Cheaper Ways for Citizens to Help With the 2025 Goals

We are all waiting for methods for energy to get cheaper (which will probably happen through higher efficiency, or higher supply through more total energy being produced. In the short and medium term this could be coal, oil, gas, if they are under the international 2025 goals; in the medium and long-term, renewables (because they take 1-1.5 years to build), especially on-demand renewables and renewables that need to be spaced out across land).

However, did you know that there are cheaper ways that citizens can help prevent climate change?

The problem with this is that there are 600-650 recommended climate change actions, which is overwhelming and feels challenging.

However, the above also means that > citizens can choose the cheaper ones first

The easiest way to help prevent climate change would be searching for 5 climate change goals you could potentially do that week, allocating a certain amount of time (depending on your energy), and trying some of the 5 things you wrote down during the time you allocated- businesses governments might do this differently. Please also print this page (double sided) and keep as a resource.

Therefore, if you create stages out of Project Drawdowns methods (e.g. the stages shown below), then UNEP’s Six Sector Solution can be methods to support achieving this.

Before Start    

(for civilians)

How do you make the 650 recommendations more achievable? If you copy and paste this, this summary is equal to two Microsoft Word pages.

How do you make the 650 climate change recommendations achievable?

 

Solution 1: Everyone does a little bit regularly (where and when it’s safe, or privately prints off)

The 650 summarised on the next 1.5 pages are dependent on the following:

1.       Asking the world (where and when it’s safe) to write down 5 effective %s each week and, for any time they choose each week (e.g. between 5 min and 4 hrs), to try some of these

2.       People could do climate adaptation safety pre-planning %s in their 5-12 safety %s

3.       Asking if all world governments could ask their teams to try to move forward 4-10 effective climate %s they wrote down per week

4.       Asking if businesses could try to move forward, for any time they choose per week (e.g. between 5 min and 4 hrs) 5 effective %s for their business, and 5 for themselves, if they have time

5.       Strongly encouraging the world to do this (where it’s safe)

 

 

Solution 2: Habits and Promotions

(1) Creating a really effective continuously improving government website that explains all of the climate methods in really motivating, memorable, easy to understand ways; some industries could also potentially do this; citizens could be strongly encouraged to write in to the government websites with potential solutions, improvements and requests for help; some of the website.com/(sections) could have industry specialists who answer questions, do problem solving, find out reasons why people don’t do, and promote to 99% of people; together with full-time promotions people for how to get the whole country to do 5 effective %s per week (especially the knowledge and habits) and visit the website regularly

(2) Figuring out the most effective, cheap, win/win promotion methods for 99% of the country (or world) to regularly visit the government website, to regularly practice climate habits in win/win ways, and specifically to attempt 5 effective climate %s per week

(3) All of the 197 countries strongly competing with their local region and the world to create the most effective website & the most effective promotions safely; for other websites to write to them and (politely) hint to look at the page with their best practices

(4) The non-government website world competing for the most effective ways to make these websites & the most effective ways to safely promote these so that the whole country and world are safely and ethically mastering the climate habits. So the world helps with figuring out most effective, and writes in and hints the best ways to the govt website

(5) Getting the whole world to actively promote visiting their government’s climate website regularly, the climate habit priorities, and other best climate resources so that the world masters the climate change priorities in safe, win/win ways & goes for 5 effective % attempts per week (where and when it’s safe) as soon as achievable.

 

Solution 3: Governments and solving the specific reasons why people can’t or don’t want to do some climate habits

(6) Building huge amounts of renewables locally and internationally, helping with research funding, and helping countries dealing with huge climate change disasters- and the next 5x increase in climate change disasters. This will probably be solved by finding up to 12 really specific potential tax options, telling the world the options so far as soon as achievable, and each country choosing a few to apply. The sooner all 197 countries can do this (only where it’s safe- please), the sooner the above tasks can be done.

