Earth Carers

Wetlands, peatlands, and freshwater ecosystems are being drained and degraded

Problem areaNature

Nature is disappearing

6/13

The natural world is collapsing at an unprecedented rate. We're losing species 1,000 times faster than normal, forests are shrinking, wetlands are disappearing, and ocean ecosystems are breaking down. This isn't just about saving cute animals — healthy ecosystems provide clean water, fertile soil, climate regulation, and countless other services that human civilization depends on.

The problem is massive in scale and accelerating. Traditional conservation approaches can't keep up with the speed and scope of destruction happening across the planet. We need technology to help us monitor what's happening, protect what's left, restore what's been damaged, and create economic incentives that make nature worth more alive than dead.

Problem

Wetlands, peatlands, and freshwater ecosystems are being drained and degraded

3/5

Wetlands, peatlands, and freshwater systems are among Earth's most productive ecosystems, but they're disappearing three times faster than forests. These areas provide crucial services like flood control, water filtration, and carbon storage, while supporting an enormous diversity of plants and animals.

Drainage for agriculture, urban development, pollution, and climate change are destroying these vital ecosystems. When peatlands dry out, they release massive amounts of stored carbon. When wetlands disappear, communities lose natural flood protection and water filtration.

Solution approaches