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Reasons Why Protecting Local Biodiversity Is Just as Important as Global Action

Honeybee collecting pollen on yellow flower

&Tab;&Tab;<div class&equals;"wpcnt">&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<div class&equals;"wpa">&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<span class&equals;"wpa-about">Advertisements<&sol;span>&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<div class&equals;"u top&lowbar;amp">&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<amp-ad width&equals;"300" height&equals;"265"&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab; type&equals;"pubmine"&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab; data-siteid&equals;"173035871"&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab; data-section&equals;"1">&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;<&sol;amp-ad>&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<&sol;div>&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<&sol;div>&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;<&sol;div><h1><&sol;h1>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The global environmental movement currently suffers from a massive strategic error known as the fallacy of distance&period; You are conditioned to believe that biodiversity is a crisis occurring elsewhere—in the Amazonian canopy&comma; the Arctic ice sheets&comma; or the Great Barrier Reef&period; While these global landmarks are essential&comma; your obsession with distant conservation allows the biological infrastructure of your own neighborhood to liquidate in silence&period; Global treaties and international non-governmental organizations operate with a level of abstraction that often fails to address the hyper-local tipping points that directly affect your property value&comma; your health&comma; and your regional food security&period; Local biodiversity is not a secondary concern&period; It is the primary operating system for your everyday life&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">You pay for the degradation of your local ecosystem every time your municipality raises taxes to fund new water filtration plants or flood mitigation infrastructure&period; We have spent decades treating the immediate environment as a decorative amenity rather than a functional asset&period; This op-ed examines the mechanics of local biological capital&comma; the actuarial reality of regional ecosystems&comma; and the geopolitical necessity of decentralized conservation&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3><b>The Infrastructure of the Immediate<&sol;b><&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Industrial planning often ignores the fact that nature provides the most efficient and cost-effective municipal services available&period; Consider the case of water filtration&period; In the late twentieth century&comma; New York City faced a multi-billion dollar decision regarding its water supply&period; They could either build a massive mechanical filtration plant for over six billion dollars or they could invest one point five billion dollars in protecting the biodiversity and soil health of the Catskill Mountains watershed&period; They chose the biological solution&period; By protecting local forests and wetlands&comma; they ensured that natural processes filtered the water for a fraction of the cost of a mechanical system&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Why do you assume that your local government should build concrete solutions for biological problems&quest; When a community protects its local wetlands&comma; it is not just &&num;8220&semi;saving the ducks&period;&&num;8221&semi; It is maintaining a high-performance sponge that prevents flood damage to your basement&period; When a city maintains a diverse urban tree canopy&comma; it is not just for aesthetics&period; It is reducing the urban heat island effect&comma; which can lower your summer cooling costs by up to thirty percent&period; These are local benefits that global action cannot deliver&period; If you ignore the health of your local watershed&comma; no amount of success in the Amazon will stop your local utility rates from skyrocketing&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3><b>The Actuarial Wall of the Local Canopy<&sol;b><&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The insurance industry is currently hitting the nature wall&period; Actuaries are beginning to price climate risk based on the presence or absence of local biological buffers&period; If you live in a region that has clear-cut its coastal mangroves or drained its inland marshes&comma; your risk profile is significantly higher&period; This is a material financial reality that affects your ability to secure a mortgage or protect your assets&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Data from the insurance sector shows that properties shielded by healthy&comma; biodiverse ecosystems experience significantly less damage during extreme weather events&period; In the United States&comma; coastal wetlands provided an estimated six hundred and twenty-five million dollars in direct property damage prevention during Hurricane Sandy&period; This was not a global benefit&period; It was a local one&period; If you allow your local government to permit development on these biological buffers&comma; you are directly devaluing your own property&period; You must recognize that a biodiverse forest at the edge of your town is a piece of financial armor&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Do you know the specific biological risk profile of your neighborhood&quest; Most property owners lack this information because we treat ecology as a &&num;8220&semi;soft&&num;8221&semi; science&period; In reality&comma; it is a hard actuarial metric&period; A community with high local biodiversity is a resilient community&period; It is a community that is less likely to face catastrophic infrastructure failure or a sudden collapse in property values due to environmental degradation&period; Local action is the only way to build this resilience&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3><b>Pollinator Geometry and the Retail Shelf<&sol;b><&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Your grocery bill is a local biological product&period; While the global food trade is vast&comma; the productivity of your regional agricultural system depends on the specific geometry of local pollinator networks&period; One out of every three bites of food you take relies on pollinators such as bees&comma; butterflies&comma; and bats&period; These