(7) As well as websites and promoting the priorities, what needs to be prioritized by governments, if it is safe (e.g. what needs resources and how help people who need to change because of it, e.g. if more carbon sinks are prevented, how help jobs around there)? For governments to also tell people what still needs to be solved so people can help with %s.

(8) How do governments- and the whole country- figure out what % of people can’t or won’t do priority habits? It could be following up emails, creating industry sample surveys, finding out reasons why people can’t or won’t do priority needs (e.g. industries could do surveys (with cash draw prizes) asking if people implement the priority solutions, with text asking, if not, to say why). It would then be figuring out ways to problem solve these, or figuring out where resources are needed most (e.g. financial help, practical, informational, or other help)

 

Solution 4: Problem Solving

(9) What needs to be problem solved? What are the 5 to 50 overall or specific problems that are most important to be solved next and overall, and how can each safely and ethically get 100 billion world %s of solutions for the most important things soon, and in a way that things don’t stop moving forward (because 2025 and tipping points are coming up soon)?

Each month, what does each person personally think are the 5 most important or next climate problems that need to be solved, and if it’s safe- how safely, ethically try to get 100 billion world solution %s for each of these 5 this month.
You don’t have to reach it, but to safely, ethically, give it some tries.

What does each person think needs 100 billion solution %s >>> next? What do energy companies need (financial help, loans, practical help), how do you make people safe during occasional power outs, backup energy storage for large city events, several days, 2-4 weeks, winters really cheap, how do you solve this for mid-winters and mid-summers, how do you make 1800 km super energy lines cheaper for northern winters, how do you solve incomes and carbon sink environments being protected, how do you solve rare minerals that are really needed for creating these, how do you make clean cooking cheap for poor countries

(9) Can there be a UN team that regularly ranks the 20-100 highest potential world research and business solutions that need funding/upscaling (and the specific funding that they are asking for), ranked in order of what has the highest potential for scaling up to the 8 billion soon? This way, countries can give funding to the highest potential areas that they choose. Funds would need to be shared efficiently though, because the international need is huge.
These could specifically be research studies with potential for the 8 billion, businesses that need to be scaled up hugely, patented solutions that need to be solved so that huge numbers of businesses can apply them (e.g. to get a patent lawyer to find out how), etc.

Overview

Before Start

Asking people to write down 5 effective %s each week and try some, for any time they choose (e.g. between 5 min and 4 hrs); Strongly encouraging the entire world to do this (where it’s safe); People could do climate adaptation planning within 5-12 safety %s; Strongly encouraging the entire world to do this (where it’s safe)

Asking if businesses could try to move forward, for any time that they choose (e.g. between 5 min and 4 hrs) 5 effective %s for their business per week; if they have time and want to, 5 for themselves

Asking if governments could ask their teams try to move forward 4-10 effective climate %s per week, so they are making regular progress within the resources available

1 Solving What Needs to be Promoted to Individuals

(A) Potential tasks (B) Food (C) Travel (D) Environmentally friendly production and consumption (E) Energy use & retrofitting (F) Other

2 Solving What Needs to be Promoted to Businesses

(A) Potential tasks could do, (B) For specific types of businesses, (C) For all types of businesses, (D) For all types of businesses

3 Solving Farming Challenges Profitably Enough & Prioritizing L-T Food Supply

(A) For governments, (B) For governments and civilians, (C) For businesses that serve food/sell food, (D) For individuals

4 Solving Environmental Areas

4, 5, 6, 7, 8: As well as websites and promotions for everyone, what needs to be solved, how help people around changes, what needs to be prioritised for governments? For example, what are the 10 overall or specific things that need to be solved next (or are most important), and how can these be solved (or explained) in ways where you get 100 billion %s for each AND things don’t stop moving forward? And where you can get world funding for the 10-50 highest potential solutions for scaling up to the 8 billion?

