The Innate Stewardship of Carbon Sinks Through an Ethical Lens
This article explores the ethical responsibilities inherent in managing natural carbon sinks—forests, wetlands, soils, and oceans—as part of global cl...
6 articles in this category
This article explores the ethical responsibilities inherent in managing natural carbon sinks—forests, wetlands, soils, and oceans—as part of global cl...
Carbon sinks—forests, soils, wetlands, and oceans—are the planet's natural debt collectors. They absorb roughly half of human-caused CO₂ emissions eac...
Carbon sinks—forests, wetlands, peatlands, and healthy soils—are the planet's natural machinery for drawing down and storing atmospheric carbon. Yet g...
Carbon sinks – forests, soils, oceans, and wetlands – are the planet's natural mechanisms for absorbing and storing carbon dioxide. Yet their governan...
The carbon credit market has exploded, but a troubling pattern emerges: many projects fail to deliver lasting sequestration. A forest planted today ma...
Carbon sinks — forests, peatlands, mangroves, soils, and emerging engineered solutions — are the planet's natural buffers against climate change. They...