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@Wjenviro has been a member of Linktree for 4 years and joined in February 2022. The social media accounts linked to from @Wjenviro are: • Instagram Besides social media accounts, Wjenviro has populated their site with: • www.peacecorpsconnect.org • Finding Data with FracTracker Portals: Accessing Oil & Gas and Petrochemical Information | Halt the Harm Network • PhD Assistantship - Social-ecological dynamics of wildland fire • International Court says countries must address climate crisis in landmark opinion • Federal Legislation Alters Energy Landscape • EPA takes rare emergency action to ban pesticide DCPA, citing health risk • Why the U.S. government is spending $7 billion on solar for low-income homes • Grim Dilemma: Should We Kill One Owl Species to Save Another? • Supreme Court Imperils an Array of Federal Rules • Supreme Court blocks EPA’s ‘downwind’ air-quality initiative • Bill Gates is going nuclear: How his latest project could power U.S. homes and AI • Wastewater from Pa. Shale Wells Could Be Major Lithium Source • Colorado hunts for co-existence between people and wolves • The Gila Centennial Speaker Series: Live from Silver City, New Mexico • What's worse for disease spread: animal loss, climate change or urbanization? • Thawing permafrost threatens Alaska's rural villages. And time is running out • Why writing by hand beats typing for thinking and learning • This is what happens when a wind farm comes to a coal town • China makes cheap electric vehicles. Why can't American shoppers buy them? • Urban Farmers in Training Crew Leader • Home | American Climate Corps • For communities near chemical plants, EPA's new air pollution rule spells relief • Climate change is delaying world clocks' need for a 'negative leap second' • PennFuture�s Statement on Governor Shapiro�s Energy Proposals • Oil and gas companies emit more climate-warming methane than EPA reports • Farmers accused of drying up the imperiled Great Salt Lake say they can help save it • Scientists take a step closer to resurrecting the woolly mammoth • www.npr.org • The hottest trend in U.S. cities? Changing zoning rules to allow more housing • Reduce, reuse, redirect outrage: How plastic makers used recycling as a fig leaf • www.kennedy-center.org • Captive in a chicken coop: The plight of debt bondage workers • Developments in desalination need a social sciences perspective - Nature Water • Future Leaders Program - The Aldo Leopold Foundation • Health is on the agenda at UN climate negotiations. Here's why that's a big deal • Waiting for water: It's everywhere in this Colombian city — except in the pipes • blandy.virginia.edu • The New Colonialist Food Economy • Bayer ordered to pay $1.56 billion in latest US trial loss over Roundup weedkiller • A disappearing island: 'The water is destroying us, one house at a time' • 'It feels like I'm not crazy.' Gardeners aren't surprised as USDA updates key map • Udall Foundation • Biden administration approves largest offshore wind project in the US • As the 'water tower of Asia' dries out, villagers learn to recharge their springs • 75th Anniversary Smog Webinar • Clean Hydropower from the Three Rivers • California sues oil giants, saying they downplayed climate change. Here's what to know • DEP Publishes Interim Final Environmental Justice Policy Changing Permit Review Process; Opens Comment Period Setting 9 Public Hearings • GLF Nairobi 2023: A New Vision for Earth • Electric cars have a road trip problem, even for the secretary of energy • About Young Voices of Science - Young Voices of Science • New Jersey requires climate change education. A year in, here's how it's going • Internship and Fellowship Program • America's farms are desperate for labor. Foreign workers bring relief and controversy • agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com • Local farmers in South Africa were cut out of rooibos tea cash. Now change is brewing • Proposed Rule: Multi-Pollutant Emissions Standards for Model Years 2027 and Later Light-Duty and Medium-Duty Vehicles | US EPA • EPA takes first-ever federal Clean Water Act enforcement action to address PFAS discharges at Washington Works facility near Parkersburg, W. Va. | US EPA • www.congress.gov • The big reason why the U.S. is seeking the toughest-ever rules for vehicle emissions • Businesses face more and more pressure from investors to act on climate change • A months-long