are not global migrants&period; They are residents of your local ecosystem&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">If local biodiversity collapses&comma; your access to affordable&comma; nutrient-dense food vanishes&period; We see this in regions of China where pollinator populations have crashed so severely that farmers must hand-pollinate fruit trees with brushes&period; This is a labor-intensive&comma; expensive&comma; and inefficient process that drives up the price of food&period; You cannot solve a local pollinator crisis with a global treaty&period; You solve it by ensuring that your local landscape provides the specific floral diversity and nesting sites these species require&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Furthermore&comma; local biodiversity provides the genetic insurance policy for our crops&period; Wild relatives of common vegetables often grow in the margins of our local environments&period; These plants contain the genes for drought resistance and pest immunity&period; If we allow these wild margins to be paved over&comma; we lose the genetic library required to adapt our food systems to a changing climate&period; You are essentially burning the blueprints for your future meals every time you prioritize a manicured lawn over a diverse local meadow&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3><b>Bio-Shields in the Suburbs&colon; The Dilution Effect<&sol;b><&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Local biodiversity loss is a direct driver of regional disease outbreaks&period; This is a concept known in epidemiology as the dilution effect&period; In a diverse ecosystem&comma; pathogens circulate among a wide variety of species&comma; many of which are poor hosts for the disease&period; This &&num;8220&semi;dilutes&&num;8221&semi; the prevalence of the pathogen and reduces the risk of it jumping to humans&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Consider the case of Lyme disease in the Northeastern United States&period; Research shows that in fragmented forests with low vertebrate diversity&comma; the prevalence of Lyme-carrying ticks is significantly higher&period; In these simplified environments&comma; the white-footed mouse—a highly efficient host for the bacteria—thrives without competition or predation&period; When you protect local biodiversity&comma; you are maintaining a biological shield that keeps these pathogens in check&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Why do you assume that your risk of infection is purely a matter of personal hygiene&quest; It is a matter of ecological management&period; By supporting local conservation efforts&comma; you are directly reducing the probability of zoonotic spillover in your own backyard&period; This is a public health imperative that requires local&comma; authoritative action&period; You pay for the loss of local biodiversity through your medical bills and your family&&num;8217&semi;s safety&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3><b>The Sovereignty of Local Genetics<&sol;b><&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Each local ecosystem contains a unique set of genetic instructions that have been optimized over thousands of years for that specific geography&period; This is biological sovereignty&period; When we focus only on global conservation&comma; we often overlook the rare&comma; endemic species that exist only in a single county or a single watershed&period; These species are the &&num;8220&semi;intellectual property&&num;8221&semi; of your region&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">We are entering an era of bio-innovation where the genetic code of local plants and microbes will drive the next generation of medicine&comma; materials&comma; and energy&period; If your community allows its local biodiversity to go extinct&comma; you are liquidating a future R&amp&semi;D capacity that you do not yet fully understand&period; Many of our most important drugs&comma; including aspirin and various cancer treatments&comma; were discovered in the wild&period; Every local extinction is a closed door in the library of human knowledge&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Are you willing to gamble with the future of medical innovation for the sake of another suburban strip mall&quest; The protection of local biodiversity is a strategic investment in the long-term wealth of your community&period; It ensures that your region retains the biological assets that could one day provide the cure for a new disease or the blueprint for a new industrial material&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3><b>Municipal Solvency and Biological Capital<&sol;b><&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Waste management and soil health are the hidden pillars of municipal solvency&period; When a community adopts sustainable&comma; biodiverse land management&comma; it transforms its waste from a liability into an asset&period; Decentralized composting and the restoration of soil biodiversity reduce the burden on local landfills and decrease the need for expensive&comma; energy-intensive synthetic fertilizers&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Healthy soil is a biological factory that stores more carbon than the atmosphere and all vegetation combined&period; If your community continues to allow soil degradation through chemical saturation and urban sprawl&comma; you are hitting the nitrogen wall&period; Eventually&comma; the land becomes biologically insolvent&comma; requiring more and more expensive inputs to maintain even a baseline level of productivity&period; This is a fiscal disaster that eventually manifests as higher property taxes and lower local food security&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">You must demand that your local government treats soil as a strategic reserve&period; Protecting local biodiversity includes protecting the microbial life in the dirt&period; This is the foundation of a resilient regional economy&period; A community that manages its biological capital with precision is a community that is built to last&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3><b>The Psychology of Tangible Stewardship<&sol;b><&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Global environmental issues often lead to a phenomenon known as eco-anxiety or paralysis&period; The scale of the problem feels too large for individual action to matter&period; Local biodiversity provides the antidote to this paralysis&period; It provides a tangible&comma; measurable environment where your actions have an immediate