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Environmental groups prepare to fight a new Trump administration
Leading environmental advocacy organizations say a second Trump term is something they’ve been preparing for, and they’re ready to litigate.
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What to do with election signs? This company has an answer
Replay Workshop, a recycling company in Minnesota, is taking care of election lawn signs as a way to reduce their impact on the land field.
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Project 2025 aims to ‘eradicate' climate change research, slash disaster aid
The Heritage Foundation, a conservative think-tank, takes aim at climate change across the federal government in its Project 2025 policy proposals. The 922 page document targets the National Weather Service, NOAA, the EPA, and FEMA among many other federal agencies. National climate reporter Chase Cain explains the implications.
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‘There will always be butterflies': Mexican mother fights to turn Chicago greener
After raising a butterfly with her daughter, Claudia Galeno-Sánchez was determined to help save more, but that mission has become more than she ever anticipated.
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Why an Alaska island is using peanut butter to find a rat that might not exist
A purported sighting of a rat wouldn’t get much attention in many places around the world. But it caused a stir earlier this year on Alaska’s St. Paul Island.
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Chicago research project seeks to determine how skyscrapers impact heat
A team of scientists, led by Argonne National Laboratory in south suburban Lemont, just wrapped up a two-week urban canyon campaign in Chicago to study how the city’s built environment can affect local weather conditions.
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Grizzly bears are set to be reintroduced to Washington state, after years of debate
Grizzly bears will be reintroduced to Washington state’s North Cascades mountain range, the federal government said this week — a decision that followed years of bitterly divided debate.
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Lab-grown diamonds come with sparkling price tags, but many have cloudy sustainability claims
Lab-created diamonds come with sparkling claims: that they are ethically made by machines running on renewable energy. But many don’t live up to these claims.
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Latest EPA assessment shows almost no improvement in river and stream nitrogen pollution
The EPA’s newest assessment of water quality and nutrient pollution in U.S. rivers and streams shows almost no progress on cutting the nitrogen pollution that comes primarily from farm chemical runoff.
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Drought-prone California OKs new rules for turning wastewater directly into drinking water
California regulators on Tuesday approved new rules to let water agencies recycle wastewater and put it right back into the pipes that carry drinking water to homes, schools and businesses.
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Mayor Brandon Johnson promised release of environmental report at Brighton Park migrant site days before asking for FOIA request
Despite promises by Mayor Brandon Johnson that a full environmental assessment report would be released “by the end of the week,” the city has not provided a copy as of 4:45 p.m. Friday, NBC Chicago’s Bennett Haeberle reports.
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Brighton Park migrant site environmental report released following FOIA request
Despite promises by Mayor Brandon Johnson that a full environmental assessment report would be released “by the end of the week,” the city has not provided a copy as of 4:45 p.m. Friday.
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Chicago receives $336 million in federal funding to replace lead pipes
The city of Chicago has received $336 million in federal funding to replace lead piping across the city, NBC Chicago’s Courtney Sisk reports.
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A fight over precious groundwater in a rural California town is rooted in carrots
In a remote, dry patch of California farm country, a battle is raging over carrots. Or rather, over the groundwater where they’re growing northwest of Los Angeles.
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UN kicks off Climate Week as phasing out fossil fuels becomes priority
The heat is about to be turned up on fossil fuels, the United States and President Joe Biden.
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Hudson River swimmer completes 315-mile trek
Endurance swimmer Lewis Pugh completed the trek to raise awareness of the need for clean rivers.
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‘Like a Russian roulette': US military firefighters grapple with unknowns of PFAS exposure
Federal research linking “forever chemicals” to testicular cancer confirms what U.S. military personnel long suspected. But as they seek testing for PFAS exposure, many wonder what to do with the results. There’s no medical treatment yet.
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China bans seafood from Japan after the Fukushima nuclear plant released wastewater into the sea
Japan’s tsunami-wrecked Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant has begun releasing its first batch of treated radioactive water into the Pacific Ocean.
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Conditions are ripe for a global coral bleaching event: ‘Florida is just the tip of the iceberg'
Florida’s coral reefs are getting hit the hardest by marine heatwaves right now, but conditions are ripe for a global coral bleaching event, NOAA says.
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Livestock pollution: EPA denies tougher regulations for large farms
The Biden administration is rejecting a plea from environmentalists to toughen regulation of large livestock farms that release manure and other pollutants into waterways.