Good News Today — Teton River Saved, AI Wetland Maps & Farming With Less Nitrogen
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Elsewhere in the episode, Campbell University has launched a hundred-acre reforestation project along North Carolina's Cape Fear River, using students as active researchers while restoring native forest over the next fifteen to thirty years. In Illinois, farmer Brad Zimmerman achieved 282 bushels of corn per acre using just 150 pounds of nitrogen — far below conventional rates — by combining biostimulants, ocean minerals, and soil health practices. It's a result that challenges how we think about crop productivity.
Washington State is using artificial intelligence to map previously undetected wetlands, building a protection foundation just as federal safeguards face pressure. At the Hay Festival, international marine experts spotlighted marine protected areas and community fishing programs as the clearest ocean recovery models working today. And a new House bill would require oil companies to fund the decommissioning of over 2,700 overdue wells and 500 platforms — shifting a $196 million taxpayer liability back to the industry responsible.
Every story today carries the same thread: patient, long-term stewardship produces outcomes worth fighting to protect. Good news, grounded in evidence.
This episode includes AI-generated content.
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