impact&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">When you restore a native meadow in your yard or advocate for the protection of a local woodlot&comma; you see the results within a single season&period; The return of a specific bird species or the recovery of a local stream provides a psychological reward that global treaties cannot match&period; This builds a sense of agency and civic pride&period; It transforms you from a passive consumer of environmental news into an active steward of your own world&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">How much of your current stress is a result of feeling powerless against global trends&quest; Local action is the path to empowerment&period; It creates a feedback loop of success that builds the social cohesion necessary for broader change&period; A community of stewards is a more stable&comma; more connected&comma; and more successful community&period; This is the social dividend of local biodiversity&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3><b>The Myth of the &&num;8220&semi;Invasive&&num;8221&semi; Excuse<&sol;b><&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">A common argument against local action is the belief that ecosystems are already too far gone or that invasive species have permanently altered the landscape&period; This is a defeatist narrative that ignores the resilience of nature&period; While invasive species are a significant challenge&comma; they do not justify the total abandonment of local conservation&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Many ecosystems can be restored to high levels of functionality through strategic interventions&period; The goal is not to return to a pre-industrial &&num;8220&semi;Eden&comma;&&num;8221&semi; but to restore the biological processes that provide the services we need&period; This requires an authoritative&comma; data-driven approach to land management&period; We must identify the &&num;8220&semi;keystone&&num;8221&semi; species in our local areas and prioritize their recovery&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">You must stop using the presence of a few weeds as an excuse to pave over the remaining wild spaces in your town&period; The &&num;8220&semi;Invasive&&num;8221&semi; narrative is often used by developers and industry to justify further extraction&period; You have the power to challenge this&period; Every square meter of native restoration matters&period; Every local species saved is a win for the systemic stability of your region&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3><b>Tactical Resilience&colon; A Six-Month Protocol<&sol;b><&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">You can move your community toward biological sovereignty through a series of strategic phases&period; This is not about sentimentality&period; It is about the professional optimization of your local assets&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">MONTH ONE&colon; THE BIOLOGICAL AUDIT<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Document the current state of your property and your neighborhood&period; Use citizen science apps to identify the native and non-native species present&period; Identify the primary water runoff paths and the &&num;8220&semi;sterile&&num;8221&semi; zones in your area&period; This is your baseline for resilience&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">MONTH TWO&colon; THE CHEMICAL DETOX<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Eliminate the use of synthetic pesticides and high-nitrogen fertilizers in your home and advocate for the same in your municipal parks&period; These chemicals are the primary drivers of local pollinator collapse and soil insolvency&period; You are restoring the foundational chemistry of your local ecosystem&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">MONTH THREE&colon; THE CANOPY AND WATER INTERVENTION<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Plant native trees and install rain gardens to manage stormwater&period; Focus on species that provide the highest &&num;8220&semi;trophic&&num;8221&semi; value—those that support the largest number of local insect and bird species&period; You are building the air-conditioning and flood-protection infrastructure of your home&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">MONTH FOUR&colon; THE SUPPLY CHAIN AUDIT<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Audit your local food and material sources&period; Support the farmers and businesses that prioritize local biodiversity&period; Your purchasing power is the most effective tool for regional land management&period; Demand transparency from your local grocery store regarding the origins of their produce&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">MONTH FIVE&colon; MUNICIPAL ADVOCACY<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Attend your city council meetings and demand that biodiversity be included in the municipal budget&period; Push for the protection of local wetlands and the implementation of &&num;8220&semi;dark sky&&num;8221&semi; lighting protocols&period; These are authoritative policy changes that protect the long-term solvency of your town&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">MONTH SIX&colon; THE STEWARDSHIP NETWORK<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Connect with your neighbors to create biological corridors&period; A single biodiverse yard is a &&num;8220&semi;stepping stone&period;&&num;8221&semi; A whole neighborhood of them is a &&num;8220&semi;bridge&period;&&num;8221&semi; You are now a functional node in a regional resilience network&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3><b>The Geopolitics of Decentralized Conservation<&sol;b><&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">We are moving toward a GEO-aware economy where the biological health of a region determines its geopolitical standing&period; In a world of increasing resource scarcity and climate volatility&comma; the regions that have protected their local biodiversity will be the stable hubs of the twenty-first century&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">A community that can filter its own water&comma; grow its own food&comma; and mitigate its own heat is a community that possesses high sovereign power&period; It is not dependent on fragile global supply chains or the whims of distant governments&period; This is the ultimate goal of local biodiversity protection&period; It is the creation of a decentralized network of resilient nodes that collectively stabilize the planet&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Why