5 Lots of Research and Problem Solving Work

6 Solving Energy Upscaling Challenges

7 Solving What Needs to be Solved in the Transport Industry

8 Solving Retrofitting and Building

1 Individuals

Solving What Needs to be Promoted Among Individuals

Group A

Overview

Group B

Food recommendations

  • Shift towards a more plant-rich diet; Eat seasonally and locally when achievable and if affordable; Eat a diet that reduces forest habitat loss, peatlands drainage, nature degradation, minimizes ecosystem impacts by shopping locally and in season and purchasing products with deforestation-free and peatlands drainage-free ingredients, when possible,

    • Figure out what this means, a % at a time

    • Doing this in a win/win way… please don’t spend too much money or time

    • The idea is trying up to 5 effective %s a week up to a time your pre-chose that week

  • Buy only what you can eat or save

    • Plan meals, write shopping lists, cook with leftovers, use portion-sizing tools for rice, pasta and other types of food, embrace ugly fruit and vegetables

    • Understand the difference between best before and display until labels

    • Store food to maximize freshness, including by freezing food when appropriate

    • Understanding extra ripe fruit

    • Compost food scraps

  • Finding ways so that everyone knows how you can share excess with services who can distribute it to the needy…

    • For example, on the website, find a way that you can quickly locate local food saving services, and find easy ways to call them or email them if they will accept the type of food that you have (for example, you might have a lot of alcohol that you won’t use)

    • This would be most relevant when someone buys a lot for e.g. a party or an event and then something happens and they can’t use it, or they can’t use all of it

  • Advocate for the above and for:

    • Clean cooking and ways to make it cheaper

    • Nature-based agriculture

    • Food waste reduction

    • Waste reduction

    • Setting up processes for surplus food rescue to transfer healthy, uneaten food to services who can distribute it to those in need

Group C

Travel recommendations

  • Learn more about these Project Drawdown links:

    Public Transit 15.42

    Carpooling and Ride Share 11.07

    Telepresence 4.43

  • Use more efficient types of transport where achievable

    • Using public transport more

    • Hold meetings over videoconference rather than travelling long distance for work

    • Buy electric vehicles and cars that use cleaner fuels

    • Walk and cycle

    • Choose train over air

    • Use public and shared transport

    • Use shared transport more, like bike-, scooter- or car-sharing services, like ride-share services

  • Travel less than usual

    • Reduce your commute by working from home

  • Advocate for the above and for:

    • The use of public transportation

    • Non-emission transport, for people who can afford it

    • Support local government initiatives to introduce electrification of the transport sector, better mass transit and non-motorized mobility infrastructure

Group D

Environmentally friendly production and consumption

  • Learn more about these Project Drawdown links:

    Reduced Plastics 5.40

    Recycled Paper 2.90

    Recycling 11.29

    Recycled Plastics 1.69

    Bioplastics 2.48

  • Reuse and repair what you consume

  • Reduce what you consume

  • Recycle what you consume

  • Do some %s to find companies that practice sustainable and circular practices;

    • For example, businesses that provide spare parts, offer take-back services to reclaim used goods and use recycled materials.

    • This is a hard to achieve area, so it would be about finding %s where it is a win/win for you and for the company, even if the win/win is you feeling like you helped the environment improve

    • Read up on companies and governments commitments to sustainable production and practices

    • Ask companies and governments for information about how they produce and source both goods and services

    • Ask companies and government bodies for sustainable options

Group E

Your house or apartment

  • Find out where your home loses energy and find ways to address it

  • For example, you can buy energy monitors that show you the 7 largest energy using areas of your home, so you know what to focus your first %s

    1. Understand how much energy you use and try to consume less of it

    2. Use energy that comes from renewable sources if possible; If possible, choose utilities and operators committed to decarbonization and energy efficiency

    3. Understand a home’s energy efficiency before you buy or rent- there are such tight rental markets that this might not be achievable

  • Understand efficiency performance when buying new appliances, especially air conditioners.

