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The Great Lawn Lie – Why Perfect Grass Is an Environmental Disaster

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  The Great Lawn Lie – Why Perfect Grass Is an Environmental Disaster Hook: The perfect lawn may be one of the least environmentally friendly things in British suburbia. There are few things more British than a neatly cut lawn. A rectangle of green. Edges trimmed. Stripes if you are feeling ambitious. Absolutely no dandelions, daisies, clover, moss, or anything that looks as though nature might have been involved. For decades, the perfect lawn has been treated as a badge of honour. It says: I am organised. I am respectable. I own a mower and know where the extension lead is. But here is the uncomfortable truth. A perfect lawn is often not very green at all. In fact, the closer we get to that flawless carpet of grass, the further we may move away from a healthy garden ecosystem. The British Lawn Obsession There is something slightly comic about our relationship with lawns. The sun appears for half an hour, and suddenly the entire street erupts into the sound of lawnmow...

Could Your Roof Feed Wildlife Instead of Just Making Electricity?

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  Could Your Roof Feed Wildlife Instead of Just Making Electricity? “We’ve taught roofs to make electricity. Perhaps it’s time they helped nature too.” For years, I have looked at roofs mainly as wasted energy platforms. A roof used to be just the thing that kept the rain off. Then along came solar panels, and suddenly a roof became a small power station. In my case, with 26 solar panels, battery storage, a heat pump, and the Whaly electric boat being charged from home solar, the roof has already become part of a much bigger green system. But recently I have found myself wondering something else. What if a roof could do more than generate electricity? What if a roof could also slow rainwater, cool the building, feed insects, shelter birds, provide nesting places, and become part of a wildlife corridor? In other words: could your roof feed wildlife instead of just making electricity? And in my own case, the question becomes even more practical. My main roof is already busy m...

The Hidden Carbon Cost of Clean Digital Living

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  The Hidden Carbon Cost of Clean Digital Living Hook: Deleting 10,000 blurry photos may not save the planet… but our digital habits are far less invisible than we think. We tend to think of digital life as clean. No paper. No plastic case. No delivery van. No pile of DVDs, CDs, folders or filing cabinets. Just a neat little icon in the cloud. Except, of course, the cloud is not actually a cloud. It is a building. A very large building. Full of servers. Using electricity. Producing heat. Requiring cooling. Connected by cables, routers, networks and backup systems. The International Energy Agency estimates that data centres used about 415 TWh of electricity in 2024 , around 1.5% of global electricity use , and expects demand to rise strongly as AI and digital services expand. That does not mean we should abandon digital technology. Far from it. Digital tools help us teach, create, communicate, reduce travel and share ideas. My own work depends on them: videos, music, blogs, so...

What Happens When Everyone Installs Solar?

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  What Happens When Everyone Installs Solar? “Solar panels are only part of the story. The real revolution starts when homes begin thinking for themselves.” For years, the green conversation has focused on generation. More solar panels. More wind farms. More renewable electricity. And yes — we absolutely need more clean energy. But there’s an interesting question that doesn’t get discussed nearly enough: What happens when everyone installs solar? Because if millions of homes generate electricity at the same time, the challenge changes completely. The problem stops being making electricity. The problem becomes what to do with it all. The Strange Problem of Too Much Electricity That sounds ridiculous, doesn’t it? For decades we worried about not having enough power. Coal stations, gas turbines, nuclear reactors — all built to meet demand. Now, in some places, the problem is increasingly the opposite. On a bright sunny spring day, solar generation can surge dramatically. Everyone’s ...