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Activists hailed the agreement’s $4.75 million civil penalty as the largest in 25 years for a water pollution infraction—and one of the biggest ever in Maryland for an environmental law violation.

Environmental advocates hope an agreement negotiated earlier this month by Baltimore City, the state Department of the Environment and the nonprofit Blue Water Baltimore to upgrade the city’s two wastewater treatment plants will help meet the state’s Chesapeake Bay restoration goals.

Baltimore City, Maryland Department of the Environment Settle Lawsuits Over City-Operated Sewage Treatment Plants

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Climate Change

Environmentalists Sue Regulator Over Extension of Construction Permit for LNG Export Terminal in New Jersey

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The Delaware River Basin Commission says the terminal’s developer has not materially changed its plans and has “diligently” pursued its goals.

An environmental group is suing a regional regulator over its recent extension of a construction permit for a terminal to export liquefied natural gas from a town in southern New Jersey. The agency’s action marks a new turn in a multi-year battle over plans to build what would be the state’s first such plant.

Environmentalists Sue Regulator Over Extension of Construction Permit for LNG Export Terminal in New Jersey

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Climate Change

Trump Administration Seeks to Speed Data Center Grid Connections and Expand Federal Control of Power System

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By removing a bottleneck to development, the federal government would make it easier to build the giant computing centers behind AI. Utilities stand to lose financially.

A proposed rule from the Department of Energy would expand federal control over how large electricity users connect to the grid, with the goal of accelerating the construction of data centers and the power plants that serve them.

Trump Administration Seeks to Speed Data Center Grid Connections and Expand Federal Control of Power System

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Climate Change

America’s Rye Whiskey Resurgence Could Help the Climate, but Not by Itself

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Liquor is just one of the markets needed for the cover crop and cereal grain to improve the health, water retention and carbon sequestration of soils, and keep them from blowing away.

Farming in the San Luis Valley, Colorado, is tough. The 8,000-square-mile, high-altitude desert has one of the shortest growing seasons in the United States. It is known for strong winds, and in the increasingly common dust storms that plague the region, local farmer Sarah Jones has been unable to pick her children up from school. Two years ago, wind-driven dust so obscured drivers’ vision that it led to a 15-car pile-up on the highway.

America’s Rye Whiskey Resurgence Could Help the Climate, but Not by Itself

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