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Sherry Heschuk's avatar

For this reason we have more power if we have the opportunity to share this information with those who are still experiencing impacts by polluting industry.

Thirteen oil and gas corporations operating or based in Canada are also on the list of 88 big carbon polluters being called out for a major share of the forested lands lost to wildfires in North America between 1986 and 2021.

https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/acbce8/pdf

I am in Southern California and will be visiting the University perhaps to ask this researcher about her study. The letter provided some really devastating statistics. Watch her video on the link above it is only 1 minute. Her last statement is very eye opening.

See the video by Kristina Dahl.

“What we found is those fossil fuel producers and cement manufacturers are responsible for almost 40% of the area of western US and southwestern Canadian forests that burned since the mid 80’s. And they are responsible for about half of the increase in fire danger conditions that’s happened over the last century”.

Previous research has linked fires and it’s human causes by these extraction industries oil and gas and cement manufacturers. This letter was published in Feb 2023. So I hope to hear back about the issues. My colleague, Dr. David Ellison has a power point from our last Task Force meeting with the United Nations and his assessment of forests from his two studies recently published.

Kristine Dahl’s email is

kdahl@ucsusa.org

David Ellison’s email is

ellisondl@gmail.com

Both Kristine’s letter and David’s presentation are available in the attachments below.

To learn more please visit the UN’s webpage dedicated to the Safe operations and closure of coal mines will find an agenda.

https://unece.org/sustainable-energy/events/fifth-meeting-task-force-safe-operations-and-closure-coal-mines

Links to these studies include a reference to coal mines and water resources

Quantifying the contribution of major carbon producers to increases in vapor pressure deficit and burned area in western US and southwestern Canadian forests

To cite this article: Kristina A Dahl et al 2023 Environmental Research Letters https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/acbce8

On the Objectives of Landscape Restoration: Forest Carbon, Water, and Energy Cycle Synergies & Nature-Based Solutions

DAVID ELLISON Natural Resource Group (NARP)

Environmental Systems Science, ETH Zurich Land systems and sustainable land management (LS-SLM) Geography Institute U. Been UNECE, Geneva Switzerland June 11, 2024

https://unece.org/sites/default/files/2024-07/Ellison_On%20the%20Objectives%20of%20Landscape%20Restoration_UNECE_June_11th_2024_0.pdf

Two of his studies are available Even cooler insights: On the power of forests to (water the Earth and) cool the planet https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/gcb.17195. Some conclusions are

Each tree is a carbon sink, each tree is a cooling tower, each tree is a potential source of future rainfall.

Degraded landscapes contribute to the land heat sink and promote additional warming

Degraded landscape restoration is necessary to reverse warming and improve the cooling power of trees, forest and vegetation cover.

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David William Jackson's avatar

The current coal royalty act in Alberta is 1 dollar per tonne. One loonie per tonne. Sellers beware as the coal sells for 150 dollars a tonne.

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