Permaculture Magazine North America

Permaculture Magazine North America PMNA has merged with its founder, Permaculture Magazine. Sign up for print and digital subscriptions or find us in stores!

You will still find lots of relevant North American content in this successful international publication. For the past 23 years our mother magazine, Permaculture, Britain, has been a bestselling green magazine in Britain and around the world. Maddy and Tim Harland co-founded it in 1992 and have since then built it into an incredibly influential reserve of practical permaculture information. With t

he ever-growing interest in sustainable living, we all knew it was time to expand the network of this permaculture inspiration to North America “officially”. Maddy and Tim have been expanding their efforts worldwide for quite some time now, but didn’t have anyone actually on the ground here to move things forward. That’s where Permaculture, North America comes in! We are so excited to start the first off-shoot of Permaculture, Britain, and will be publishing the first issue of Permaculture, North America in the spring of 2016! We will be launching a version of the magazine that will focus on issues relating specifically to the United States, Canada, and Mexico. Following in the steps of Permaculture, Britain the new version will offer high-quality educational articles, reader solutions, examples of permaculture successes, connections to local workshops, and advertisements from regional businesses that operate from a triple-bottom line.

Live Event: Why Won’t Anyone Listen? Elizabeth Sawin on How to Talk about the PolycrisisDo you find people changing the ...
25/09/2024

Live Event: Why Won’t Anyone Listen? Elizabeth Sawin on How to Talk about the Polycrisis

Do you find people changing the subject when you speak up about climate change? Have you ever torpedoed the mood of a get-together just by mentioning an environmental problem? Well, you’re in good company. Could it be that we—well-intentioned environmentalists—should be doing something different?

Years ago, Dr. Elizabeth Sawin, founder of the Multisolving Institue, realized that when she talked with people about our sustainability crises, she was effectively “bumming people out.” As a systems thinker (trained by the esteemed Donella Meadows) she knew she had to try something different to make a better case for environmental and social action.

Join us for a conversation with Dr. Sawin on Thursday, September 26, 2024 at 11:00am Pacific. In this live, online, 75-minute event, Dr. Sawin will share how she turned her focus to visioning and “multisolving” to communicate more effectively and develop more inspiring projects. Beth will be joined by Rob Dietz, Program Director at Post Carbon Institute.

In this live, online event, Dr. Elizabeth Sawin (Multisolving Institute) shares how she learned to stop bumming people out about climate change and communicate effectively.

16/05/2024

Want to grow food in a forest?

Then check Farming the Woods book.

The first in-depth guide for farmers and gardeners who have access to an established woodland and are looking for productive, innovative ways to create a natural forest ecosystems that produces a wide range of food, medicinals, and other non-timber products.

https://amzn.to/4bBJL4h

Check out this amazing learning opportunity for environmental students in Kentucky this June by Ecosystem Restoration Co...
05/05/2024

Check out this amazing learning opportunity for environmental students in Kentucky this June by Ecosystem Restoration Communities! This workshop is suitable for students in the environmental sector seeking to marry knowledge and learned skills with practical, field-based work, as well as early-stage ecosystem restoration practitioners interested in M&E skills and working with student/volunteer groups.

https://www.ecosystemrestorationcommunities.org/experiences/restoration-recording

June 3 – 7 2024, Kentucky, USA   Few landscapes epitomize the impacts of human industrialization or the challenges of eco restoration better than a reclaimed surface coal mine. Join us this June in the heart of Central Appalachia – “Coal Country”– as we learn the core principles and appli...

29/04/2024

THIS WEEKEND — Sunday on the 5th of May, or thereabouts, when the world lights up with the vibrant spirit of International Permaculture Day. This isn't your usual celebration—it's a call to action and a chance to dive deep into the heart of permaculture's sustainable living and community resilience.

Now in its 13th year, International Permaculture Day has grown from a humble Australian initiative into a global phenomenon celebrated in over 35 countries. It's a day where curious minds and passionate souls converge to witness permaculture in action, to ask questions, and to ponder its relevance in the face of our collective challenges.

For those eager to experience permaculture firsthand, the day offers a smorgasbord of opportunities. Visitors can step into homes, gardens, and farms teeming with life, where every element serves a purpose and every system harmonizes with nature. They can attend film screenings that showcase the beauty and ingenuity of permaculture design, or participate in workshops where knowledge flows freely and ideas take root.

But International Permaculture Day isn't just about passive observation—it's about active participation. Why not organize an event in your own community? It's easier than you think; follow the link in our bio and watch as your vision springs to life. Open homes, gardens, and farms beckon, offering a glimpse into a world where sustainability isn't just a buzzword but a way of life. Community gardens thrive, educational workshops inspire, and permablitzes transform ordinary spaces into verdant oases.

