the Regenerative Movement begins with a single step!
“
“If governments won’t solve the climate, hunger, health and democracy crisis, then the people will. Regenerative agriculture provides answers to the soil crisis, the food crisis, the health crisis, the climate crisis and the crisis of democracy.”
”
Ideas for Immediate Action:
Plant a garden
—at home, in neighborhood schools or free spaces, in pots, indoors and outdoors.
Buy local & organic
as much as possible.
Gain back your connection to the earth
and your food.
Start a compost pile!
Loving yourself means loving this planet.
Get outside and spend time in the forest, the fields, or the desert.
Reducing your carbon footprint or becoming carbon neutral begins with a single step:
Plant trees!
Activate your dreams by living them through action.
Give back to your local communities.
Circular Economy
Circular Economay
As we think about old, linear systems of production—“take / consume,” “throw away,” and “out of sight, out of mind”
—it is clear how this way of life pollutes the earth, leaving it much worse than we found it.
Plastic, for example, takes decades to break down, and even then continues to release micro-plastics and toxins into the environment. A circular economy creates closed cycles of production and waste management with each product we consume.
Circular Economy is based on three principles:
Design out waste and pollution.
Keep products and materials in use as long as possible.
Regenerate natural systems.
In a circular economy, activity builds and regenerates itself. Regeneration is about the entire cycle of life—from life to death. Nature works in cycles, circles, and spirals. Linear systems go against that natural order.
Circular economy is not
just a big concept for governments
and economists, but something
real that we can immediately
put into practice as individuals.
RECOMMENDED RESOURCES
“In a circular economy, activity builds and regenerates itself. Regeneration is about the entire cycle of life—from life to death. Nature works in cycles, circles, and spirals. Linear systems go against that natural order. ”