I’ve been setting the table for this article for the last 6 months, laying out the context and challenges around the fundamental question: “How do we feed the world without destroying the planet?| nealspackman.substack.com
One of the looming subjects when it comes to the question of “feeding the world without destroying the planet” is population.| nealspackman.substack.com
Since the end of last year I’ve had the opportunity to serve as a judge for Stanford’s Climate Adaptation Accelerator, which is hosted at the new Doerr’s School of Sustainability.| Humans: The Keystone Species
Carrying Capacity is an ecological concept that has grown in importance over the last century, particularly as it relates to the sustainability of human populations.| nealspackman.substack.com
The last few posts on land sparing analyzed the argument that efficiency reduces impact and the feedback loops on intensive ag systems that make them long-term suicidal.| Humans: Keystone Species
But it is a symptom of the real cause| Humans: Keystone Species
Revisiting my post on challenges in blue carbon development in Baja California Sur| Humans: Keystone Species
In my last three posts, I’ve introduced the sharing vs sparing argument, given the context for the Green Revolution that set off the last 65 years of agricultural innovation and transformation, and the fundamental problems that agriculture causes itself.| Humans: Keystone Species
The Yellow River is named for the fine Loess soils from its headwaters, that are sandy colored and highly erosive.| Humans: Keystone Species
or, How a Nobel Peace Prize Winner Predicted We Were All Going to Die Without DDT| Humans: Keystone Species
An Introduction to the Foundational Argument on How We Feed the World Without Destroying the Planet| Humans: Keystone Species
Over 5000 people have read my articles in the last week, including influential folks in the regenerative / nature / conservation world, and I’m honored to consider myself part of that community.| Humans: Keystone Species
lessons learned and patterns on making it work| Humans: Keystone Species
How I inadvertently became a carbon developer, and why I'm pivoting away from it in efforts to restore blue ecosystems.| nealspackman.substack.com
This is Humans: Keystone Species.| nealspackman.substack.com
an axiom of regenerative systems| nealspackman.substack.com