Resilience Photo by Christoph Schulz on Unsplash Cities are rapidly reclaiming land at risk of extreme sea level rise People are building more and more land—a growing proportion of which is for luxury developments. It’s putting the rest of us at risk of flooding.
CausesMurray Foubister/Flickr/Commercial use & mods allowedhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ Antarctic tourism is up, but experts give it a thumbs down Fuel spills and invasive species could be just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the impacts of increasing tourism in Antarctica.
Good NewsNOAA Photo Library/Flickr Banking on the seaweed rush Seaweed farmers promise to feed us, combat climate change, support coastal communities, provide wildlife habitat, and more. Can seaweed do it all?
ResilienceFlorida Fish and Wildlife/Flickr In cod’s shadow, redfish rise Thirty years after the population collapsed, the Atlantic redfish fishery is poised to reopen, providing a second chance at a sustainable fishery.
ImpactsUSAID Biodiversity & Fores/Flickr Stormier seas keep fishers on shore As climate change fuels more extreme weather, fishers in western Madagascar and around the world are facing shrinking opportunities to fish.
CausesProvince of British Columbia/Flickr The price of paper Coastal communities around the world contend with the toxic legacies of pulp and paper mills.
Good NewsDrew Brayshaw/Flickr Welcoming herring home In Howe Sound, British Columbia, a new generation of stewards is keeping careful tabs on the comeback efforts of a tiny fish with big cultural value.
As Biden prepares to block the sale of U.S. Steel to Nippon Steel, pollution concerns persist in Pennsylvania
A Pennsylvania fracking company with more than 2,000 environmental violations selected for federal environmental justice funding