Rochelle Baker
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News, Climate Solutions Reporting, Island Insider
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October 17th 2022
A new research initiative is working on a national assessment of the “blue carbon” storage capacity of Canada’s salt marshes, seagrass meadows and kelp forests to fight against climate change.
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More in today's news
Cities need a youthful infrastructure that includes affordability, good jobs, safety, mobility, a net-zero focus, physical and mental health, and fun with entertainment, music and green space based on metrics young people devise.
Robert Barnard
Opinion
| October 17th 2022
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Patricia Lane talks to the Montreal-based founder of Arrêtons GNL, a coalition of most student unions in Quebec, about plans to make his movement Canada-wide.
Patricia Lane, Simon Guiroy
Opinion, Climate Solutions Reporting
| October 17th 2022
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Federal Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault visited South America to rally support for biodiversity and nature conservation ahead of a critical United Nations conference being held in Montreal.
Natasha Bulowski
News, Politics, Ottawa Insider
| October 17th 2022
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A controversy over an industry lobbyist's input into draft guidelines for genetically modified organisms has exposed gaping loopholes in Canada's lobbying laws, experts say.
Marc Fawcett-Atkinson
News
| October 17th 2022
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In the rapidly warming Eastern Mediterranean, water stratifies into layers, like a cake. That’s allowing carbon-spewing crystals to form.
Matt Simon
News
| October 17th 2022
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The Environmental Protection Agency said it has evidence that Black residents in an industrial section of Louisiana face an increased risk of cancer from a nearby chemical plant and that state officials have allowed air pollution to remain high and downplayed its threat.
Janet Mcconnaughey, Michael Phillis
News, US News
| October 14th 2022
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The British Columbia government says it's ready to deploy sand bags and tiger dams in case flooding follows the ongoing drought.
The Canadian Press
News, Politics
| October 14th 2022
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Water use in Metro Vancouver is much higher, while reservoir levels are lower than normal, prompting the regional district to ask millions of residents and businesses to conserve.
The Canadian Press
News
| October 14th 2022
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Most Canadians are worried about climate change and believe it is caused by humans, but the regional differences in how people responded to that question show the political battles over the environment are still going strong, a new poll suggests.
Mia Rabson
News, Politics
| October 14th 2022
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From the archives
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Morgan Sharp
News, Culture, Next Gen Insider
| November 4th 2021
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