acquisitive species require moist mild climates and fertile soils, conditions that are generally not met in the field. By contrast, conservative species, which are supposedly slow-growing species, show generally higher realized growth due to their ability to tolerate unfavourable environmental conditions. In general, conservative tree species grow more steadily than acquisitive tree species in non-tropical forests. We recommend planting acquisitive tree species in areas where they can realize their fast-growing potential. In other regions, where environmental stress is higher, conservative tree species have a larger potential to fix carbon in their biomass.”
Mar 18, 2025:
– B.C. failing to show how it calculates forest carbon, audit finds
By Stefan Labbé for Business in Vancouver “B.C. ministry lacks transparency in its accounting of forest carbon — calculations crucial to decisions on annual allowable cut and reforestation, finds audit”
– – Rising Seas and Land-Based Salt Pollution Pose Dual Threats for Drinking Water
by By Kiley Price for Inside Climate News. “New studies show that climate change is fueling salt contamination in freshwater ecosystems”
– Canadians want next government to prioritize climate change, poll finds
Stefan Labbé for BIV “Survey results come as 14 environmental groups warn Ottawa that European Union import regulations will soon restrict wood products linked to forest degradation”
Mar 17, 2025:
– New Study Finds Time is Not the Driving Influence of Forest Carbon Storage
by Chrissy Billau for Univ, of Michigan References this paper: Carbon cycling across ecosystem succession in a north temperate forest: Controls and management implications by Lucas E. Nave. et al., 2025 in Ecological Applications. “The research published in the journal Ecological Applications on Feb. 24 involved the effort of more than 100 scientists from across the country who have conducted studies at the historic field station in Pellston, Michigan, over many decades. The researchers targeted a variety of forest stands at the more than 10,000-acre campus founded in 1909, including old reference forests that established in the 1800s, stands that were logged in the early 1900s and have since been left undisturbed, and stands that have experienced subsequent logging or burning… “Time is not what drives carbon cycling,” Nave said. “Time is more of a playing field, and the rules of the game on that field are things like canopy structure, tree and microbial community composition, and soil nitrogen availability. That means that changes in things like structure, composition, and soil nitrogen are what control forest carbon trajectories, whether those changes happen quickly or slowly, and whether we are influencing those changes through management or letting them happen on their own terms.”
– Carney’s cabinet selections clarify climate priorities before upcoming election
John Woodside in the National observer (subscription may be req’d) “After Carney and his cabinet were sworn in, the group held its first cabinet meeting Friday afternoon where Carney announced the consumer facing carbon price will be eliminated “immediately.” Another clear indication Carney was concerned about potential backlash from the climate movement is that the morning of his swearing in as prime minister, he met with leaders from environmental NGOs to outline his vision for climate. Guilbeault will maintain a significant link to the environment portfolio with Parks Canada. As part of this role, Canada’s National Observer has learned he will be responsible for stickhandling the conservation and biodiversity protection file at large, including wildlife services and marine conservation, previously under the purview of Fisheries and Oceans Canada. Effectively being the minister for nature reflects one of Guilbeault’s signature accomplishments from the Trudeau era — hosting the UN biodiversity summit in Montreal in 2022 which landed the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (a major Paris Agreement-style treaty)….“Given Carney’s whole shtick is the intersection of finance and climate, I think there’s a lot of subtle signalling there for people who are paying attention that this is a file that he’s going to be taking seriously,” Rowe said.”
Mar 14, 2025:
– How Nature Can Alleviate Pain—and Why Climate Change Could Get in the Way
By Kiley Price for Inside Climate News. “Exposure to green spaces can improve mental health, speed recovery and relieve pain in patients. But climate change and human activities could disrupt this effect, experts say.”
– Province tells Nova Scotia Power to burn more wood to generate electricity
Taryn Grant · CBC News “The Houston government made a regulatory change this week that requires Nova Scotia Power to use 160 gigawatt hours of biomass each year until 2027. The new regulation builds on earlier directives for Nova Scotia Power’s biomass use. In 2022, the province called for 135 gigawatt hours of biomass-powered electricity each year until 2025…in order to get more renewable energy on the grid while waiting for additional wind and solar projects to come online…The regulation used to stipulate that biomass burned for electricity had to be a forestry byproduct. In other words, it couldn’t come from trees harvested for the sole purpose of producing biomass. The province did away with that provision. A spokesperson for Boudreau’s department said it wouldn’t make economical sense for the forestry sector to harvest trees explicitly for creating biomass — essentially calling the previous stipulation redundant.”
Mar 12, 2025:
Want to preserve biodiversity? Go big, U-M researchers say
University of Michigan. References this paper:Species turnover does not rescue biodiversity in fragmented landscapes, TG Souza et al., in Nature Mar 12, 2025 “Large, undisturbed forests are better for harboring biodiversity than fragmented landscapes, according to University of Michigan research…The scientists investigated what’s called alpha, beta and gamma diversity at these sites. Alpha diversity refers to the number of species in a patch, while beta diversity refers to how species composition differs between two areas. Gamma diversity refers to biodiversity over a whole landscape…The group discovered that fragmentation decreased the number of species across all taxonomic groups, but that the increase in beta diversity in fragmented landscapes did not compensate for species diversity loss at the landscape level…“This paper resolves a half-century old debate about how to conserve biodiversity in natural areas, one started by scientific luminaries including E.O. Wilson and Jared Diamond,” said co-author Nick Haddad, a researcher at Michigan State University.”

From B. Saxifrage 2023: “Some managed forest areas are managed for logging, while others are managed for non-timber uses like recreation, water, wildlife and fire protection. Unfortunately, Canada reports emissions from all managed areas mixed together. The failure to report logging areas separately and transparently obscures the emissions caused by logging and encourages policies that increase the climate threat.” Related: Enhanced forest inventories in Canada: implementation, status, and research needs, JC White et al., 2025 in CJFR
Mar 11, 2025:
– Canada is opening the floodgates on one of Earth’s greatest living reservoirs of CO2
By Barry Saxifrage in the National Observer
“Canada’s managed forest is one of the largest living reservoirs of carbon on the planet. For centuries it slowly filled, as billions of growing trees pulled CO2 from the air and stored it away in their wood. This ancient, continent-spanning, “carbon sink” helped keep the climate calm and cool. But in the last couple of decades, the flow of CO2 has completely reversed. Chainsaws and fossil fuel pollution are cranking open the floodgates that hold back this enormous reservoir of forest carbon”
Mar 6, 2025:
– Virtual Climate Café (Announcement)
Facilitated by Wil Brunner of Soft Pine Wellness “Communicate and connect with others to help sort out what climate change and social challenges mean for ourselves and communities. A climate café is a casual and empathetic space where feelings about the climate crisis can be safely expressed and shared with others. Sharing with others can provide understanding and support and also helps build community resilience. The cafe model was created by Climate Psychology Alliance, where Wil is a trained facilitator.” More Info
Mar 6, 2025:
Trump order: Logging can skirt Endangered Species Act, environmental study
By Joshua Murdock, Longview News-Journal “President Donald Trump took action last weekend to increase domestic logging by circumventing environmental protections and to staunch the flow of imported lumber products primarily from Canada. A pair of executive orders — one addressing timber and wood product imports, the other addressing logging on federal lands — drew praise from the logging industry, condemnation from environmental and wildlife groups, and concern from the construction industry over higher prices. The order rolls back the degree to which the agencies have to comply with the Endangered Species Act or consider negative impacts of logging. …[making] it easier for environmentally damaging clear-cut logging to be approved. …The executive order on timber production … can exempt projects from complying with the landmark law. …allowing projects to proceed even if they will harm a protected species or result in extinction. Historically, the committee has been used to aid recovery from natural disasters, not to expedite resource extraction. (Summary from TreeFrog)” Also view Immediate Expansion of American Timber Production, The White House Mar 1, 2025
Mar 4, 2025:
North America’s largest wind turbines under construction in Nova Scotia
By Darius Snieckus for National Observer “..near the small town of Mulgrave, Nova Scotia. Construction is now underway on the $450 million Goose Harbour Lake development, a project featuring 24 giant seven megawatt (MW) machines supplied by German manufacturer Nordex. The 168 MW wind power project in eastern Nova Scotia is being co-developed by the UK’s RES and Port Hawkesbury Paper (PHP), whose local pulp and paper mill accounts for up to 25 per cent of the provincial grid’s peak demand.”
