
Connecticut Public is proud to support PBS’s climate programming initiative, a bold commitment to explore environmental impacts on our planet through solutions-driven storytelling.
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Most of our interest in sharks is based around fear, even though we’re much more of a danger to them than they are to us. This hour, a look at our relationship with sharks.
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With summer temperatures giving way to cooler weather, you may see fewer mosquitoes buzzing about. But experts say August and September is when mosquitoes are most likely to carry West Nile virus.
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The order represents a rare — and, at least for now, temporary — win for the offshore wind industry, which has been a frequent target of the Trump administration.
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Spotted lanternflies are popping up across Connecticut, but one scientist says there’s no need to panic. Plus, we look at the state’s clean energy goals and how people are coping with climate anxiety.
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The Wednesday filing says the Trump administration's stop-work order caused "irreparable harm" to the states by "undermining their sovereign interests in procuring renewable energy."
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As the federal government rolls back clean energy investment, state officials are responding to demand for expiring tax credits.
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The agency is adding dye to five sites along the Connecticut River this year as part of a plan to get rid of hydrilla - an invasive, hard-to-kill plant that threatens fish and other wildlife.
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Hank Sprouse is part of a dwindling community of bird carvers, a group of artists who make lifelike birds out of blocks of wood.
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Emissions from CT's largest sources of climate pollution are down, but state still lags on 2030 goalThe findings come amid a proposed effort by the Trump administration to roll back climate regulations.
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The developer behind Revolution Wind, a large — and nearly complete — wind farm near Massachusetts and Rhode Island, is suing to overturn the Trump administration's stop-work order.
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A Connecticut Sea Grant and UConn Extension course has the financial support of the state Department of Agriculture.
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This hour, we look at the place our sun holds kind of literally at the center of all of human history and ask what the future holds for our nearest star.