    • Understand the benefits to you, like a lower energy bill

    • Search for government incentives around this, because it can reduce your energy price

  • Install things that decrease your energy use, e.g.

    • Seal windows and doors

    • Stop thermal bridges through insulation

    • Switch to LED lighting

    • Invest in heat pumps

    • Install double-glazed windows

    • Use curtains to keep homes cooler and reduce the need for air conditioning

    • Regulate temperature by adding verandas, green roofs, high-inertia walls and bio-based insulation made from renewable or recyclable materials

  • Advocate for the above and for:

    • The fact that new buildings “lock in” the climate change amounts and environmental amounts, so finding government ways to make these cheaper

    • The retrofitting of buildings

    • Carbon neutral buildings

    • Carbon neutral cities

  • Overall idea- how make this safer and cheaper, including research

    Building Retrofitting

    Net-Zero Buildings

Group F

Other

  • If the fastest growing parts of the world can be safely and ethically persuaded to have 0-2 children per couple, this will strongly reduce pressure on the world’s resources.

  • Divest from investments or pension funds investing in fossil fuels and whenever possible, invest in natural carbon sinks, such as forests (remembering that buying stocks does not increase the money a company has to invest- it just goes to the previous stockholder)

  • Advocate For Energy efficiency, Renewable energy, A price on carbon, Climate action

  • Advocate For nature restoration, Against deforestation, Supporting forest, peatlands and priority habitat conservation and restoration

2 Businesses

Solving What Needs to be Promoted Among Businesses

Group A: Overall

Learning more about these links:

Potential tasks could do:

  • These could be organized according into groups, or they could be organized from most logical to implement first to implement second to implement third to implement fourth to implement fifth; these would also be in addition to industry needs

  • Creating and promoting a really well known website that shows businesses the best ways to do this

  • How do you promote these cheaply, effectively long-term? Each country could have a website where they describe these as easily and memorably as achievable, and someone regularly updates, improves and especially- promotes it

  • Because there are 197 countries, to translate it into all local languages, and especially, to try and make each country website so incredibly good that if anyone from the other 196 countries finds it (by themselves or through promotions), it will strongly influence them to do the right things too

  • Asking industries and businesses if they could treat these as climate change priorities and promote

  • Asking industries to research what needs to be done for these, and where the problems are

  • Finding ways to help them solve these

 

More tasks that governments could do:

  • Impose and strengthen energy efficiency standards

  • Price carbon — this will facilitate the drawdown of carbon-intensive technologies and promote more sustainable alternatives

  • Incentivize and mandate less emissions of greenhouse gases, including cutting methane leaks

Group B: For specific types of businesses

For businesses that serve food or sell food

  • Intermediate:

    • Join Race to Zero global campaign that is rallying support from business, cities, regions, and investors for a healthy, resilient, zero carbon recovery.

    • Measure and report company food loss and waste

    • Create a corporate commitment to halve food loss and waste by 2030

    • Work with suppliers and clients to find solutions that reduce food loss and waste across the supply chain, targeting waste hotspots like weak links in the cold chain

    • Integrate corporate food loss and waste strategies across your company, including by making it easier for consumers and employees to limit their food waste

  • Easier:

    • Review packaging, provide clear storage and freezing guidance, remove ‘display until’ labels and clarify best before/use-by labels

    • Avoid ‘Buy One Get One Free’ food promotions if they are likely to cause customers to buy more than they can eat

    • Repurpose extra-ripe foods in-store

    • Set up processes for surplus food rescue to transfer healthy, uneaten food to services who can distribute it to those in need

    • Share excess with services who can distribute it to the needy

Group C:

For all types of businesses:

Advocacy for All Industries and Businesses to think about if they could attempt this process from UNEP’s 6 Sectors (if it’s safe and ethical enough)

Level 1 (the hows of how businesses could do this) - Getting an Overview

  • Re-organize these 5 levels of potential tasks according to what you can do sooner and what you think is more important (e.g. larger points in Project Drawdown)