Mar 3, 2025
Planetary Technologies: Protecting and Restoring the Ocean and Climate for Generations to Come
YouTube Video, Plantetary Technologies. NS/Halifax based research & project
Feb 28, 2025:
Countries reach a $200-billion deal to protect nature. The U.S. was not involved
Thomson Reuters on CBC “New funding is a win for Canada-led agreement to protect the world’s lands and oceans”
Feb 26, 2025:
– Indianapolis program killed by federal government sought diversity … among trees
By Karl Schneider, IndyStar “The US Department of Agriculture revoked a federal tree-planting grant to Keep Indianapolis Beautiful in a move the nonprofit’s CEO Kranowitz said may be the result of anti-DEI initiatives coming from the Trump Administration… There’s growing evidence that words like “biodiversity” are being targeted by federal agencies bent on terminating Diversity, Equity and Inclusion initiatives across the country.”
– Not-so-green policy is the new global normal
By Terence Corcoran, Financial Post. “A major shift in environmental policy seems to spreading around the world. The most high-profile indicator of the shift is Germany, where Social Democratic Chancellor Olaf Scholz and his Green Party coalition partner were thrown out of office on Sunday… The only question left is how far the green wave has receded in Germany — and across Europe…While the Canadian policy establishment resists declaring a trend, the carbon war has moved down the priority ladder, as evidenced Monday during the French-language Liberal leadership debate. “
Feb 25, 2025:
– Continuing recovery of wolves in Europe
Cecilia Di Bernardi et al., in Plos Sustainability & Transformation “The recovery of wolves (Canis lupus) across Europe is a notable conservation success in a region with extensive human alteration of landscapes and high human population densities…Despite the challenges of high human densities and significant land use for agriculture, industry, and urbanization, wolves have demonstrated remarkable adaptability and increasing population trends in most European countries. Improved monitoring techniques, although varying in quality and scope, have played a crucial role in tracking this recovery. Annually, wolves kill approximately 56,000 domestic animals in the EU, a risk unevenly distributed and differently handled across regions. Damage compensation costs 17 million EUR every year to European countries. Positive economic impacts from wolf presence, such as those related to reducing traffic accidents with wild ungulates or supporting wildlife tourism, remain under studied…Sustainable coexistence continues to operate in evolving and complex social, economic, and political landscapes, often characterized by intense debates regarding wolf policies.”
Feb 18, 2025:
US paper industry asks Trump to seek lighter EU deforestation rules
By Richa Naidu and Kate Abnett for Reuters
Feb 12, 2025:
– Guest Column: Congress should oppose anti-science, anti-public lands bill
Erik Fernandez in www.bendbulletin.com “With a name like the “Fix Our Forests Act,” it should be a good thing for forests, wildlife, and the environment, right? Unfortunately, that is not the case with H.R. 471, aka the Fix Our Forests Act. A more accurate name for this legislation would be the “Clearcut Our Public Lands Act.”Proponents of the bill say it will reduce wildfire risk. A closer look at the actual text shows that it would significantly erode bedrock environmental protections under the Endangered Species Act (ESA) and National Environmental Policy Act, remove science from land management decisions, eliminate public oversight across millions of acres of public lands, and may even make wildfires worse.”
Feb 7, 2025:
No El Niño, no relief: January sets another heat record
Chris Hatch in National Observer “…despite conditions that should have cooled things down, Earth hit its hottest January in recorded history.We’ve been on a run of record-setting temperatures ever since June 2023 when global heating suddenly kicked up a gear. Scientists are still trying to figure out what’s happening — why the last two years were so inexplicably hot and 2024 broke through the symbolic figure of 1.5 degrees above temperatures before the industrial revolution. The worry is that all this fossil fuel burning has unleashed an unexpected step change in the climate system.
Feb 6, 2025:
– GOP Lawmakers Seek to Roll Back Methane Fee
By Phil McKenna for Inside Climate News “Policy experts say the proposal to permanently kill a fee on excessive oil and gas industry pollution will hurt U.S. LNG competitiveness and public health.”
– Guest view: Beyond fairy tales – the realities of sustainable forestry investment
By Charlie Sichel for realassets.ipe.com. “While some fairy tales belong in the woods, the forestry sector must rely on robust data to prove sustainability claims and avoid perpetuating the myths that can fuel scepticism. The challenge now lies in translating sustainability goals into data that supports reporting, benchmarking, and progress tracking. Below, I explore some of the enduring misconceptions investors hold. Myth: established forests make better investments…”
Feb 4, 2025:
Saving salmon can be a win-win for climate change
Report on www.nbcwashington.com “A team of Canadian scientists at CarbonRun discovered two environmental wins with one stone — limestone. Accelerating a natural process through “enhanced rock weathering” helps restore river ecosystems while also offsetting pollution from oil and gas. Climate reporter Chase Cain traveled to Nova Scotia to see how the first-of-its-kind process works.”
Feb 1, 2025:
– This pristine Canadian river has legal personhood, a new approach to conserving nature
Elizabeth Benner for CBC “New documentary examines how a Quebec river became a person under the law and how that protects it from harm”
Jan 30, 2025:
– Canada Unveils Direct Air Capture And Storage Offset Protocol
By Violet George for Carbon Herald “Canada is advancing its carbon removal strategy by developing a protocol for Direct Air Carbon Dioxide Capture and Geological Storage (DACCS)…The proposed protocol, released by Environment and Climate Change Canada, is subject to public review until March 28, 2025.”
Jan 27, 2025:
– Nova Scotia government says wind farms key to meeting 80 per cent renewables goal
By Michael Tutton, The Canadian Press in halifax.citynews.ca
Jan 26, 2025:
– Nova Scotia’s bat population showing signs of recovery after years of decline
CBC News “Bats are able to tolerate fungus that once killed them in droves”
Jan 24, 2025:
Conservation Won Big Under Biden. Environmentalists and Tribal Leaders Fear Trump Will Undo Those Gains
By Wyatt Myskow for Inside Climate News “While public lands protections are widely popular with the American public, the Trump administration has signaled it will again look to reduce the size of national monuments and roll back conservation measures.”
Jan 23, 2025:
– WWF sounds alarm on Finland and Sweden’s failure to protect Europe’s last old-growth forests
World Wildlife Fund. “Despite being home to the largest share of Europe’s remaining primary and old-growth forests, Finland and Sweden are putting these irreplaceable ecosystems at risk. A new WWF report, launched today, reveals alarming evidence that both countries are falling short of their commitments under the EU Green Deal and Biodiversity Strategy. COMMENT: Nova Scotia Big Forestry folks often cite Finland forest management as a model for NS. e.g. see From Nova Scotia to Finland: Growing Relationship Will Benefit the Sector (Blog post on forestns.ca, June 28, 2024).
Jan 21, 2025:
Protecting forests with Google Earth Engine: How FSC is using GEE to monitor forest degradation and support EUDR compliance
FSC newsfeed. “FSC is using satellite imagery and advanced data analytics available in Google Earth Engine (GEE) to track changes in forests, improve decision making, and support sustainable forest management…Satellite imagery has changed the way we understand forests, providing a bird’s-eye-view of how ecosystems change over time. Google Earth Engine’s powerful computing platform enables FSC to analyze vast amounts of data to identify shifts in forest characteristics, including changes away from “naturalness” – a measure of how much a forest has been changed due to human activity. Naturalness is shaped by various factors, such as tree density, height, and the extent of human activity like trails, roads, and logging. A theoretically pristine, untouched forest has the highest level of naturalness, while a plantation or heavily logged forest ranks lower. Understanding these distinctions helps FSC and its stakeholders make informed decisions to protect forests and maintain their ecological integrity. To support this work, FSC used Google Earth Engine and Dynamic World to develop tools that can analyze and compare global forest data over time…”
Jan 20, 2025:
– High fertiliser use halves numbers of pollinators, world’s longest study finds
Phoebe Weston for The Guardian. “Even average use of nitrogen fertilisers cut flower numbers fivefold and halved pollinating insects”.
