A Dangerous Game

One of our Global Open Table ‘Graduates!!’, now a Professor of Global Partnership, shares these insights and a bold image from a colleague Phillipe Birker:-

Regenerative agriculture has a lot of positive effects on its direct and indirect environment. Carbon sequestration seems to be the main one people care about, but the increased soil health also leads to higher nutrient density, higher climate change resilience, increased soil water retention and increase in biodiversity.
All these are at least as important as carbon sequestration, yet society seems to be unwilling to pay for these benefits. That is why I love the radicalness of the above image.
We are not apart from nature, but a part of nature and if we do not take care of the biodiversity loss on our planet soon, then we will have ruined the building blocks that our civilization is based on.

Thanks to Hans Lak 🚲🌍 for showing me the image.
Peter Challen