  • Print this off so you can make notes or cross off what you’ve done

  • Understand your exposure to climate risk and please take precautions ahead of time… climate change adaptation is 50% of the equation. An easy way to do this is to include efforts to plan and prevent potential climate change risks within your 7-12 safety %s

  • Capitalize on government incentives that can help you lower your average energy usage

 

Level 2 (the hows of how businesses could do this) - Learning More

  • Learn about the Race to Zero global campaign that is rallying support from business, cities, regions, and investors, and plan to join it as soon as you become able to

  • Have a read of the categories in Project Drawdown’s 100 solutions, and start to find out if any of these are relevant to you, especially the largest, highest priority areas (e.g. recycling technology, energy storage, solar photovoltaics, alternative refrigerants, electricity/ building improvements, might be relevant to you).

    • For example, a category was created below for food, because it is so large

    • This could be copying and pasting the whole list in a separate document, and within your 5 effective %s per week, deleting the parts that are definitely not relevant to your business or yourself, and creating summary notes for the parts that are relevant

  • Learning in more detail about the largest or most relevant recommendations above, like plant rich diets and reduced food waste

  • Plant-Rich Diets - e.g. (1) preferring to grow plants rather than meat and (2) certain types of meat are better for the climate than others (e.g. chicken) 103.11

  • Reduced Food Waste 102.20

  • Join a local or national organization supporting forest and peatlands habitat conservation and restoration (or alternatively, learn more about what this means in practice)

  • Embrace the opportunities that resource efficiency, renewable energy and a transition to renewable energy will create across your supply chains

 

 

Level 3 (the hows of how businesses could do this) - Food

  • Because food has such a big impact on climate change, it would be really effective to include ways to improve your company’s food connected efficiencies & employee promotions

  • How do you integrate corporate food loss and waste strategies across your company, including finding and promoting ways that make it easier for consumers and employees to limit their food waste- this is one of the largest solutions out of Project Drawdown’s 100 solutions

  • Figuring out how to measure company food loss and waste

  • Figuring out how to report company food loss and waste

  • Creating a corporate commitment to halve food loss and waste by 2030

  • Set up processes for surplus food rescue to transfer healthy, uneaten food to services who can distribute it to those in need

  • Encourage diets that reduce forest habitat loss, peatlands drainage and degradation by shopping locally and in season and purchasing products with deforestation-free and peatlands drainage-free ingredients, when possible.

 

Level 4 (the hows of how businesses could do this) - Easier Tasks

  • You could start off with the easier tasks, e.g.

  • Creating and regularly promoting some really well known web pages that shows employees, businesses, customers and suppliers the best ways to do this

  • Educating your consumers and clients about how to prevent climate change and help sustainability, being careful that it fits with what your business is already doing

  • Embrace video conferencing for meetings and conferences rather than long-distance travel

  • Arrange for flexible and staggered working arrangements

  • Divest holdings in fossil fuel companies

  • Invest in landscape conservation and restoration with high social and environmental standards as part of net-zero emission efforts

  • If achievable, invest in natural carbon sinks, such as forests and peatlands.

 

Level 5 (the hows of how businesses could do this) - Industry Specific Things

  • All of the 6 Sector Solution has been included here, but what are priorities that you can find from Project Drawdown to include here?

  • What are industry-specific things you could add here to problem solve with climate change? For example, have a look at the larger industry categories here or search for specific industry things that your company could prioritise finding %s for

  • Are there ways to reduce methane

  • Ways to increase recycling across your company and consumers

  • For example ways to recycle or reduce your plastics while still keeping the same product quality, ways to recycle your products more effectively, ways to recycle metals, ways to potentially create bioplastics for the consumers that would prefer this; asking your employees to recycle paper and plastics and to reduce their plastics where achievable

 

 

Level 6 (the hows of how businesses could do this) - Energy Efficiency and Research