Jan 18, 2025:
– Can my city burn? Let’s ask John Vaillant
In Zero Carbon series by Chris Hatch, in the National Observer. “I know I’m not the only one watching the Los Angeles fires and asking myself an almost forbidden question: could my city burn too?”
Jan 17, 2025:
– Biomass mission: Advancing our knowledge of the carbon cycle
On www.innovationnewsnetwork.com “To understand the rapid changes that forests are undergoing, and therefore tackle the implications this has for our climate, quantifying the global carbon cycle is vital. However, current measurements of forest biomass are poor in many parts of the world. Using a novel measuring technique to deliver new information on forest height and above-ground forest biomass from space, the European Space Agency’s Biomass mission will collect important data to help reduce the major uncertainties in calculations of carbon stocks and fluxes on land.”
– Prominent climate scientist argues it’s time to ditch the ‘myth of neutrality’
Amanda Buckiewicz · CBC News “Scientists should stop trying to be neutral and instead embrace their values, says a group of top climate scientists. Canadian climate scientist Katharine Hayhoe was among the group behind a paper recently published in the Nature journal Climate Action, which argued that scientists are living, feeling, caring humans, and not just “brains in a jar.” They say the myth of “neutrality in science” is actually harming the reputation of science right when we need it most…”
Jan 16, 2025:
– Urge the federal government to order environmental assessment of massive carbon storage project
On www.enivornmentaldefence.ca. “The Pathways Alliance, a coalition of the largest oil sands companies, have proposed a massive $16 billion carbon capture and storage (CCS) network in northeast Alberta. It would be the largest CCS project in Canada – and one of the largest in the world. Allowing a project this size to proceed without an environmental assessment is unacceptable.”
Jan 9, 2024:
– Compartmentalization by industry and government inhibits addressing climate denial
YH Hendlin & FP Palazzo in Plos Climate “The move from outright denialism by the fossil fuel and related industries to ‘soft denial’ urges reassessing the mechanisms and networks of actors involved in anti-environmentalism….”
– Coastal carbon sentinels: A decade of forest change along the eastern shore of the US signals complex climate change dynamics
M Ardon et al., 2025 Scientific Paper in Plos Climate. From the Introduction “Coastal forests are important ecotones, located between upland forests and lower elevation marshes, that are vulnerable to, and under threat from, climate change and sea level rise [1, 2]. Coastal forests provide important ecosystem services, such as carbon sequestration, flood protection, habitat for migratory birds, and water purification in coastal settings, which will be degraded and lost as coastal forests decline [3]. Recent work has described the simultaneous transgression of salt-tolerant species (e.g. Juncus spp. and Spartina spp.) into and the death of characteristic forested wetlands and upland forests species (e.g. Taxodium distichum and Pinus spp.), creating ghost forests [4–6]. These ghost forests are visual reminders of the “invisible” climate change stressors that coastal ecosystems are experiencing, such as saltwater intrusion, increased flooding, changes in the magnitude and frequency of storms.”
Jan 2, 2024:
– Climate misinformation is exploding — and Canadian politicians are spreading it
By Michelle Cyca in The Narwhal
– After Abandonment: When farmers leave their land, what version of nature takes over?
Dan Charles for Science
– A Reality Check on Our ‘Energy Transition’
Andrew Nikiforuk in The Tyee
“To our peril, there’s been no green revolution. Just green addition to rising fossil fuel use…The much-vaunted “energy transition” that promised a great leap forward from fossil fuels to renewables along with a cornucopia of technologies is now struggling with history and complexity. A few facts tell the story…Some clear-eyed experts are urging we rethink our response to climate change or face calamity. One is French historian Jean-Baptiste Fressoz, who is not surprised by our seeming inability to replace and subtract fossil fuels with renewables that require fossil fuels for their construction.A green energy transition on the scale promised by global power brokers simply won’t happen, Fressoz says in his new book More and More and More: An All-Consuming History of Energy. In fact, he refuses to endorse the term green energy transition, calling the phrase a delusion and “a delaying tactic that keeps attention away from issues like decreasing energy use.” In two recent interviews, one with nuclear advocate Chris Keefer on the podcast Decouple and another published on the site Resilience, Fressoz laid out his reasoning as well as our startling history of energy consumption.
Dec 31, 2024:
Rising oceans and extreme storms threaten Canada’s lighthouses
By Michael MacDonald in the National Observer “Research scientist Tim Webster, an expert on coastal issues, says data he has collected during the past 20 years show the province’s shoreline is moving inland, on average, about 30 centimetres, or one foot, every year. “But that’s a little misleading because it’s an episodic phenomenon,” says Webster, who leads the geomatics research group at the Nova Scotia Community College campus in Middleton, N.S. “We could have years go by where we don’t have any erosion, and then you get a couple of big storms and all of a sudden you’ve eroded a few metres.” He, too, says there’s mounting evidence suggesting storms are becoming more intense and more frequent.”
Dec 19, 2024:
Earth’s clouds are shrinking, boosting global warming
by Paul Voosen in www.science.org “Narrowing storm bands may be a surprising and dangerous new feedback of climate change…Stevens, for one, is increasingly worried. “If the trend holds up, we’re in trouble,” Stevens says. “We hope, hope it changes its direction tomorrow.””
Dec 18, 2024
Nova Scotia environmental group applauds new regulations to cut carbon emissions
Jennifer Henderson in the Halifax Examiner. Summary in Morning File Dec 19 ” In combination with the carbon tax which puts a price on pollution, the new rules are designed to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions at a time when climate change is accelerating. The regulations will take effect in 2035. Badia Nehme, energy coordinator for the Ecology Action Centre environmental charity, described the new regulations as “an environmental victory that will help Nova Scotia reduce greenhouse gas emissions from the electricity sector and continue on the path to more renewable energy.” That’s despite the fact the target for when provinces must achieve net-zero carbon emissions has been extended by 15 years. Draft regulations released in 2022 proposed that all provincial grids would be net-zero by 2035. However, the final regulations have settled on 2050 as the deadline for compliance.”
Dec 17, 2024:
– Mi’kmaq-owned wind farm gets $45.8 million CIB loan financing
Kirk Starratt for saltwire.com “Nova Scotia’s 13 Mi’kmaq First Nations will be the majority owner of the wind farm, known as Benjamin Mills, which will be located north of Falls Lake and include eight turbines…Overall, the 33.6-megawatt wind energy project will cost about $120 million and is expected to be operational by late 2025.”
– Canadians losing winter days to climate change, new report says
Yvette Dentremont in the Hfx Examiner. Cites a report by U.S.-based non-profit Climate Central released late Monday. “Researchers found that among the provinces overall, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island experienced the most days above freezing added by climate change each year – on average about seven additional days. Dahl said regions in the Maritime provinces had some of the largest changes found in their analysis across Canada, with anywhere from seven to 20 extra days above freezing because of climate change in an average year.’
– Coal-Black Swans Threaten the Green Transition
Will Wade for Bloomberg. On “how dramatically increasing power demands will further disrupt the green transition in 2025 (35%: coal’s share of the world’s power generation in 2023, making it the biggest source of electricity, according to climate think tank Ember.)”
Dec 13, 2024:
– Birding Is a Much (Much) Bigger Industry Than You Knew
By Kiley Price for Inside Climate News “In 2022, around 96 million people in the U.S. closely observed, photographed or tried to identify birds in the wild—activities known broadly as birding. For context, that means more than 35 percent of the country’s population aged 16 and over are birders. It turns out this staggeringly popular hobby adds up, according to a November report from the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (FWS). The report found that birders in 2022 spent an estimated $107.6 billion on expenses related to their pursuits—from buying equipment like binoculars to travel costs for visiting bird hotspots. That’s almost six times the total revenue generated by the National Football League that year.”
Dec 12, 2024:
– Canada says it wants to slash its emissions in half by 2035
By Jordan Omstead The Canadian Press in Business in Vancouver “Canada is aiming to cut its emissions in half by 2035 compared to 2005 levels, the federal government announced Thursday, a target more modest than what a federal advisory body had previously recommended. The target of reducing emissions by 45% to 50% balances both ambition and what is achievable, Environment and Climate Change Minister Steven Guilbeault said. …He added that the target’s lower end accounts for potential headwinds, including how United States president-elect Donald Trump approaches key climate policies.”
