"If we're serious about supporting the actual solutions for climate change, we really need to foster the innovative solutions here, right on the ground in Boulder County," says Susie Strife, director of Boulder County's Office of Sustainability, Climate Action, and Resilience.
That's why the county is dishing out more than half a million dollars to five landscape restoration and carbon-sequester projects in the area.
The Boulder Watershed Collective, Drylands Agroecology Research, Ollin Farms, and Takachar are the recipients of the Climate Innovation Fund, which awarded at least $90,000 each to the projects that use plants, soil, wood debris, and livestock to remove carbon, increase water retention, minimize fire risks, and bolster biodiversity, reports the Daily Camera.
"The beauty of DAR's work is that we are using nature's wisdom to set in motion agricultural ecosystems that function like natural ecosystems," says DAR's Amy Scanes-Wolfe in a press release.
The projects were chosen after more than 2 million applications were received and reviewed by 17 local and national experts in climate research, carbon sequestration, carbon removal technology, and nature-based solutions.
"With these funds, Boulder County is bolstering its status as a hub for nature-based solution
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