  • Energy efficiency will help you to save a lot of money

  • However, please be careful with employee’s comfort and wellbeing, especially around temperature, so that they can be productive and will stay at your company for longer

  • Monitor and reduce your company’s energy usage and strive for energy efficiency; Audit the energy use and resource efficiency of your operations to identify cost-effective high-impact reductions

  • Assess and reduce your energy use, climate change emissions, sustainability, environmental emissions

  • Scale up research and development to create new options for low-carbon industrial and other processes

 

Level 7 (the hows of how businesses could do this) - Working with Suppliers

  • Influencing suppliers is harder, but if you talk to them, you might be able to find low hanging fruit and you might be able to persuade them to become more committed to regularly making improvements for this

  • Consider overlaps between making your supply chain climate resilient and restoring forests and ecosystems, and find ways to make it happen

  • Work with suppliers to find collaborative solutions to minimize ecosystem impacts across the supply chain

  • Work with suppliers and clients to find solutions that reduce food loss and waste across the supply chain, targeting waste hotspots like weak links in the supply chain

  • Switch to rail for the transportation of materials part of your supply chain, because it has lower carbon emissions than other forms of transport, especially aviation

  • Promote investments in deforestation-free supply chains and peatlands drainage-free supply chains.

 

Level 8 (the hows of how businesses could do this) - Achieving the Advanced Level

  • Join the Race to Zero global campaign that is rallying support from business, cities, regions, and investors, as soon as you are able to

  • Make long-term sustainability a core part of your business and investment practices

  • Set decarbonization and net-zero carbon targets

  • If your company can afford it, switch fleets to electric vehicles

 

The Gold Level- you’re a leader (the hows of how businesses could do this) - Becoming a Real Maestro

  • Scale up research and development to create new options for low-carbon, sustainable and/or environmentally friendly industrial and other processes

  • Make your products and processes so that it is a lot easier for customers and employees to reduce, reuse, repair and recycle your products

  • Be a leader in sustainable industrial practices… for example ways to recycle or reduce your plastics while still keeping the same product quality, ways to recycle your products more effectively, ways to recycle metals, ways to potentially create bioplastics for the consumers that would prefer this

  • Be a leader in sustainable and low-carbon practices

 

 

 

Group D:

For all types of businesses:

 

Alternative Organization:

For All Types of Businesses: Industrial practices

  • Audit the energy use and resource efficiency of your operations to identify cost-effective high-impact reductions

  • Be a leader in sustainable industrial practices

  • Scale up research and development to create new options for low-carbon industrial processes

  • Join Race to Zero global campaign that is rallying support from business, cities, regions, and investors for a healthy, resilient, zero carbon recovery.

For All Types of Businesses: Travel

  • Join the Race to Zero global campaign that is rallying support from business, cities, regions, and investors for a healthy, resilient, zero carbon recovery.

  • Embrace video conferencing for meetings and conferences

  • Arrange for flexible and staggered working arrangements

  • Switch fleets to electric vehicles

  • Switch to rail for the transportation of raw materials

 

For All Types of Businesses: How your business operations interact with deforestation

  • Consider overlaps between making your supply chain climate resilient and restoring forests and ecosystems - and make it happen.

  • Promote investments in deforestation-free supply chains.

  • Work with suppliers to find collaborative solutions to minimize ecosystem impacts across the supply chain

  • Invest in landscape conservation and restoration as part of net-zero emission efforts; investments must meet high social and environmental standards

 

 

For All Types of Businesses: Energy suppliers and energy efficiency

  • Understand your exposure to climate risk and take precautions

  • Embrace the opportunities that a transition to renewable energy and resource efficiency will create within your business and across your supply chains

  • Divest holdings in fossil fuel companies

  • Monitor and reduce your company’s energy usage and strive for energy efficiency

  • Capitalize on government incentives designed to lower carbon emissions

  • Educate your consumers and clients about sustainability

  • Join Race to Zero global campaign that is rallying support from business, cities, regions, and investors for a healthy, resilient, zero carbon recovery.