– Government of Canada provides disaster recovery funding to Nova Scotia for wildfires, flooding and storm Dorian
Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness Canada. ” OTTAWA, ON, Dec. 12, 2024 /CNW/ – In 2023, Nova Scotia experienced one of its worst wildfire seasons, leading to extensive damage to residences, small businesses, farms, municipalities, and provincial sites, and the evacuation of more than 16,000 people. Just over a month later, the province experienced extreme rainfall that led to the worst flooding the province has experienced in 50 years. This follows the significant damage to public and private infrastructure and prolonged power outages caused by storm Dorian across the province in 2019. Today, the Honourable Harjit S. Sajjan, President of the King’s Privy Council for Canada and Minister of Emergency Preparedness and Minister responsible for the Pacific Economic Development Agency of Canada, announced payments of almost $67 million to Nova Scotia through the Disaster Financial Assistance Arrangements (DFAA) program, to assist with response and recovery costs associated with the wildfires in 2023, the extreme rainfall and flooding in summer 2023, and storm Dorian in 2019.”
Dec 11, 2024:
Who’s behind one of the major accounts promoting climate denialism on X?
By Anna Merlan for the National Observer. Originally published by Mother Jones Dec 4, 2024 “Wide Awake Media, a Twitter account that Fidden [arrod Fidden, an Australian entrepreneur living in Ireland} appears to operate, has become a major voice for climate denialism… But responses to the climate denialism industry, and the individuals who spread it, are also starting to take shape. Brazil, the United Nations, and UNESCO recently announced a project to respond to climate disinformation. Their Global Initiative for Information Integrity on Climate Change will, the groups have said, “expand the scope and breadth of research into climate disinformation and its impacts.”
Dec 10, 2024:
A summer of whales and salmon
By Sandra Bartlett in the National Observer “The summer of 2024 on B.C.’s West Coast was full of good surprises. Orcas came back and stayed around a long time, and everyone was gobsmacked by the salmon returns…”There is some indication that increased orca sightings and strong salmon returns is proof that closing 42 fish farms off B.C.s West Coast is paying off.”
Dec 5, 2024:
– This Low-Cost EV Battery (Kind of) Runs on Salt, and It’s Having a Moment
By Dan Gearin for Indside Climate News. ““The reason we’re pursuing this is very simple,” said Venkat Srinivasan, a battery scientist at Argonne and the director of the new collaboration. “It’s because the huge demand in lithium-ion batteries has meant that we have a supply-chain constraint. “We have a problem with cobalt. We have a problem with nickel,” he said, naming two of the metals often used in lithium-ion batteries.”
– Nova Scotia, still dependent on fossil fuels, drops in rankings for energy efficiency
The Canadian Press on CTV A new national study says Nova Scotia’s leadership position in energy efficiency has been overtaken by other provinces, including its closest neighbours. The “Canadian Energy Efficiency Scorecard” has the East Coast province tumbling from second place in in 2022 to fifth this year, while Prince Edward Island is now tied with Quebec for second place, and New Brunswick has moved ahead to fourth spot… Nova Scotia’s programs have been emulated by other jurisdictions, but P.E.I. and New Brunswick now have higher levels of efficiency and supports for low-to-moderate income households, while other provinces are moving more quickly on retrofitting buildings for improved energy efficiency. The report says Nova Scotia “reliance on coal for electricity production is increasing costs and putting pressure on electricity bills.”
– Quebec’s electric challenges and Nova Scotia’s opportunities
by L Hughes and M Godwin in the Halifax Examiner. “Given Canada’s abundance of hydroelectric power, most of the electricity we export to the United States is from hydroelectricity generated in British Columbia, Manitoba, Quebec, and Ontario (Ontario also exports electricity from its nuclear generating facilities). However, drought in much of Canada in 2023 reduced our electricity exports by over a quarter below the 2013-2022 10-year average… The province hardest hit by the drought is also Canada’s largest exporter of electricity: Quebec…To meet this new demand, Hydro-Québec must add an estimated eight to nine gigawatts of generating capacity to its grid by 2035…Hydro-Québec is also looking for additional sources of electricity outside the province… In September 2022, Premier Tim Houston announced that Nova Scotia is to have five gigawatts of offshore renewable wind by 2030.According to the premier, the electricity produced from the offshore is intended to signal that “Nova Scotia is open for business and becoming an international leader in offshore wind and green hydrogen development.”…the planned five gigawatts of offshore wind would produce enough electricity in a year to meet at least twice what Nova Scotia uses in a year…Since it is unlikely that Nova Scotia’s electricity demand will double between now and 2030, there will clearly be a considerable excess available for other uses. The premier’s plan is to use this electricity for green hydrogen. But the intended customer for this hydrogen, Germany, is in the midst of a political crisis, with many of the government’s existing policies unlikely to survive the expected election in February 2025, including Germany’s current green hydrogen policy…If the hydrogen market fails to materialize as envisaged by the premier or Nova Scotia’s demand for offshore wind is not as great as the premier hopes, there will need to be other reasons for offshore wind developers to come to Nova Scotia… Nova Scotia’s offshore wind resource was developed, it could help Hydro-Québec meet its 2035 and 2050 emissions targets. The question is, how could the electricity be made available to Quebec?” The authors propose underwater cables, discuss uncertainties etc. They conclude: Nova Scotia has had three previous offshore energy opportunities promising a brighter future for the province: oil since the 1950s, natural gas in the early 2000s, and tidal energy in the 2010s, none of which have lived up to their proponents’ expectations. Fourth time lucky?”.
Dec 4, 2024:
The Quest to Make Clean Energy Even Cleaner
S Chen et al in Bloomberg “As solar and wind power have taken off around the world, so has the backlash against the waste they generate when the equipment has to be retired…Solar panels and wind turbines are state-of-the-art equipment built to survive in open fields, the ocean and on rooftops for decades. That resiliency also makes them harder to break down when it comes time to dispose of them.”
Dec 3, 2024:
Scientists Behind ‘Net Zero’ Concept Say Nations Are Getting It Wrong
By Eric Roston BNN Bloomberg “Diplomats from 197 countries agreed earlier this month to new rules governing how they can buy and sell credits to neutralize carbon emissions. But while they were deliberating, some of the biggest names in climate science, who defined “net zero” in 2009, found something wrong with the math underlying those debates. “Achieving ‘net zero’ no longer means what we meant by it,” said Myles Allen, professor of geosystem science at University of Oxford, one of the authors of a new paper published last month in the journal Nature. Their new analysis skewers an assumption at the heart of how countries and companies track emissions — that a ton of CO2 is the same everywhere, whether it’s dispersed in the atmosphere, embedded in forest wood or pulled from the air and pumped deep underground forever. That fungibility is the foundation of carbon markets. It lets a ton of CO2 in a forest stand as a fair trade for a ton put in the atmosphere. That rule-of-thumb turns out to be a vast oversimplification that could render many well-meaning net-zero efforts meaningless…”
View:- Geological Net Zero and the need for disaggregated accounting for carbon sinks
Allen et al., 2024 in Nature (Published: 11 November 2024)
Also: Durability of carbon dioxide removal is critical for Paris climate goals
Brunner et al., 2024 in Nature Communications Earth & Environment (Published: 11 November 2024) [The connection – or not – between these two papers is not clear.]
Nov 28, 2024:
– The view from space ‑ Dalhousie University researchers use satellite data, AI to identify trends in cows’ methane emissions and develop tools to tackle climate change in the Canadian dairy industry
Dalhousie University. View Research Paper pre-preprint. COMMENT: They tracked individual farms, likely the same techniques could be applied to forests, forestry operations.
