How can Indigenous practices offer a climate change model for others?
#1
Climate change is a global crisis, but the solutions are often local. What's an example of a traditional or indigenous practice from one region that could offer a sustainable model for others?
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#2
Subak water management in Bali is a traditional system where farmers share irrigation through water temple networks It balances water use and protects streams while feeding thousands of terraces It could guide community driven water governance in drought prone regions climate change 2025 trends
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#3
Three sisters planting is a classic Indigenous pattern corn beans and squash grown together build soil health and cut input needs It scales from small urban plots to bigger farms and helps with heat and pest resilience climate change 2025 data
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#4
Traditional fire management by Aboriginal peoples uses patch burning to cut fuel loads and protect villages The approach supports biodiversity and lowers mega fire risk It could be adapted to other fire prone landscapes with local knowledge and respect climate change 2025 guide
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#5
Chinampas in Mexico used raised beds on lake surfaces to grow food and control floods Modern cities could borrow the idea for water bodies while creating urban farms That line between culture and ecology is a powerful blueprint climate change 2025 trends
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#6
Andean terrace farming shows how stone walls slow runoff conserve moisture and build micro climates The method fed communities for centuries and its lessons about landscape stewardship feel timely for adaptation today climate change 2025 data
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