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Illinois farmers struggle to balance livelihoods with reducing agricultural runoff, a major contributor to Gulf dead zone

Lance Nacio’s family has made its living fishing along the coast of Louisiana’s Terrebonne Parish for three generations. He’s continuing the family business, but it’s becoming increasingly difficult. Nitrogen and phosphorus are flowing from the Mississippi River Basin into the Gulf of Mexico, creating an oxygen-void area along southern Louisiana and eastern Texas over 18 times larger than ...

Illinois , United-states , Mississippi-river , Louisiana , Bureau-county , Chicago , Montgomery-county , Gulf-of-mexico , Texas , University-of-illinois , American , Megan-dwyer

Torquay developer frustrated by anti-pollution rules

The government said the rules date back to when the UK was in the EU, but plans to scrap them were defeated.

Winsham , Somerset , United-kingdom , River-axe , United-kingdom-general- , Devonport , Plymouth , Laurence-couldrick , Grayham-tucker , Luke-pollard , Tony-fuller , National-farmers-union

Government plans watered-down nutrient pollution rules in bid to ramp up housebuilding

Government unveils plans to dilute EU-derived nutrient neutrality rules in a bid to accelerate development of hundreds of thousands of new homes in England, as Labour touts planning reform vision

United-kingdom , Cambridge , Cambridgeshire , Britain , Michael-gove , Keir-starmer , Sam-richards , Craig-bennett , Tim-farron , Therese-coffey , Department-for-levelling , European-union

Chesapeake Bay settlement could be a sign of things to come – or not

A proposed agreement designed to force EPA to provide more oversight over animal feeding operations and discharge permits in Pennsylvania could signal a willingness on the part of the agency to look more closely at using its Clean Water Act authority to reduce nutrient pollution in watersheds nationwide.

United-states , Penn-state-university , Pennsylvania , Oklahoma , Bedford , Illinois-river , Arkansas , Chicago , Illinois , Lebanon , Ohio , Lucas-county

CNN Newsroom

of warmer waters and nutrient pollution, which drives a lot of red tides and toxic algae blooms around florida. all yourfort fertalizers and hurricanes mix them up and you see these toxic blooms. it could be a similar trend with this stuff. it could also be an ally, and there's a fix for this, actually. i was talking to agua culture specialists who are in the business now of capturing carbon with seaweed, and they tomorrow, you could have a dozen guys from maine down there with the equipment to do it, use trawlers and nets. crop it up on barges at sea and put it in the ocean. it pulls carbon out of the sea and sky and locks it away below. right now, there's no incentive to do that unless whether the states or cities or -- >> or hotels. >> exactly, get those guys going down there. i guarantee you're going to see an increased call for this as it gets closer to florida. >> keep the bags packed. if the beaches look like this

Lot , Waters , Florida , Blooms , Red-tides , Algae , Hurricanes , Trend , Nutrient-pollution , Yourfort-fertalizers , Guys , Seaweed

The Lead With Jake Tapper

ocean currents, a gyre that keeps it in place as it deco decomposes. this one has broken off and has doubled in size in a month. and scientists think maybe it has to do with warmer waters due to climate change, nutrient pollution, phosphorus, nitrogen. we've seen that sort of trigger the red tide and the toxic algae blooms around florida as well. it's hitting the yucatan peninsula now, the beaches there. it probably wouldn't hit florida until july or so. >> and what can be done to prevent this from hitting the beaches? >> i was talking to some experts actually up in maine who work with seaweed as a carbon capture tool and they say there are plenty of guys with, you know, trawler rigs, two boats pulling a net, that could get in front of it, sort of corral it, and then they would chop it up and sink it in deep ocean, which actually would be a net benefit for the planet because it captures carbon and sends it, locks it away deep on the ocean bed there as well. but right now there's no incentive to do that. as you get closer, when you think about six-foot drifts of rotting, you know, seaweed,

Place , Climate-change , Scientists , Ocean-currents , Size , Deco-decomposes , Waters , Gyre , Nutrient-pollution , One , Florida , Sort

Legislation aims to bolster the 'blue economy' in partnership with Aquarium

Lawmakers presented several pieces of legislation that would advance the state's marine industries while protecting wildlife.

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Biden-Harris Administration Announces $6 Million in Bipartisan Infrastructure Law Funds to Support Tribal Nations in Reducing Nutrient Pollution in the Mississippi/Atchafalaya River Basin

Today, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced the availability of $6 million in funds from President Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law to support Tribal Nations across the Mississippi/Atchafalaya River Basin (MARB) in reducing nutrient pollution on Tribal lands in the Basin.

Environmental-protection-agency , District-of-columbia , United-states , Washington , Radhika-fox , Us-environmental-protection-agency , Biden-harris-administration , Hypoxia-task-force , Gulf-hypoxia-program , Protection-agency , President-biden , Bipartisan-infrastructure-law