Nov 27, 2024:
This drone just won a $10 million race to survey 100 hectares of rainforest in a single day
By Warren Cornwall for anthropocenemagazine.org “…Last week, the winners were announced in a $10 million competition put on by XPrize Rainforest to build devices that could survey 100 hectares of rainforest in a single day. The results are a testament to the growing conservation power of tools such as drones, DNA samplers, audio and video recorders and artificial intelligence, especially when paired with old-fashioned human ingenuity and the pressure to save these forests before it’s too late…The $5 million top prize went to a team whose drone-delivered tree-top labs identified 700 different types of animals and plants, including 250 distinct species over a 24-hour period (plus two days to analyze the data) while exploring a section of rainforest in the Brazilian Amazon. Developed by the U.S.-based nonprofit Limelight Rainforest under the leadership of Colorado Mesa University tropical ecologist Thomas Walla, the devices combine insect traps, audio recorders and cameras into a constellation of gadgets suspended in a lightweight lattice of rods. A drone uses a robotic hand to gently set one of these little laboratories into the top of a tree. Illuminated at night to attract insects, the constellation of devices resemble small lanterns floating in an ocean of trees…Second place and $2 million went to a Yale University-based team that developed a fleet of semi-autonomous flying drones that could explore the jungle, gathering images, sounds and environmental DNA. The approach relies partly on sophisticated AI programs that can use satellite images to predict what species will be in a place before the drones are deployed, as well as to scan audio and images collected by the drones to automatically identify species or flag unusual ones for a person to check. During the final competition, the team was able to identify 225 different species during a 24-hour survey.”
Nov 25, 2024:
Canadian tidal power is swimming hard against the current
By Cloe Logan for the National Observer “While there isn’t one huge ticket item over the past year that shows the viability of tidal, the combination of smaller wins combined with support from both the provincial and federal governments and continued industry enthusiasm bode well for the industry, Bennett said.”
Nov 22, 2024:
– CTV Leaders’ Roundtable was feisty, but ignored climate change
Jennifer Henderson in Halifax Examiner. Intro in Morning File
– Is there enough land on Earth to feed the world and store carbon?
By Emma Bryce for anthropocenemagazine.org “The surprising answer from a new modeling study is yes—if we line up all the pieces” References Land-use competition in 1.5°C climate stabilization: is there enough land for all potential needs? by A. Gurgel et al., in Frontiers in Environmental Science, Nov 2024
Nov 17, 2024:
– Does the road to clean energy run through dirty mines?
By Mark Harris for Anthropocene Magazine “You can’t scale green power without scaling gray industry.”
Nov 15, 2024:
– The carbon tax is dead; long live the carbon removal charge
By Jamie Stephen, PhD, managing director for TorchLight Bioresources in Canadian Biomass. “The likely impending doom of the carbon tax opens the door for better policy, BECCS”
Nov 23, 2024:
Trump Is Already Helping Revive the College Climate Movement
By Ethan M Steinberg for bloomberg.com “Since the election on Nov. 5, young activist leaders have traveled the US holding mass meetings, organizing school protests and hosting online calls that have drawn thousands of people. The idea is to turn up the volume on environmental concerns and convince policymakers to block legislation that will worsen climate change.”
COP 29: UN Climate Change Conference Baku Nov 24, 2024: Nov 13, 2024: Nov 12, 2024: Nov 11, 2024: Nov 10, 2024: |
Nov 13, 2024:
– Halifax climate plan HalifACT ‘at risk’ of failing
By Matt Stickland for The Coast. “Halifax’s new city council had their first regular meeting of Halifax Regional Council on Tuesday, Nov 12,..In the public portions of the meeting, the bulk of the interesting debate was around the climate, specifically the yearly update on Halifax’s climate action plan, HalifACT AKA Halif-Acting on Climate Together…The annual report says that Halifax is doing okay but really needs to start implementing the plans it comes up with. City staff gave a presentation summarizing the report.
Nov 12, 2024:
– – Canadian activist Tzeporah Berman named among TIME’s top climate leaders
By Rochelle Baker for the National Observer “One of Canada’s most prominent environmental crusaders is being named among TIME’s Top 100 most influential climate leaders worldwide. Tzeporah Berman, a Vancouver-based activist and policy advocate, is at the forefront of climate action nationally and internationally. Her latest brainchild, the Fossil fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty, aims to check the expansion and end fossil fuels use and transition equitably away from coal, oil and gas in favour of clean energy to save the planet and people. The treaty’s network is growing and enjoys the backing of 14 nations, more than 100 cities or regional governments, thousands of civil and environmental groups, Indigenous communities and international bodies such as the World Health Organization and the Vatican — and nearly a million individual global citizens, including Nobel Peace Prize winners and most recently former UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon.”
Nov 7, 2024:
– Audit shows Canada falling far behind emission reduction targets
By Stefan Labbé for www.vancouverisawesome.com “Canada’s plan to reduce planet warming emissions is “overoptimistic” and is moving “too slowly” to meet its targets, the country’s environment commissioner has warned in a new report. Of the 20 carbon reduction measures audited by Commissioner of the Environment and Sustainable Development Jerry DeMarco, only nine were found to be on track. Another nine faced challenges, while two faced “significant barriers.” The report comes with only six years left to meet federal targets aimed at reducing carbon pollution 40 to 45 per cent below 2005 levels by 2030…A March 2023 audit from the commissioner found the federal government had failed to properly account for emissions from the country’s forestry sector. Among several recommendations, DeMarco said the federal government “did not provide a clear and complete picture” of greenhouse gases from forestry and called for an independent expert review to assess any gaps.
Nov 6, 2024:
– Trump plans to dismantle some of the most effective U.S. climate policies
By By Jennifer Mcdermott & Matthew Daly for the National Observer. “The election of Donald Trump as president for a second time and the Republican takeback of the U.S. Senate could undo many of the national climate policies that are most reducing planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions, according to climate solutions experts. When they list measures that are making the most difference, it lines up with policies Trump has said he’ll target.”
Nov 4., 2024:
– Drax will keep raising carbon emission levels until 2050s, study says
Jillian Ambrose in The Guardian/ “Drax will keep raising the levels of carbon emissions in the atmosphere until the 2050s despite using carbon capture technology, according to scientific research.”
– With campaign in full swing, N.S. party leaders weigh in on exporting wind energy
Luke Ettinger · CBC News “EverWind, Bear Head Energy, have plans to build hundreds of turbines to produce hydrogen with intent to export”. Also view: How Nova Scotia wind turbines could become an election issue (CBC news Video) “Hundreds of wind turbines are proposed for rural communities in Nova Scotia. But the energy is slated to produce green hydrogen for export and one group is attempting to make that a provincial issue. Luke Ettinger has the story.”
COP 16 United Nations Biodiversity Conference Nov 2, 2024: Oct 31, 2024: Oct 24, 2024: |
Oct 24, 2024:
– Survey puts human face on pollution caused by U.S. wood pellet mills
By Justin Catanoso for Mongabay.com Forest biomass companies working in the U.S. Southeast in 2023 produced 9.54 million metric tons of wood pellets for export at their 28 mills. …While the pellets are an environmentally controversial substitute for coal burned in overseas power plants, awareness is also growing that biomass manufacture poses a public health threat in the rural U.S. communities where the mills operate within a 10-state arc stretching from southern Virginia to Louisiana.
Oct 23, 2024:
– Will a Liberal win in New Brunswick prompt a sea change on climate?
By Cloe Logan for the National Observer “After six years of leadership under the Progressive Conservatives, New Brunswick now has a Liberal premier who is an outlier in a region that has consistently pushed back against federal climate policy. On Monday night, Liberal leader Susan Holt was elected with a majority at 31 seats, while incumbent premier Blaine Higgs lost his seat, leaving his party with 16 total.Holt won’t be as combative as Higgs, who constantly railed against the carbon tax and clean energy transition deadlines, says Mario Levesque, a professor at Mount Allison University..Holt has long criticized Higgs for his stance on climate. In 2023, when Higgs threatened to lift the moratorium on fracking in the province, Holt said he was looking in the “rearview mirror” when it comes to the province’s energy future…The province has a slew of climate-related issues which will continue to be important to voters during Holt’s term, notes Moe Qureshi, director of climate research and policy with the Conservation Council of New Brunswick, a non-partisan organization. The province is a hot spot for energy: it is home to Canada’s largest oil refinery owned by Irving Oil, a company that has long been supported by Higgs, once an executive of the company. The province also harnesses nuclear power, which has been backed by both the Progressive Conservatives and the Liberals. Glyphosate is sprayed over Crown land to benefit the forestry industry, which both the Liberals and Greens vowed to stop during the 2020 election.”
