Equilibrium & Sustainability

Equilibrium/Sustainability — Countering climate cost of cows

A Western ranching cooperative wants to use “climate friendly” cattle to turn an area roughly the size of Massachusetts into an enormous carbon sink, KGW8 Oregon reported.

“We’re wanting to move beyond sustainability,” Dan Probert, marketing director of the Country Natural Beef ranching co-op, told the local NBC affiliate.

The Country Natural Beef cooperative includes about 100 ranches with cattle grazing on 6.5 million acres of public and private land in 11 states, KGW8 reported.

Now the co-op is teaming up with Portland-based nonprofit Sustainable Northwest to help convert its members’ rangeland to regenerative agriculture, a loosely defined collection of practices that seeks to improve the health and biodiversity of farmlands.

“If we can increase [stored] carbon, even a little bit, across those 7 million acres, that will be a ginormous impact on the climate,” Dallas Hall Defrees, of Sustainable Northwest, told KGW8.

Cattle are a leading source of greenhouse gas emissions from agriculture — particularly the potent pollutant methane, according to research from the University of California Davis.

But while dietary changes can cut down on the cattle’s methane-releasing burps, the extensive sweep of Western ranchlands also creates a huge area that can be used to “draw down” carbon dioxide, researchers have found. 

One method proposed by the co-op: keeping cows moving along the range, so that they don’t eat grasses down to the roots.  

“If we allow a plant to fully recover before we graze it, that is the practice that allows us to actually put carbon back in the soil,” Probert told KGW8. 

If Country Natural Beef members are able to increase their carbon storage — and therefore the health of their lands — the practice will spread, Hall Defrees, of Sustainable Northwest, told KGW8. 

“I think once people start looking across their neighbor’s fence and start seeing ‘wow their grass, their land is actually looking better. Maybe I should pay attention to what they’re doing,’ I really think this will start snowballing,” she said. 

Welcome to Equilibrium, a newsletter that tracks the growing global battle over the future of sustainability. We’re Saul Elbein and Sharon Udasin. Send us tips and feedback. A friend forward this newsletter to you? Sign up here or in the box below.

Today we’ll start in California, where Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) has proposed penalties for “excessive” oil profits. Plus: Why America’s rail trouble is only just beginning, and a Harvard-led team launches a climate resilience toolkit for front line clinics

Newsom proposes penalties to tackle fuel prices

California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) on Monday evening unveiled a proposal that would penalize oil companies for “excessive profits” in the Golden State. 

Reining in profits: Newsom introduced the so-called “price gouging penalty” alongside state Sen. Nancy Skinner (D) in a move they said would “keep money in Californians’ pockets.” 

Sky-high prices: California, which also has among the highest gas taxes in the country, saw prices hit a record high of $6.44 per gallon in mid-June, according to the American Automobile Association. 

Prices at the pump on Tuesday were about $4.72 per gallon — significantly higher than the national average of $3.38. 

Tampering excess: If approved by state lawmakers, the proposal would make it illegal for companies to charge excessive prices.  

Reaching records: To back up the proposal, the governor’s office referred to a list of occasions in which oil companies recently reported record high profits for 2022: 

What do the companies say? ExxonMobil spokesman Todd Spitler said that “supporting reliable and affordable energy throughout the energy transition, in any market environment, is what governments should strive to do.” 

“Punitive policies discourage long-term investment in energy supply, and that will only create supply shortages in the future,” Spitler added. 

Equilibrium has also reached out to the other companies for comment. 

To read the full story, please click here.

No sick days poses a threat to rail, supply chains 

Forcing railroad workers to work without sick time poses a growing threat to the sustainability of U.S. railroads, union members and investors are warning. 

Costly win: In forcing through a controversial agreement between rail workers and rail companies last week, the U.S. government may have traded an acute crisis for a chronic one, experts told our colleague Karl Evers-Hillstrom.

Thousands could leave: Rail workers who can find other jobs could filter out of the industry, Evers-Hillstrom reported.

Coming exodus: Sawyer said that young workers around thriving cities like Atlanta would be the first to go. 

Where they’ll go: While other trucking or factory jobs might pay less, they offer more reliable hours, Jeff Kurtz of Railroad Workers United told Evers-Hillstrom. 

Ray of hope: This threat of losing workers may cause major carriers to voluntarily sweeten their benefits packages, local BNSF union leader Kevin Knutson told Wyoming Public Media. 

Investors are worried: Sustainability concerns have investors at Union Pacific and Norfolk Southern pushing the companies to offer “a reasonable amount” of paid sick time, Reuters reported. 

While both activist investment firms — Impact Partner and Trillium Asset Management — own less than 0.01 percent of the two rail giants, they can still propose resolutions, according to Business Insider. 

“Focusing on the short term at the expense of workers poses potential risks to the company and the economy,” Monahan added. 

House Dems want $2.1B for key grid components 

A group of House Democrats is pushing Congress to use the powerful Defense Production Act to rapidly produce electric transformers. 

In the weeds: The nine members included Reps. Sean Casten (Ill.), Bobby Rush (Ill.), Doris Matsui (Calif.), Jared Huffman (Calif.), Mike Levin (Calif.), Connor Lamb (Pa.), Paul Tonko (N.Y.) and Susie Lee (Nev.). 

Current threats: A climate of disaster looms over the bill. 

Long-term risks:  But levels of both consumer demand and disaster-based destruction of infrastructure are increasing, the House members wrote.  

To read more about how they want to use this wartime measure to reform the grid, please click here

Harvard launches climate toolkit for front line clinics 

A team of Harvard University public health experts has launched an initiative to help front line medical clinics protect their patients from climate risks. 

When heat hits hard: The project, called the Climate Resilience for Frontline Clinics toolkit, provides guidance on how to develop action plans and alert systems ahead of extreme weather events, as well as checklists for staff and tips for patients. 

Coping with climate shock: “Frontline clinics are the glue that hold their communities together when disasters strike,” Aaron Bernstein, of the Center for Climate, Health, and the Global Environment at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health (Harvard Chan C-CHANGE), said in a statement

Full-time assistance: The researchers said they worked with front line clinics in California, Massachusetts, North Carolina and Texas to develop tools for the periods “before, during and after climate shocks.” 

A growing need: “We know that low-income, uninsured and underinsured populations need more support after emergencies,” Kristin Stevens, of Americares, said in a statement.  

“This need is accelerating as we experience more intense storms, wildfires and extreme weather,” Stevens added. 

To read more about the toolkit, please click here for the full story.

Toxic Tuesday

Environmental Protection Agency proposes tightening “forever chemical” reporting standards, researchers find a link between air pollution exposure and depression symptoms and a congressional bill seeks to combat plastic pollution.

EPA seeks to close gap on ‘forever chemical’ reporting 

Study links air pollution to increased depression in those with bipolar disorder 

Bill seeks to cut single-use plastic overproduction, pollution 

Please visit The Hill’s Sustainability section online for the web version of this newsletter and more stories. We’ll see you tomorrow.