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Farms + Forests

Cultivating a resilient future for Cascadia

Promoting practices that tame wildfires, restore working lands, and strengthen rural communities.  

Latest research + analysis

Four Ways Context Matters for Wildfire News Coverage

Reporters can help people see the forest, even when the trees are on fire.

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Northwest Carbon Markets Can’t Support Longer Timber Harvest Rotations

That would take a New Zealand-style, all-forests cap-and-trade system.
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Why Do We Choose Short Rotation Forestry Over Carbon Storage, Timber Supply, and Forest Health?

The discount rate, vanishing large-log mills, and fear of the spotted owl.
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Yes, Long Rotations Can Yield Real Climate Gains for Cascadia

Harvesting trees at 80 years, instead of 40, stores more carbon and yields more timber.
Read More

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Meet your researcher

Jeannette Lee

Alaska Research Director

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Farms and forests cover much of the Cascadia bioregion, and how we care for these lands is key to a sustainable future. Rural land owners, managers, and workers are devising ways to work with nature, regenerating and protecting healthy soils, rich biodiversity, and clear and bountiful water. All the while, they are supporting thriving rural economies and producing healthy foods and plentiful timber. 

Unfortunately, such approaches are not yet widespread. On our farmlands, we often rely on practices that tax both the land and workers. In places, these methods have eroded our soils and polluted our rivers. Agriculture could be a carbon sink, but instead it’s a major carbon emitter. In our forests, short timber harvest rotations and careless clear-cuts pollute and desiccate water sources, disrupt habitat, and imperil the most carbon-rich bioregion on earth. 

Sightline’s Farms & Forests program spotlights and supports the innovators who are restoring our working lands and rural economies. 

We identify the barriers that hold these innovators back, researching and promoting strategies, especially in public policy, that help Cascadia’s rural leaders scale up their solutions for the environmental and economic challenges of Cascadia’s working lands. 

Learn more about our Farms + Forests research projects below.

Learning to live with wildfires

Strategies to protect communities and reduce long-term fire risk.

Long rotations for Cascadian forests

Long rotations can deliver greater timber yields, greater carbon storage and water and habitat benefits.

Climate-smart farming

Explore sustainable agricultural practices that support Cascadia’s resilience to climate change.

Envisioning Cascadia’s wildfire future

What do we see when we game out the region’s strategies for managing wildfires in a world with increasing fire weather? 

65%

Less soil erosion with reduced tillage

5.6 million

Metric tons more of CO2 per year by extending logging rotations in Oregon

$4.5 billion

US firefighting budget in 2021, 20x the amount from 35 years earlier

Latest research + analysis

Farms + Forests

Four Ways Context Matters for Wildfire News Coverage

Reporters can help people see the forest, even when the trees are on fire.

Read More

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