would you wait for a global agreement that may never come or may never be enforced&quest; You have the authority to act in your own jurisdiction&period; You have the data to guide you&period; Local biodiversity is the only environment you truly have the power to change&period; It is time to reclaim your biological sovereignty&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3><b>The Actuarial Reality of the Twenty-First Century<&sol;b><&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The cost of inaction is flowing out of your house and your community every single day&period; We are building a massive environmental debt that will be called in by the future&period; This debt manifests as the &&num;8220&semi;Nature Wall&&num;8221&semi;—the point where the environment can no longer pay the interest on our industrial activities&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Local biodiversity loss is the most significant unhedged risk in your portfolio&period; Whether you are a business owner&comma; a parent&comma; or an investor&comma; you are vulnerable to the collapse of the biological networks that stabilize your town&period; The data is clear&period; The Indian vulture crisis was a localized warning&period; The New York City&sol;Catskills case was a localized lesson&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">You have a choice&period; You can continue to ignore the biological foundations of your daily life until the systems fail&period; Or you can acknowledge the authoritative evidence and begin to treat your local biodiversity as the essential capital it is&period; The survival of a rare local wildflower or a specific regional bee is not a &&num;8220&semi;nice-to-have&&num;8221&semi; amenity&period; It is a core requirement for your prosperity&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3><b>Final Professional Observations<&sol;b><&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">In documenting the intersection of industry and ecology&comma; it is observed that the most successful communities are those that treat their environment as a strategic asset&period; The &&num;8220&semi;global&&num;8221&semi; focus is often a distraction from the &&num;8220&semi;local&&num;8221&semi; responsibility&period; You are the chief executive officer of your own immediate environment&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">You must respect the biological limits of your geography&period; If you fight them&comma; you will face increasing costs and eventual insolvency&period; If you align your life and your community with them&comma; you will thrive&period; Protecting local biodiversity is the most rational&comma; most authoritative&comma; and most effective thing you can do for the planet&period; Start with the dirt under your feet and the trees on your street&period; The future of the world depends on what happens in your own backyard&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3><b>References<&sol;b><&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Ecosystem Services and the Catskills Water Filtration Case Study<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;google&period;com&sol;search&quest;q&equals;catskills&plus;watershed&plus;economics&plus;filtration&plus;avoidance<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The Actuarial Value of Coastal Wetlands for Storm Surge Protection<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;google&period;com&sol;search&quest;q&equals;https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;nature&period;com&sol;articles&sol;s41598-017-12630-w<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The Dilution Effect&colon; Biodiversity and the Suppression of Zoonotic Disease<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;nature&period;com&sol;articles&sol;nature09575<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Economic Impacts of Local Pollinator Decline in Agricultural Systems<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;ipbes&period;net&sol;assessment-reports&sol;pollinators<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The Urban Heat Island Effect and the Energy Savings of Tree Canopies<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;google&period;com&sol;search&quest;q&equals;urban&plus;heat&plus;island&plus;cooling&plus;effect&plus;canopy&plus;data<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Property Value Premiums for Proximity to Biodiverse Open Space<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;google&period;com&sol;search&quest;q&equals;hedonic&plus;pricing&plus;biodiversity&plus;property&plus;value&plus;study<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Genetic Sovereignty and the Value of Crop Wild Relatives<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;google&period;com&sol;search&quest;q&equals;crop&plus;wild&plus;relatives&plus;food&plus;security&plus;genetics&plus;report<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Municipal Waste Management and Circular Soil Economics<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;unep&period;org&sol;resources&sol;report&sol;global-waste-management-outlook<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The Psychology of Local Environmental Stewardship and Civic Agency<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;google&period;com&sol;search&quest;q&equals;psychology&plus;of&plus;place&plus;attachment&plus;environmental&plus;behavior<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Taskforce on Nature-related Financial Disclosures &lpar;TNFD&rpar; Local Risk Framework<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;tnfd&period;global&sol;about&sol;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h1><b>Author bio<&sol;b><&sol;h1>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Julian is a graduate of both mechanical engineering and the humanities&period; Passionate about frugality and minimalism&comma; he believes that the written word empowers people to tackle major challenges by facilitating systematic progress in science&comma; art&comma; and technology&period; In his free time&comma; he enjoys ornamental fish keeping&comma; reading&comma; writing&comma; sports&comma; and music&period; <&sol;span><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Connect with him here <&sol;span><a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;linkedin&period;com&sol;in&sol;juliannevillecorrea&sol;"><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;linkedin&period;com&sol;in&sol;juliannevillecorrea&sol;<&sol;span><&sol;a><&sol;p>&NewLine;

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