– Clean50 brings Canada’s key climate innovators together for outstanding results
By Darius Snieckus for the National Observer “The event, now in its fourteenth year, is “doing things more than a little differently,” executive director Gavin Pitchford said in his opening remarks..Instead of a standard programme of Powerpoint presentations, panel sessions and fireside chats, the summit is built around a day of open-table discussions and idea-generation on green transition topics that ran the gamut from clean finance to sustainable construction, renewable energy to climate action education.”
Oct 18, 2024:
– The Finnish Environment Institute Forest says carbon sinks have been overestimated, logging must be reduced
YLE News “The Finnish Environment Institute (Syke) says that tree felling should be decreased by about one quarter from a previous government estimate. Previous estimates of the capacity of Finland’s forests to absorb planet-warming emissions have been overly optimistic, the Finnish Environment Institute (Syke) said on Thursday.”
– COP16: From forests to oceans, nature in a dire state
By Jake Spring for Reuters. Cites the 2024 Forest Declaration Assessment: Forests under fire. That includes links to
– (i) 2024 Forest Declaration Assessment: Forests under fire
– (ii) Summary for Policymakers
– (iii) Technical Annexes: A and B
A search for “Canada” in document (i) reveals many issues related to compliance for Canada at large.
Oct 14, 2024:
Trees and land absorbed almost no CO2 last year. Is nature’s carbon sink failing?
Patrick Greenfield The Guardian. Subscription may be required. “The sudden collapse of carbon sinks was not factored into climate models – and could rapidly accelerate global heating…In 2023, the hottest year ever recorded, preliminary findings by an international team of researchers show the amount of carbon absorbed by land has temporarily collapsed. The final result was that forest, plants and soil – as a net category – absorbed almost no carbon…“We shouldn’t rely on natural forests to do the job. We really, really have to tackle the big issue: fossil fuel emissions across all sectors,” says Prof Pierre Friedlingstein of Exeter University, who oversees the annual Global Carbon Budget calculations. “We can’t just assume that we have forests and the forest will remove some CO2, because it’s not going to work in the long term.”
Oct 11, 2024:
– Fortescue pauses B.C. hydrogen project as Canada worries about missing export rush
By David Reevely for The Logic, subscription required. “Australian resources company Fortescue suspended plans for a green hydrogen plant in Prince George, B.C., last month, dealing a blow to Canada’s hydrogen hopes. It may be an omen of more trouble.”
– Pumped up: how ‘high density hydro’ could supercharge global energy storage
By Darius Snieckus in the National Observer. Subscription may be required for full access. “…Batteries, however, are limited by a four-hour charging cycle, unlike a growing number of so-called “long duration energy storage” (LDES) technologies that have already been shown to often be a cheaper storage solution than Li-ion, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance (BNEF), an industry research house. BNEF analyzed 20 LDES technologies — including thermal, chemical and gravitational designs — with energy storage lasting for weeks rather than hours. It found the least expensive design would require an average capital spend of $232 per kilowatt-hour (kWh) to build, much lower than the average of $304/kWh for the latest Li-ion facilities. Among this wave of next-generation LDES technologies is the “high density” pumped hydro system that RheEnergise successfully piloted in Quebec in 2022.”
Oct 10, 2024:
– ‘Alarming’ decline of seed-dispersing animals threatens Europe’s plants
By Erik Stokstad in science.org news. “Today in Science, a team reports that at least one-third of European plant species could be in trouble because most of the animals that move their seeds are threatened or declining. The study is “brilliant and compelling” but also “alarming,” says Pedro Jordano, an ecologist at the University of Seville. The decline in seed dispersers—not just birds, but also mammals, reptiles, and ants—could jeopardize the ability of plants to expand their range to cope with climate change or recover after wildfire, he adds, especially in Europe’s highly fragmented landscape.”
– El Niño fingered as likely culprit in record 2023 temperatures
Paul Voosen in science.org news. “For the past year, alarm bells have been going off in climate science: Last year’s average global temperature was so high, shooting up nearly 0.3°C above the previous year to set a new record, that human-driven global warming and natural short-term climate swings seemingly couldn’t explain it. Some, like famed climate scientist James Hansen, suggested Earth is entering an ominous new phase of accelerated warming, driven by a rapid decline in sunlight-dimming air pollution. Others, like Gavin Schmidt, director of NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies, said the rise might represent a “knowledge gap,” some new climate feedback that might tip the planet toward a future even warmer than models predict. Now, a new series of studies suggests most of the 2023 jump can be explained instead by a familiar climate driver: the shifting waters of the tropical Pacific Ocean.”
Oct 9, 2024:
–Anger at UK’s ‘bonkers’ plan to reach net zero by importing fuel from North Korea
Isabella Kaminski in The Guardian. “About a third of the biomass used in the UK is imported. In 2021, 9.1m tonnes of wood pellets for use in energy production came from abroad – about 76% from North America and 18% from the EU. But there is not enough wood in these regions to supply the large expansion in bioenergy that the government is banking on…Scientists and environmental campaigners have long disputed claims that burning wood for energy is climate neutral, saying forests are unlikely to be replaced quickly enough to absorb the carbon emissions required to slow the climate crisis. A recent report showed that Drax, the UK’s largest power station, was responsible for four times more carbon emissions than the country’s last remaining coal-fired plant which closed last month.”
– Sylvain Charlebois is Canada’s ‘Food Professor.’ His take on food prices is helping shape our climate policy debate
Marc Fawcett-Atkinson in the National Observer. “…Since early 2023, the Food Professor has criticized the government and the Bank of Canada over Canada’s carbon tax, arguing the tax is “very difficult to assess” and could be contributing to higher food prices by making the country’s food supply chain less competitive. He believes it should be paused until its full impact has been assessed…His argument has been amplified by the federal Conservative party…Charlebois eventually moved to Dalhousie University, where he now leads his own agri-food research lab at the university. The lab surveys food consumer priorities and behaviour and is best known for an annual Canada Food Price Report, which is not formally peer-reviewed in an academic journal, detailing predicted food trends and prices for the year ahead that regularly makes it into national news…An August 2024 paper by researchers at the University of Guelph that examined 14 Canada Food Price Reports and 39 Statistics Canada reports on food pricing concluded that “most claims made in these reports are scientifically incomplete.” They noted the reports from both organizations lack “comprehensiveness” in the claims they make and their analysis, particularly on climate change and the influence of corporations on food prices.”
– Climate and Construction: New study spotlights logging industry carbon emissions
John Bleasby in Canada Construction Connect. “Questioning the benefits of incorporating wood into ever-larger construction can feel like swimming against the tide…However, a report released last month titled 2024 Logging Emissions Update questions one of the foundational arguments surrounding the carbon reduction benefits of wood.
Oct 8, 2024:
– Timber trail blazers see new growth in green building drive
By Darius Snieckus| Part 5 of Big Green Build in the National Observer. “Lumber was once a go-to building material before concrete and steel took over. Now, reborn as mass timber, it may be on the cusp of a comeback as the construction sector steps up its green transition.” The article covers pros and cons of Mass Timber in Canada, from a green perspective.
– Nova Scotia is getting a massive wind farm — but barely any of its green energy
CBC Video “Nova Scotia is getting a massive wind farm — but barely any of its green energy. Nova Scotia is building what could be the largest onshore wind farm in the Western Hemisphere, but the power is being shipped overseas. CBC’s Tom Murphy breaks down the divide over hosting a massive project but not greening the local power grid.
Oct 7, 2024:
Diverse forests better at capturing planet-warming carbon dioxide, study finds
By University of Birmingham on Phys.Org “Forests with a greater diversity of trees are more productive—potentially leading to greater efficiency in capturing planet-warming carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, a new study reveals.”
Oct 3, 2024:
– Europe’s Global Green Ambitions Push Too Hard Once Again
John Ainger et al. for Bloomberg.”EU deforestation law delayed by a year amid widespread protest”
Sep 25, 2024:
– Higgins Mountain Wind Project in Nova Scotia moves forward
On www.newswire.ca, News provided by Canada Infrastructure Bank “17 wind turbines to provide 100 megawatts of clean electricity to the grid./Project to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by over 200,000 tonnes annually/100 workers at peak of construction and new, full time jobs during operations. – The Canada Infrastructure Bank (CIB) and Elemental Energy have reached financial close on a $118 million loan to support the Higgins Mountain Wind Project, located within the municipalities of Colchester and Cumberland in Nova Scotia.”
