Fast Tracking Extinction: The Rush to Streamline Permitting for “Green” Energy
This picture paints its own conclusion: fast-tracking renewable infrastructure in America will fast-track our extinction crisis.
This picture paints its own conclusion: fast-tracking renewable infrastructure in America will fast-track our extinction crisis.
For sure, the cow and the deer can easily co-exist. On our farm, there is plenty of wild-life co-existing with our small herd of five mother cows. There are deer, elk, boars, fox, voles, fox, the occasional lynx, a huge number of birds including flocks of geese, and cranes.
Ultimately, the Earth will survive after the sixth mass extinction event, but it will do so without us unless we care enough to change.
This is the story, in large part, of my own life journey (which is, I earnestly hope, not quite over yet), from breeding endangered breeds of domestic farm livestock at its beginning to restoring a broad array of the most marvellous native creatures back into habitats they have lost at its end.
It’s not possible, after all, to tackle one crisis without addressing the other.
To fight climate change, we need fully functioning ecosystems with healthy populations of native plants and animals.