  • Set decarbonization and net-zero carbon targets

  • Be a leader in sustainable and low-carbon practices

  • Make long-term sustainability a core facet of your business and investment practices

 

 

 

 

(for civilians)

How do you make the 650 recommendations more achievable? If you copy and paste this summary, it is equal to two Microsoft Word pages.

The information on this page is from Project Drawdown’s Climate Change Solutions www.drawdown.org/ solutions/table-of-solutions and the interactive Six Sector Solution: www.unep.org/interactive/ six-sector-solution-climate-change, and has been re-organized multiple times to make the 650 different recommendations as cheap and easy as achievable.


Here are some places you could start:

Easier

  1. Plant-Rich Diets 103.11 

  2. Reduced Food Waste 102.20 This involves finding %s to reduce food waste all along the food supply chain, including the retail and consumer stages.

  3. Public Transit 15.42 

  4. Recycling 11.29 

  5. Reduced Plastics 5.40

  6. Bicycle Infrastructure 4.63

Protecting and restoring the environment 

  1. Tropical Forest Restoration 85.14  Ways to help with this, especially around Tipping Points, would be really appreciated by a world of people affected by climate change

  2. Tree Plantations (on Degraded Land) 35.09 

  3. Indigenous Peoples’ Forest Tenure 12.51 

  4. Temperate Forest Restoration 27.85 

Buildings fixtures and fittings

  1. Building Retrofitting  Fitting out buildings after they’ve been built

  2. Distributed Solar Photovoltaics 64.86 

  3. Insulation 18.54 This is one of the best ways that you can save money on heating and cooling bills, and if you can make it environmentally friendly, that’s even better

  4. LED Lighting 15.69  This can save you 90% of your lighting costs

  5. Solar Hot Water 13.73  Government rebates for this will help you save money in two ways on your heating bills, which can add up to 1/3 of your electricity bills

  6. Smart Thermostats 7.25 

  7. Low-Flow Fixtures 1.52 

Farming

Asking farmers to prioritize the quantities for world food supply and fertilizer first

Asking the farming industry to check if they can apply any of these would be really helpful.

A number of these provide financial win/wins for them.

  1. Silvopasture 42.31 

  2. Perennial Staple Crops 32.87 

  3. Tree Intercropping 24.40

  4. Multistrata Agroforestry 23.94

  5. Regenerative Annual Cropping 23.21

  6. Managed Grazing 20.92

  7. Abandoned Farmland Restoration 20.32

  8. Bamboo Production 19.60

  9. Improved Cattle Feed 15.05

  10. Improved Rice Production 14.43

  11. Nutrient Management 11.48

  12. Conservation Agriculture 8.08

Transport Industry 

  1. Efficient Trucks 10.77

  2. Electric Cars 9.76 

  3. Hybrid Cars 4.71 

Industry solutions 

  1. Refrigerant Management 57.15

  2. Recycled Metals 12.34

  3. Recycled Plastics 1.69

  4. Recycled Paper 2.90

Electricity Industry

  1. Grid Flexibility 

  2. Utility-Scale Energy Storage

  3. Distributed Energy Storage

  4. Onshore Wind Turbines 143.56

  5. Utility-Scale Solar Photovoltaics 111.59

  6. Concentrated Solar Power 21.51

  7. Geothermal Power 9.17

  8. Offshore Wind Turbines 9.89

  9. Tidal Power 0.80

  10. Landfill Methane Capture -1.48

  11. Methane Digesters 7.05

  12. Waste to Energy 5.24

  13. Methane Leak Management 4.50

  14. Nuclear Power 3.64

  15. Small Hydropower 3.21

 

Previous
Previous

Alternative Ways to Help With the 2025 Goals: Citizens, the Environment, Governments

Next
Next

If You would like to Help with Economic Problems