– Logging’s climate threat: Emissions now rival transportation
By Michael Polanyi, Nature Canada x The National Observer .“… A new report, 2024 Logging Emissions Update, release by Nature Canada, Nature Quebec, and Natural Resources Defence Council (NRDC), found that logging in Canada released 147 megatonnes (Mt) of carbon dioxide in 2022 – one-fifth of Canada’s total reported emissions.
Sep 24, 2024:
– Planet Releases AI-powered Forest Carbon Monitoring Product — at 3-Meter Resolution
By Planet Labs for Business Wire TreeFrog Summary: “Planet Labs PBC, a provider of daily Earth data and insights, released its Forest Carbon Monitoring product, consisting of quarterly, 3-meter resolution measurements of forests globally. It offers an unprecedented dataset to support voluntary carbon markets, regulatory compliance, and deforestation mitigation. …This quarterly dataset estimates aboveground carbon, canopy height, and canopy cover over the entire Earth dating back to 2021, setting a new standard for monitoring forest growth and change. Forest Carbon Monitoring equips stakeholders with a cost-effective way to monitor forested areas — scaling from a single tree to the entirety of the Amazon rainforest. …But by leveraging Forest Carbon Monitoring data — built using Planet’s extensive archive of PlanetScope imagery and a global library of airborne and spaceborne LiDAR data, with processing by AI — users can derive precise, scalable, and affordable measurements without sacrificing scientific rigor.”
– Concrete innovation: a deep dive into the long-term impacts of cement
Macenzie Rebelo in Canadian Contractor “Concrete has been the most relied upon and used building material not only in Canada but the entire world…However, the cement industry is responsible for eight per cent of global greenhouse gases and Canada produces approximately 60 million tonnes of concrete each year… “One ton of cement used to produce one ton of CO2,” he says. “But, now they’ve gotten it down to produce half a ton.” According to the CAGBC, a way to reduce embodied carbon in concrete is to add supplementary cementitious materials…The only downside of using alternatives is that they are often twice the amount of cement and only sometimes as effective…Timber is also a common substitute for concrete entirely and in the last decade, there has been a push across the nation to build with mass timber. A benefit to timber, according to the CAGBC is more predictable construction times and lower embodied-carbon production. However, timber can only go so far, as it is considered for builds less than 12 storeys..There is no clear-cut solution to the cement dilemma “ Comment There is a PR battle going on between Concrete and Mass Timber interests… both claiming to reduce emissions with new products etc. Good to know the strengths and weaknesses of both and make the best combinations pf products accordingly.
Sep 23, 2024:
– Nova Scotia’s climate action plan falls short: report
Taryn Grant · CBC News “A new report published by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives says Nova Scotia’s plan to curb greenhouse gas emissions and mitigate climate change is falling short. The report, released Monday, considers a 2022 plan from the PC government that details how it intends to reach its legislated climate goals. It says the government’s goals are ambitious and “paint a rosy picture of Nova Scotia’s future,” but cannot realistically be met if the province stays on its current path. “Our analysis shows that the changes envisioned by the plan are too shallow to achieve these goals and are at odds with the principles that are claimed to be its foundation,” the authors wrote. Read the full report…”
– New Study Suggests California Should Start Counting Timber Industry’s Greenhouse Gas Emissions
by R.V. Scheide in www.anewscafe.com. “A new study on the impacts of the logging and wood products industry in Shasta and Siskiyou Counties has found such economic activities emit an average of 4 million metric tons of CO2 equivalent per year, equal to the annual emissions of 883,000 gas-powered passenger vehicles. The estimated climate damages caused by the greenhouse gas emissions are $487 million to $1.4 billion per year, which far exceeds the revenue generated by logging and wood products. The kicker? According to the study, California does not currently report or regulate GHG emissions from industrial logging activities because they are erroneously considered carbon neutral…Natural forests that have not been developed or logged are indeed remarkable carbon sinks thanks to their ability to capture CO2 from the atmosphere and store it both above and below the ground, for centuries if left undisturbed. Talberth calls this “catch and store.” In contrast, he labels modern industrial logging and wood products industry “catch and release” because it emits far more greenhouse gasses than it captures.“Trees are half carbon by weight, and when they are cut down and processed into two by fours, paper products, or wood pellets, the majority of this biogenic carbon is released into the atmosphere over time, most of it during the first few years after logging,” Talberth writes.”
Sep 19, 2024:
– Experts estimate modest drop in 2023 emissions, with big differences across sectors
By Canadian Climate Institute Cision Newswire “The independent estimate finds Canada’s emissions now sit at 8 per cent below 2005 levels, the baseline year for Canada’s 2030 emissions target of a 40 to 45% reduction.”
– ‘Concrete revolution’ takes aim at construction’s worst polluter
By Darius Snieckus in the National Observer. Subscription may be required. Cited as ‘Part 0 of Big Green Build‘ “Concrete has weighed down the building industry’s efforts to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions, but a low-carbon revolution in the world’s most-used construction material is starting to gather momentum, writes Darius Snieckus.” [It’s NOT about Mass Timber]
– Backlash Erupts Over Europe’s Anti-Deforestation Law
By Patricia Cohen on The New York Times. Subscription may be required. From summary by TreeFrog: “The European Union has been a world leader on climate change, passing groundbreaking legislation to reduce noxious GHGs. Now the world is pushing back. Government officials and business groups have jacked up their lobbying to persuade EU officials to suspend a landmark environmental law aimed at protecting the planet’s endangered forests by tracing supply chains. The rules, scheduled to take effect at the end of the year, would affect billions of dollars in traded goods. They have been denounced by countries in Southeast Asia, Latin America and Africa. In the US, the Biden administration petitioned for a delay as American paper companies warned that the law could result in shortages. In July, China said it would not comply because of “security concerns”. Brazil… and even Germany asked the EU to postpone the regulations. Delaying the rule’s onset is not easy. The legislature would have to approve any amendments.”
– Climate change means we may have to learn to live with invasive species
Heather Kharouba (Univ. of Ottawa) in www.theconversation.com /. “Invasive species are often looked upon with suspicion. From non-native “weeds” to insects and aquatic invaders, introduced (or non-native) species continue to be misunderstood — and consequently often mismanaged. Stated plainly, the vast majority of intentionally or unintentionally introduced species are not a threat to native ecosystems…”
Sep 13, 2024:
How scientists debunked one of conservation’s most influential statistics
Tim Fischer in The Guardian “The factoid about biodiversity and Indigenous peoples spread around the world, but scientists say bad data can undermine the very causes it claims to support”
Sep 12, 2024:
Nature Conservancy Releases Innovative Emerald Edge Carbon Map
The Nature C0nservancy/ ” The Nature Conservancy (TNC) and our Canadian affiliate Nature United are excited to announce the launch of the Emerald Edge Carbon Map, an innovative, interactive map to help identify the most impactful and actionable opportunities for natural climate solutions projects that also support Indigenous and community priorities. Natural climate solutions are actions to protect, manage and restore ecosystems that help sequester carbon and fight climate change. The Emerald Edge is the world’s largest coastal temperate rainforest and is a globally important carbon storage and sequestration heavyweight. The region spans 125 million acres across Oregon, Washington state, British Columbia and Alaska, and comprises the territories of more than 50 Indigenous Nations who continue to care for the land to support their cultures, food security, ecotourism services and other economic uses.”
Sep 9, 2024:
Why ‘the UK’s biggest carbon emitter’ receives billions in green subsidies
By Jillian Ambrose The Guardian UK
Sep 7, 2024
–‘Sustainable’ logging operations are clear-cutting Canada’s climate-fighting forests
C. Kirkham et al for a Reuters Special Report. “Nonprofit environment watchdogs put their stamps of approval on countless wood products that get touted as responsibly produced. But Reuters found that the timber firms these groups certify are harvesting large swaths of Canada’s older forests, which are critical to containing global warming.” Examines issue of Certification, “The rapid loss of older Canadian forests highlights the flaws of certification programs that have come under heavy influence of the logging and forest-products industries, a Reuters investigation has found.”