So why should people get involved in International Permaculture Day on the 5th of May? Because it's more than just a day on the calendar—it's a movement, a global tapestry woven with threads of resilience, creativity, and hope. It's a chance to connect with like-minded individuals, to learn from seasoned practitioners, and to sow the seeds of a brighter, more sustainable future. So mark your calendars, spread the word, and join the celebration. International Permaculture Day awaits, and the world is invited to take part in this extraordinary journey.
(REPOST TEXT FROM .PermacultureAustralia)

https://www.permacultureday.org

Permaculture Greece Permaculture Queensland Permaculture Hunter Permaculture Sydney East Permaculture Sydney South
Permaculture Sydney: good ideas for a resilient city Permaculture SE Asia Florida Permaculture Community Permaculture Canada Permaculture UK Official Permaculture Magazine North America Permaculture Northern Beaches Permaculture North America Permaculture Australia Official Ballarat Permaculture Guild Brighton Permaculture Trust Permaculture Association of Bulgaria Castlemaine Permaculture POW Community (Permaculture Out West) Canterbury Permaculture Institute Wisconsin Permaculture Convergence Permaculture Calgary Guild Djanbung Gardens Permaculture San Diego Permaculture Permakultur Deutschland / Permaculture Germany European Permaculture Community Permaculture Research Institute Kenya Permaculture Research Institute of Australia Permafund - Permaculture International Public Fund Permaculture Jardins Biologiques et Sauvages London Permaculture Network Permaculture Design Magazine / PcActivist Permaculture Magazine Permaculture Magazine North America Permaculture Melbourne Permaculture Action Network Permaculture UK Official Oregon Permaculture Parkrose Permaculture Southern Alberta Permaculture Convergence Permaculture Tasmania: Huon locals Permaculture Yarra Valley Verge Permaculture Permaculture Sydney West Permaculture Institute Hong Kong 香港永續栽培學苑 Milkwood Good Life Permaculture Permaculture Principles Pip Magazine Community Pip Magazine

International Permaculture DayMarch 31 at 4:50 PM  ·   — Sun 5 May (or thereabout)ents."We are sufficient to do everythi...
18/04/2024

International Permaculture Day
March 31 at 4:50 PM ·
— Sun 5 May (or thereabout)ents.
"We are sufficient to do everything possible to heal this Earth." ...Bill Mollison

— Sun 5 May (or thereabout)ents.

"We are sufficient to do everything possible to heal this Earth." ...Bill Mollison



Permaculture Greece Permaculture Queensland Permaculture Hunter Permaculture Sydney East Permaculture Sydney South
Permaculture Sydney: good ideas for a resilient city Permaculture SE Asia Florida Permaculture Community Permaculture Canada Permaculture UK Official Permaculture Magazine North America Permaculture Northern Beaches Permaculture North America Permaculture Australia Official Ballarat Permaculture Guild Brighton Permaculture Trust Brighton Permaculture Trust Permaculture Association of Bulgaria Castlemaine Permaculture POW Community (Permaculture Out West) Canterbury Permaculture Institute Wisconsin Permaculture Convergence Permaculture Calgary Guild Djanbung Gardens Permaculture San Diego Permaculture Permakultur Deutschland / Permaculture Germany European Permaculture Community Permaculture Research Institute Kenya Permaculture Research Institute of Australia Permafund - Permaculture International Public Fund Permaculture Jardins Biologiques et Sauvages London Permaculture Network Permaculture Design Magazine / PcActivist Permaculture Magazine Permaculture Magazine North America Permaculture Melbourne Permaculture Action Network Permaculture UK Official Oregon Permaculture Parkrose Permaculture Southern Alberta Permaculture Convergence Permaculture Tasmania Permaculture Yarra Valley Verge Permaculture Permaculture Sydney West Permaculture Institute Hong Kong 香港永續栽培學苑

Looking for ways to bring Permaculture Principles to help your regenerative business? Then check out the first offering ...
08/04/2024

Looking for ways to bring Permaculture Principles to help your regenerative business? Then check out the first offering of the “Permaculture Business Design Course”! It’s a course Jason Thomas built to help PDC graduates create a permaculture-focused business using a permaculture approach for developing tailored offerings, attracting the ideal audience, planning sustainable growth, and more. The more passionate and successful permaculturists we can have thriving, the bigger impact we can create. We can create an Abundant Earth for all by creating Abundant regenerative businesses!
Classes start this week, so check it out:

Have you taken your PDC and are still wondering, “What’s next?” This course will guide you step-by-step toward designing a profession that cultivates your permaculture education into a thriving regenerative enterprise. Redesign your future the permaculture way! Regeneration Nation Costa Rica p...

