Home > Blog > We Have a Solution to Climate Change

We Have a Solution to Climate Change

Stressed young corn plants in poor soil
Young corn plants are stressed by soil of poor quality. Improving this soil with a regenerative agricultural process would yield better and is a climate change solution! Photo by Markus Spiske via Unsplash

It seems so complicated and impossible to turn around climate change. But there is an extremely powerful answer. One that comes with multiple wonderful, strong benefits.

It’s the soil

When soil is full of the organic matter and life that it’s supposed to have… it can absorb all the carbon dioxide we humans put out. Yes, potentially all of it. (Not that we should continue with that…)

And with all that carbon in the soil? The healthiest food grows. Biodiversity improves. Pollinators thrive. Farmers become very profitable. Pesticide use is no longer needed.

It’s done with regenerative agriculture

Regenerative agriculture is an impactful way to restore this ailing earth and go a very long way to solving climate change.

But beware, the pesticide and fertilizer companies don’t want you to know this. They have a LOT at stake.

Learn more about it by going to see the film Common Ground. Newly released, it’s on tour and may be coming to a theater near you. See it’s schedule here. And watch the trailer there, too.

In this film you will see how regenerative farmers dramatically improve their soil with how they grow their crops and make a profit, without taking any farm subsidy.

This is a solution to our climate change problem.

Don’t let the big companies keep the wool over our eyes. Watch this film and learn from it… and get very inspired! If you want to read more about how soil sucks carbon dioxide out of the air, read my post here. And each of us can do this even in a small home garden. So… watch the trailer here.

Related Reading

Two Ways the Soil Sucks Up Carbon Dioxide

Just What Is Carbon Dioxide and How Does It Cause Climate Change?

What is Ecological Landscaping? What Does it Do? And How do We Start?