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  1. Feed the Farm, Not the Algae

    Revista Land Lines
    Noviembre 2023
    By Jon Gorey, November 1, 2023

    Farmers use nitrogen-based fertilizer to increase yields and feed the growing world population, but the practice contributes to climate change, pollution, and toxic algal blooms.

  2. Lincoln Institute Staff Promote Private and Civic Land Conservation at Historic COP15

    Revista Land Lines
    Enero 2023
    By Shenmin Liu, January 23, 2023

    A team from the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy joined leaders and conservationists from more than 190 countries at the COP15 conference in 2022, promoting the role that private and civic land...

  3. A Natural Experiment Hints at an 'Elegant Approach' to Climate Adaptation

    Revista Land Lines
    Enero 2023
    By Jon Gorey, January 25, 2023

    As climate change advances, how can governments protect people and property? A four-decade-old law may point to one successful approach.

  4. How Land Trusts and Conservancies Are Achieving Climate Impact at Scale

    Revista Land Lines
    Febrero 2022
    By Will Jason, February 15, 2022

    As the climate crisis grows ever more urgent, land conservationists are taking meaningful action to reduce carbon in the atmosphere and protect natural systems from the unavoidable impacts of a warming planet, according to a new report from the Lincoln In

  5. Climate Change and the Colorado River

    Lincoln Institute Dialogue Addresses Water Management Challenges
    Revista Land Lines
    Septiembre 2021
    By Katharine Wroth, September 22, 2021

    For the first time, the federal government has declared a shortage for the Colorado River, which provides water to more than forty million people and over 4.5 million acres of agriculture in seven U....

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