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Water

Algae blooms can produce toxins and harbor other bacteria, making it potentially harmful to people who come into direct contact with the mucky water. Credit: David McNew/Getty Images

There’s a New Plan and Funding to Clean Up the Muck Plaguing Lake St. Clair

By K.R. Callaway

A humpback whale jumps out of the waters of the Pacific Ocean near Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. Credit: Alfredo Martinez/Getty Images

Whale and Dolphin Migrations are Being Disrupted by Climate Change

By Teresa Tomassoni

An aerial view of farmland in the Des Moines metropolitan area. Credit: Mario Tama/Getty Images

Iowa Counties Keep Water Quality Monitoring Afloat After State Funding Cuts

By Anika Jane Beamer

A wetland is seen under construction on Jim Fulton’s farm in Livingston County, Ill. Credit: Illinois Land Improvement Contractors Association Inc.

Wetlands Help Remedy Agricultural Pollution. Some Illinois Farmers Are Installing New Ones.

By Alexia Underwood

A view of the Funk-DeWald Nature Preserve, one of H2Ohio’s wetland restoration projects, in Seneca County, Ohio. Credit: H2Ohio

Ohio Has Invested Millions in Wetlands to Catch Nutrient Runoff From Farms. A New Report Suggests It’s Working.

By Theo Peck-Suzuki

Water pools in the front yard of a house in “The Hole” of New York City. A makeshift bridge has been constructed out of wooden planks. Credit: Lauren Dalban/Inside Climate News

New York City Unveils Plan for Flood-Prone Neighborhood Nicknamed ‘The Hole’

By Lauren Dalban

Boulder City, Nev., an original Hoover Dam power contractor, now receives additional electric power from the Townsite Solar Facility, located a few miles southwest of the city. Credit: Brett Walton/Circle of Blue

Solar Growth Cushions Colorado River Hydropower Declines

By Brett Walton, Circle of Blue

A phytoplankton bloom off the East Coast of the United States shows how the chlorophyll produced by photosynthesis tints the ocean green. A new study finds that concentrations of plankton are declining in many ocean regions. Credit: NASA Earth Observatory

Earth’s Oceans Lose Some of Their Luster

By Bob Berwyn

The Green River makes its way to Flaming Gorge reservoir near the border of Utah and Wyoming. Credit: Trout Unlimited

Wyoming’s Draft Pilot Conservation Program ‘a Good Starting Point’ but There’s Room for Improvement

By Jake Bolster

A view of the Shoesmith Glacier on Horseshoe Island on Feb. 21. Credit: Sebnem Coskun/Anadolu via Getty Images

Scientists Warn About the ‘Greenlandification’ of Antarctica

By Bob Berwyn

People wade through PFAS-contaminated sea foam at North Carolina’s Holden Beach in October 2022. Credit: Clean Cape Fear

A Short-Lived Win in a Never-Ending Fight Over Forever Chemicals

By Lisa Sorg

Photo of the Counting House during the 2024 Nor'easter. Credit: Paul Wright

Climate Change Comes for the House of the Seven Gables

By Ryan Krugman

The Conowingo Dam, on the Susquehanna River in Darlington, Maryland, on July 2, 2017. Credit: Bill O'Leary/The Washington Post via Getty Images

Maryland’s Conowingo Dam Settlement Reasserts State’s Clean Water Act Authority but Revives Dredging Debate

By Aman Azhar

The photo shows the bay around Oxford

Federal Shutdown Hampers Chesapeake Bay Agreement Talks

By Aman Azhar

Students walk through the University of Michigan campus on April 3 in Ann Arbor, Mich. Credit: Bill Pugliano/Getty Images

Los Alamos and University of Michigan Want to Build a National Security ‘Data Center’ in Ypsilanti. Residents and Local Officials See Few Benefits.

By Tom Perkins

A drilling rig is at a natural gas fracking pad in Pennsylvania’s Greene County. Credit: Jim West/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Scientists Find Evidence that a Pennsylvania Town’s Water Was Contaminated by Fracking

By Kiley Bense

The Colorado River flows up to Glen Canyon Dam as Lake Powell sits at a third of its capacity on July 10 in Page, Ariz. Credit: Rebecca Noble/Getty Images

As Colorado River Nears Collapse, It Faces Leadership, Transparency ‘Crisis,’ Environmentalists Warn

By Wyatt Myskow

A person walks their doing along the Delaware River in Philadelphia. Credit: Thomas Hengge/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

Amid Rollbacks on Environmental Protections, the EPA Goes the Other Way on Delaware River Water Quality

By Jon Hurdle

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