Are you searching for a way to have more meaning in your life? Do you want to be more connected within your local commun...
31/03/2024

Are you searching for a way to have more meaning in your life? Do you want to be more connected within your local community? Are you ready to be part of the solution? I just signed up for this free course, and I wanted to share it with you in case you have been looking for something too. Today is the last day to sign up - and it is free!

Thank you, Pachamama Alliance, for making this course available to all of us!

The Game Changer Intensive is an 8-week course that prepares you to engage in effective collective action in the world.

PODCAST/Climate Capitalism' explores how drive for profit can be help solve environmental crisisAkshat Rathi is senior c...
14/03/2024

PODCAST/Climate Capitalism' explores how drive for profit can be help solve environmental crisis

Akshat Rathi is senior climate reporter for Bloomberg News. His new book is called: “Climate Capitalism: Winning the Race to Zero Emissions and Solving the Crisis of Our Age.”
Book excerpt: 'Climate Capitalism'

“It’s now cheaper to save the world than destroy it.”

That’s the slogan, the rallying cry, animating entrepreneurs and investors worldwide who believe capitalism can help solve the climate crisis.

Of course, the world’s richest companies have built their fortunes on burning fossil fuels and polluting the climate with greenhouse gasses. But that same drive for development and material wealth can be a force for good, according to some, he says, it might be our only hope.

Akshat Rathi is senior climate reporter for Bloomberg News. His new book is called: “Climate Capitalism: Winning the Race to Zero Emissions and Solving the Crisis of Our Age.”
Book excerpt: 'Climate Capitalism'

By Akshat Rathi

It was an admission of defeat. But you would never know it looking at the mild-mannered smiles that morning. Angela Merkel, then German chancellor, was standing next to Chinese Premier Li Keqiang. On a partially cloudy summer morning in Berlin in July 2018, both leaders made small talk in between posing for the cameras.

WBUR is a nonprofit news organization. Our coverage relies on your financial support. If you value articles like the one you're reading right now, give today.

A few feet in front of them, two men in dark suits sat at a desk with identical leather-bound folders open and pens in hand. Then, with the blessing of the elders standing behind, Zeng Yuqun, CEO of Contemporary Amperex Technology Limited, the world’s largest battery company, and Wolfgang Tiefensee, a minister for the German state of Thuringia, signed an agreement committing the Chinese manufacturing giant to building Germany’s first large electric car battery factory. The moment passed quickly, and few of those present realized the historical importance.

Germany is known as the home of the car industry and with good reason. It is where, in 1879, Karl Benz built and ran one of the first internal combustion engines designed to power a car. Today, it is home to Volkswagen, one of the world’s largest car companies, and other brands such as BMW, Audi, Mercedes-Benz and Porsche, which are recognized globally for their excellence. By one estimate, the car industry accounts for a seventh of Germany’s jobs, a fifth of its exports and a third of its research spending.

The agreement was an acknowledgement that the industry, which had been the country’s economic backbone, had finally failed. Not because it couldn’t make cars that people wanted, but because it hadn’t developed a crucial technology – lithium-ion batteries – that would power them in the 21st century. While countries are finally seriously trying to catch up, China has taken a commanding lead. By 2025, China’s battery production capacity will be three times as much as the rest of the world combined, according to BloombergNEF estimates.

Advertisement

It wasn’t just the Europeans that missed the boat. Even as recently as the late 1990s or early 2000s, few were sure that batteries could do so much and at such low costs. China’s rise as the global leader of lithium-ion batteries is now a matter of regret for the oil industry, which invented them; for the Americans, who nurtured the technology towards commercialization; and for the Japanese, who were the first to scale up the technology. So I traveled to China to find out the story of how that happened.

The first thing I noticed when I walked into CATL vice chairman Huang Shilin’s twentieth-floor office was the view. It was a grey November afternoon in 2018, and a thick fog rolled over the mountains in front of us, revealing a bay that opens into the East China Sea. Huang, who is Zeng’s second-in-command at CATL and one of China’s richest men, and I admired the view for a little bit, but I was eager to ask him questions. He handed me a cup of hot water and we talked batteries – a 200-year-old invention.

A battery, technically, is any device that converts chemical energy to electrical energy. While the first one was a rudimentary example invented by Italian chemist Alessandro Volta in 1799, it wasn’t until 60 years later – when the lead-acid chemistry was born – that batteries could be put to work beyond single use. By the end of the 19th century lead-acid batteries were deployed on a mass scale, including to power early cars – although this was short lived. The battery chemistry couldn’t compete with the distances that could be covered in a car that burned fossil fuel. The rebirth of the electric car had to wait until the invention of lithium-ion batteries.

