NYC Gets an Earful on Solving Sewage Overflows

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund I’ve been writing a lot about the latest happenings on sewage overflows in New York City.  Spoiler alert: Overflows are still happening. A lot. And concerned New Yorkers are looking to the Mayor to fix it.  About 2,500 people have sent emails to the Mayor since last week […]

Florida’s Endangered Key Deer Survived Hurricane Irma—but Their Future Is Stormy

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Murray Foubister/Flickr Way down in the Florida Keys live about 950 miniature relatives of the white-tailed deer. Since the last Ice Age 11,000 years ago, the species has become so adapted to island living that it has shrunk down to no more than 32 inches tall, about the […]

India Green News: India Advances Launch of Euro-VI Fuels

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund India on course to achieve its 2030 climate targets; Power minister launches national portal for power sector; India advances launch of Euro-VI fuels for smog-hit Delhi India Green News is a selection of news highlights about environmental and energy issues in India. November 07 – 16, 2017 CLIMATE […]

Save Dolphins—Leave the Marine Mammal Protection Act Alone

Published by Ocean Conservancy Last month we celebrated the 45th anniversary of the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA). It has been at the foundation of our nation’s environmental policies since it became law in 1972, yielding some pretty remarkable results. Dolphins, whales and sea lions can flip, flop and play anywhere near U.S. coastlines, free of potential […]

People of the Shore

Published by Ocean Conservancy In light of National American Indian Heritage and Alaska Native Heritage Month, I had a conversation with Kelsey Leonard of the Shinnecock Indian Nation on the importance of our ocean to her tribe, the first ocean-based currency (wampum) and how ocean planning gives them a seat at the table. © Kelsey Leonard Leonard […]

Zinke Doubles Price to Parks, Gives Gifts to Polluters

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Many eyebrows and a good deal of ire were raised recently when the Interior Department announced it planned to double and in some cases nearly triple entry fees to America’s grandest national parks to $70. For a lot of families, $70 is a lot of money, especially on […]

Congress: Biggest Attack on Marine Mammals in Decades

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund On Thursday, the House Natural Resources Committee passed a bill, called the “SECURE American Energy Act” (H.R. 4239), that can only be described as an oil industry wish-list.  The bill’s purpose is to mow down environmental concerns that stand in the way of the complete exploitation of fossil […]

The Complicated Story Behind 18,000 Dead Penguin Chicks

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund This year, Adélies had to travel across more sea ice than usual to reach their feeding grounds. Andrew Shiva via Wikimedia Commons An enormous colony of Adélie penguins—around 40,000 of them—lives in eastern Antarctica. Scientists have been observing these flightless birds since the 1960s, and each year between […]

No Rest for the Arctic: New Plans Threaten Existing Protections

Published by Ocean Conservancy Winter is coming! So while we’re between seasons of Game of Thrones, we’re watching what’s happening in another cold place: the Arctic Ocean. And now is a good time for an update on what’s going on with oil and gas operations there. First, the good news: in 2016, the Obama administration finalized […]

Air Pollution Emergency in Delhi – #DelhiSmog

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Co-Authored by Sayantan Sarkar Air pollution levels are at a crisis level in New Delhi over the past 36 hours. The government has called a public health emergency. Government and key leaders are taking action but more is needed. In sister cities, such as Ahmedabad air quality continues […]

9 Reasons You Can’t Help but Love Manatees

Published by Ocean Conservancy Get ready, because November is Manatee Awareness Month! You may know West Indian manatees are one of the most adorable and graceful creatures in areas like the Gulf of Mexico, but there are some things about them that may truly surprise you. These nine facts will lead you to an even greater […]

New Haven Is for the Birds—and the People

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund A B&W New England Warbler in Connecticut Jason Ondreicka/iStockPhoto Migratory songbirds cover thousands of miles on their epic seasonal journeys, battling fatigue, hunger, nasty weather, window glass, and predators along the way. For any frequent flier, a welcoming space to rest and recharge before the next leg of […]

New WHO Guideline Offers Hope in Curbing Antibiotics

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund As antibiotic resistance spreads worldwide, the calls get more urgent to stop squandering our most precious medicines, in both human medicine and in livestock. Just released today are new recommendations from the World Health Organization—the leading international public health authority—on how the medically important antibiotics given to food […]

FERC Gas Pipeline Review Process Needs 21st Century Approach

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Nearly two decades ago, federal energy regulators established guidelines for evaluating proposed natural gas pipelines. Coal was still king, the Google search engine was new, Americans were voracious energy consumers, and climate change was not yet a common term. A lot has changed since then, but federal natural […]

An Agency Hijacked: Public Lands and Waters at Risk

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund The federal government agency responsible to safeguard over 20 percent of America’s public lands, waters, and wildlife has been hijacked.  And it’s an inside job. The agency is the Interior Department, and the hijacker is the Secretary himself, Ryan Zinke. Zinke often invokes the image of a modern […]

Week 41: Introducing . . . Pseudoscience Advisory Councils

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Welcome to our weekly Trump v. Earth column, in which onEarth reviews the environment-related shenanigans of President Trump and his allies. iStock Conflict of Information U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott Pruitt announced this week that scientists who have received research funding from the EPA will not be eligible to […]

At the Intersection of Creativity and Science

Published by Ocean Conservancy Ocean Conservancy RAY Diversity Fellow Emily Okikawa recounts her experience listening to the words of Nai’a-Ulumaimalu Lewis and her thoughts on the enmeshing of conservation and Design Thinking. Nai’a Lewis is all grace and poise and power when she takes the stage. As she begins to chant, the chatter in the conference […]

Protecting Chesapeake Oysters, One Cage at a Time

Published by Ocean Conservancy This past Saturday morning, several members of the Ocean Conservancy team traveled to Annapolis to participate in local oyster restoration efforts. Though only a forty minute drive from Ocean Conservancy’s Washington DC headquarters, the sleepy docks of Annapolis, Maryland feel like an entirely different world. Busy city streets give way to tree-lined, […]

One Deep Sea Wind Farm Could Power Entire World

Published by the Environmental News Service STANFORD, California, November 1, 2017 (ENS) – The whole world could be powered by one deep-sea wind farm stretching across the North Atlantic Ocean, finds new research from doctors Anna Possner and Ken Caldeira of the Carnegie Institution for Science at Stanford University, California. Read the full article at: http://ens-newswire.com/2017/11/01/one-deep-sea-wind-farm-could-power-entire-world/

1 80 81 82 83 84 122
top