landfill fire in Alabama reveals waste regulation gaps • Rachel Carson Council Fellowship 2023-2024 - Rachel Carson Council • UN delegates reach historic agreement on protecting marine biodiversity in international waters • Join Our Team - Mountain Watershed Association • Here's why Arizona says it can keep growing despite historic megadrought • Renewable Natural Gas: Sustainable Energy from Trash • Disappearing Saint-Louis • Black farmers call for justice from the USDA • Yale honors the work of a 9-year-old Black girl whose neighbor reported her to police • 6 states that depend on the Colorado River have agreed on a new water-sharing model • Biden's offshore wind plan could create thousands of jobs, but challenges remain • Federal Spending Bill for Fiscal Year 2023 Delivers Mixed Results for Animals • The Keystone pipeline leaked in Kansas. What makes this spill so bad? • The U.S. wants to slash carbon emissions from power plants. Natural gas is in the way • A new kind of climate refugee is emerging • 3 tribes dealing with the toll of climate change get $75 million to relocate • Did the world make progress on climate change? Here's what was decided at global talks • Office of Sustainability | Homepage • Money will likely be the central tension in the U.N.'s COP27 climate negotiations • The EPA awards grants to monitor air quality in communities hurt by pollution • Glaciers from Yellowstone to Kilimanjaro are predicted to disappear by 2050 • Greenhouse gases reach a new record as nations fall behind on climate pledges • Seattle among worst in the world for poor air quality • Careers | Project Drawdown • Radioactive waste found at Missouri elementary school • In Idaho, America's first, and only, cobalt mine in decades is opening • COMIC: How foraging restored my relationship with food • A public payphone in China began ringing and ringing. Who was calling? • EPA Launches New National Office Dedicated to Advancing Environmental Justice and Civil Rights | US EPA • Washington County Watershed Alliance Stream Cleanup • Why even environmentalists are supporting nuclear power today • The last member of a tribe in Brazil has died • A plan to bring the Tasmanian tiger back from extinction raises questions • 72 percent of hunters and anglers see a changing climate • How to destroy ‘forever chemicals’: cheap method breaks down PFAS • The world's smallest sea turtle returns to nest in Louisiana • Sierra Magazine- Regenerative Agriculture • NPR - Why scientists have pumped a potent greenhouse gas into streams on public lands • Center for Energy Policy & Management Symposium on Hydrogen • NPR- Promising battery technology given to the Chinese • NPR- Seaweed Problems in the Caribbean • NPR - Help from Supreme Court won't save coal • PA DCNR Field Work Opportunities • Bayer loses again in court • Biden Administration Tosses Trump Definition of ‘Habitat’ for Endangered Species • The role of performing arts in environmental sensitization and education • Reuters - Exxon must face climate change lawsuit • One Earth - Correlation between hotter weather and poorer sleep in areas around the world • CEPM - Carbon Pricing and Cap-and-Trade • ACEEE - Energy Equity for Renters • NPR - The U.S. pledged billions to fight climate change... • NPR: Federal Investigation Halts Solar Panel Production • Making New Climate Data from Old Timber • NPR Spending on Green Infrastructure... • Yale Environment 360 - Amid Hopes and Fears, a Plastics Boom in Appalachia Is On Hold • NPR - Microplastics Found in Human Lungs • Binational Park Along US-Mexico Border • Nature - Avert Global Wheat Crisis... • AgWeb - Ukraine Grain Production • New York Times - Tree Planting is Booming... • Sixth Tone - Native Forests Perform Better... • Big Think - The Collapse of the Industrial Livestock Industry? • NPR - Environment (Polar Melt) • NPR-Business • Federal appeals court rules Biden administration can use key climate metric • Center for Coalfield Justice Fellowships • Fondes Amandes Community Reforestation Project • Nature Magazine News • The Narwhal • Langan Environmental Internship • World Resources Institute- Events • Rachel Carson Council Fellowships • National Public Radio- Environment • Aldo Leopold Fellowships • The Counter • North American Association for Environmental Education • Conservation Jobs Board • PA Department of Environmental Protection News • Environmental Studies at W&J • Center for Energy Policy & Management