During the oil crises of the 1970s big fossil fuel companies were reminded that oil is a finite commodity, and so they doubled down on efforts to find alternatives. One project, helmed by chemist Stanley Whittingham at the US oil giant Exxon, led to the invention of the world’s first rechargeable lithium-ion battery: one of its electrodes – the cathode – was titanium sulfide and another – the anode – was lithium metal. But there was a major problem that needed fixing: the battery kept bursting into flames.

Before Whittingham was able to do anything about that, the 1980s rolled around, the oil glut returned, and Exxon’s interest in finding alternatives waned. Fortunately, his work had sparked broader interest in the field. Over the next decade lithium-ion batteries were the subject of intense scientific work around the world. Three researchers provided the upgrades that transformed Whittingham’s invention into a viable commercial product (and for that they were awarded the 2019 Nobel Prize in chemistry).

In 1992 Sony became the first company to commercialize the lithium-ion battery as an optional upgrade for its Handycam. Others were quick to jump on Sony’s success, including Zeng Yuqun, who, at the age of 31, founded Amperex Technology Limited, or ATL, in 1999. Within two years ATL had produced lithium-ion batteries for 1 million devices and made its name as a reliable supplier. In 2005 ATL was acquired by TDK, the Japanese firm probably best known for its cassette tapes and recordable CDs.

Zeng and Huang decided to stay on after the acquisition. TDK added Japanese discipline to ATL’s manufacturing process and grew its lithium-ion battery business into the newest cash cow: the smartphone market. Soon ATL would go on to supply batteries to both Samsung and Apple.

Huang began fielding queries about batteries for electric cars as early as 2006. The earliest request came from Reva, an Indian company. At the time it was making the G-Wiz, a two-seater electric car powered by improved lead-acid batteries. Its top speed was 40 kmph (25 mph) and range 80 km, with only slow charging. Lithium-ion batteries would increase the Reva car’s speed and range, and enable faster charging. In order to develop a solution, Huang and Zeng created a research department within ATL while simultaneously starting to acquire technology licenses from the US that would enable them to build off existing research.
Few Chinese companies at the time were buying up licenses or investing millions of dollars into early stage car battery research in this way. Chinese companies have been accused of stealing or copying from foreign firms. But with its own robust research efforts, ATL broke that mold, and set the stage for Chinese domination of what will be one of the most important sectors of manufacturing in the 21st century.

By 2008 ATL already had something to show for its efforts. That year, the Chinese government rolled out a demo fleet of electric buses at the Beijing Olympics – some of which were powered by ATL batteries. The electric bus demo fleet was the start of the government’s plan to push for the electrification of transport, a move that would cut deadly particulate pollution, reduce oil imports and lower greenhouse gas emissions by reducing the number of pollution-belching buses. The Chinese government was under pressure from citizens and the global media to do something about its smoggy skies and to lower its carbon footprint. Huang and Zeng sensed an opportunity. In 2011 they created the spin-out company CATL, C standing for Contemporary to denote their belief that the future of batteries lay in the car business.

About the same time, in a bid to capitalize on a next generation technology, the Chinese government introduced subsidies for electric cars. The catch was that to be eligible the battery had to be Chinese-made. That’s when BMW, which was looking to grow its presence in China, partnered with Chinese car maker Brilliance and CATL. In 2013 BMW-Brilliance launched the all-electric Zinoro for the Chinese market. It was based on the design of BMW’s X1 and used CATL batteries.

Unlike AA batteries, which are essentially the same no matter who makes them, electric car batteries need to be typically custom-made for different car models, to fit the body of the car in the most optimal way possible. That means engineers from the car maker need to work with those from the battery company, exchanging ideas, standards and processes. While working with BMW on Zinoro, CATL added some German engineering skills, such as attention to detail and increasing the reliability of products coming off the factory floor.

“We have learned a lot from BMW, and now we have become one of the top battery manufacturers globally,” Zeng said at an event celebrating Zinoro in 2017. “The high standards and demands from BMW have helped us to grow fast.” In 2019, CATL would break ground on Germany’s first car battery factory, beating the revered German car industry to the punch. Today the Chinese giant also has a plant in Hungary, with plans to build new ones in the US and Mexico. It supplies batteries to every electric vehicle manufacturer, including Tesla.
Excerpted with permission of author Akshat Rathi.

The world’s richest companies have built their fortunes on burning fossil fuels and polluting the climate with greenhouse gasses. But author Akshat Rathi that same drive for development and material wealth can be a force for good, according to some, he says, it might be our only hope.

Address

Petersfield
GU321HR

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Permaculture Magazine North America posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Permaculture Magazine North America:

Share