Sep 4, 2024:
– Logging is the 3rd highest emitter in Canada. It should be measured that way, a new report says
Inayat Singh, Benjamin Shingler · CBC News “UN experts and environmental groups continue to call on Canada to report true climate cost of logging” Comment, I cant locate the ‘Report’ referred to in the article, apparently published very recently. The article cites this scientific paper: High emissions or carbon neutral? Inclusion of “anthropogenic” forest sinks leads to underreporting of forestry emissions by Bysouth et al., 2024 in Frontiers in Forests and Global Change (AR Taylor, one of the authors, is in the Faculty of Forestry and Environmental Management, University of New Brunswick Fredericton, Fredericton, NB, Canada and is often consulted by NS NRR).
– Sep 4, 2024:
FPAC’s Derek Nighbor says Canada’s passive approach fuelling wildfires
By Derek Nighbor in Canadian Biomass “…Even some of our national parks, those enduring icons of conservation, are turning into net carbon emitters due to drought and wildfires, according to recent findings from the Parks Canada Carbon Atlas Series…What does proactive management mean? It means hands-on intervention into our forest ecosystems. For example, making deliberate efforts to remove flammable materials in high fire risk zones, particularly forests that are older, denser and drying out. These forests are prime for combustion from a lightning strike or a spark from an off-road vehicle.”
Comment (DP): Big Forestry has the solutions to it all. Carbon capture, stopping the fires; no recognition of Bif Forestry’s high emissions and practices that contribute to bigger fires (herbicides etc), and even start them (sparks from machinery operatng during very dry periods). The comments by Nighbor expose the real objective… continued access to Old Growth, and they want access to Parks and Protected Areas, all to feed thethirst for biomass. For the Nova Scotia version, see Forest NS on wildfires, and some comments on versicolor.ca/nstriad. Also available as a PDF
Sep 3, 2024
Contrary to industry claims, forests left alone are best able to combat climate change
Joan Baxter in the Halifax Examiner. Subscription required. Cites this scientific paper: Carbon sequestration and storage implications of three forest management regimes in the Wabanaki-Acadian Forest: A review of the evidence by Emma Cox et al., 27 November 2023 in Environmental Reviews. Baxter discusses also how forest industry is “trying to convince the public that industrial forestry is a force for good in our forests and for the climate”. Says Baxter, ” The Forest Products Association of Canada (FPAC) has been running a massive PR campaign called “Forestry For The Future” that makes over-the-top boasts such as “Canadian Forestry Can Save The World.” The Examiner delved into the Forestry For The Future propaganda campaign in March 2024.”
Aug 29, 2024:
– Can dumping seaweed on the sea floor cool the planet? Some scientists are skeptical
Warren Caldwell in Science. “An ambitious strategy aims to cool the planet by dumping farmed seaweed on the sea floor. Will it work? “I think it’s nonsense,” one expert says”
Aug 28, 2024
– How low can we go? To cut the carbon that goes into buildings to net zero, we need radical change
By Philip Oldfield et al., in The Conversation AU. ‘Our new research shows while we can greatly reduce embodied carbon in Australia, it will require radical changes in how we design, construct, use and reuse buildings…Of all the changes we made, the one that reduced embodied carbon the most was simply replacing carpet with hardwood floors.”
– Surging Methane Emissions Could Be a Sign of a Major Climate Shift
By Bob Berwyn for Inside Climate News “New studies suggest global warming boosts natural methane releases, which could undermine efforts to cut emissions of the greenhouse gas from fossil fuels and agriculture…A new trouble spot is in the Arctic, where scientists recently found unexpectedly large methane emissions in winter. ”
– Why biodiversity urgently needs more financing options
By Saijel Kishan for Bloomberg “…The question is how do you get profit-loving capitalists to plow money into a niche market that focuses on the well-being of insects, the health of marine species and the preservation of mangroves?””
– MSU researchers contribute to study revealing salamanders are surprisingly abundant in eastern North American forests
By Emilie Lorditch in MSU Today. References Range-wide salamander densities reveal a key component of terrestrial vertebrate biomass in eastern North American forests ny Grant et al., 2024 in Biology Letters.”…We demonstrate that overall the biomass of P. cinereus, a secondary consumer, is of similar or greater magnitude to widespread primary consumers such as white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) and Peromyscus mice, and two to three orders of magnitude greater than common secondary consumer species. Our results add empirical evidence that P. cinereus, and amphibians in general, are an outsized component of terrestrial vertebrate communities in temperate ecosystems.”
Aug 22, 2024
Climate policies that achieved major emission reductions: Global evidence from two decades
Annika Stechemesser et al., in Science, 22 Aug 2024 Vol 385, Issue 6711 pp. 884-892 Description from Inside Climate News: “A new study analyzed 1,500 policies around the world aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions, and found that only 4 percent resulted in significant carbon cuts. There are a few ingredients in the secret sauce of successful projects in that slim margin, including making polluters pay for their emissions. “Other policies help, but nibble around the edges,” Rob Jackson, a climate scientist at Stanford University who was not involved in the study, told The Associated Press. “Carbon pricing puts the onus on the owners and products causing the climate crisis.”
Aug 14, 2024:
Will regulators OK controversial effort to supercharge ocean’s ability to absorb carbon?
Warren Cornwall in www.science.org “Geoengineering study that would disperse alkaline chemicals off Cape Cod draws environmental opposition…Some other alkalinity experiments have fared better. With the blessing of local regulators, the Canadian company Planetary Technologies last summer poured 280 tons of a mineral form of magnesium hydroxide—a common ingredient in antacid tablets—into the harbor in Halifax, Novia Scotia, and dyed parts of the water near the busy downtown pink with a tracer for several days. The experiment generated local news stories, but little opposition, says Katja Fennel, an ocean modeling expert at Dalhousie University who is collaborating with the company, which began a second round of tests there this year. In contrast, the company’s plan to pour magnesium hydroxide into the U.K.’s scenic St. Ives Bay has been met with suspicion and protests by some local officials and residents. The company postponed the experiment, originally scheduled for 2023, but is still seeking a permit. Fennel suspects the receptions have differed partly because Halifax Harbor is industrialized whereas St. Ives Bay seems unspoiled. “Doing an experiment or field trial in an environment that people value as pristine or people perceive as undisturbed is probably not a good idea,” she says.”
Aug 9, 2024:
The risky business of private climate modeling
By Eric Roston et al. for Bloomberg. Subscription may be required. “…Computer models can now gauge the likelihood of fire, flooding or other perils at the scale of a single building lot and looking decades into the future. Startups that develop these models have proliferated, buoyed by venture capital and private equity…But there’s a big catch. Most private risk modelers closely guard their intellectual property, which means their models are essentially black boxes. They’re often not transparent enough to allow for rigorous independent vetting. A White House scientific advisers’ report warned last year that climate risk predictions from a “burgeoning” new industry were sometimes “of questionable quality.” And the research nonprofit CarbonPlan puts it even more starkly: Decisions informed by models that can’t be inspected “are likely to affect billions of lives and trillions of dollars…A Bloomberg Green analysis of two flood-risk models, based on new academic research, finds they clash with each other more than they agree. When compared only on a single, relatively simple metric, the models match just 21% of the time.”
June 18, 2024:
Healthy Rivers, Healthy Planet Naturally (Video)
Presentation by Eddie Halfyard & Shannon Sterling to the Halifax Field Naturalists Recorded on Zoom & archived by HFN.
“The Nova Scotia Salmon Association’s Ecologist Edmund Halfyard, PhD, along with Dalhousie environmental scientist Shannon Sterling, PhD, co-founded Carbon Run, a company whose mission is to ‘restore the health of rivers and their natural ability to draw carbon from land — to sea’. The presentation details the situation we are currently in, the steps needed to rectify this, and Carbon Run’s approach to doing so. Through their research, they have found that when water quality is restored, rivers regain their natural ability to markedly increase biodiversity while drawing down carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere.” View more about Carbon Run/Liming of Forest Soils
March 14, 2024:
The global energy transition offers new options for mitigation of coastal hypoxia: Do we know enough?
Patricia Handmann, Douglas Wallace in Global Change Biology