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The Latest

#177 February 2024/Editor's Notes/Environment/Urban Nature

Editor’s Notes: Desperately Hopeful

I am desperate for American chestnut trees to make a comeback, even though I know that it’s not happening anytime soon. I long to see our woods as they were 150 years ago. The forager in me misses the chestnuts I never got to gather from the forest floor. As Jessie Buckner writes in her

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February 1, 2024
2 mins read
#177 February 2024/Environment

Infographic: Setting the Sun

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February 1, 2024
1 min read
#177 February 2024/Environment/Urban Nature/Water

The EPA has proposed making the Delaware River cleaner for endangered sturgeon, but getting there won’t be easy, or cheap

By Meg McGuire and Katherine Rapin In December 2023, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency made a bold move for the Delaware River, proposing to raise the water quality standards in the estuary for the first time since the Clean Water Act of 1972. This upgrade would increase requirements for dissolved oxygen levels among the foundational

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February 1, 2024
7 mins read
#177 February 2024/Energy/Environment/Water

Emerging battery technology brings sustainable, reliable energy to Chester County business

Skeptics of the green energy movement have always asked: What do you do when there’s no sun for the solar panels and no breeze to stir the blades of the windmill, but you still need power? Batteries can store excess energy created when the conditions are favorable to be used for precisely those times —

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February 1, 2024
3 mins read
#177 February 2024/Air/Cooking/education/Energy/Environment/Food

Electrified kitchens are safer, healthier and greener. Will Philly’s restaurants and institutions make the switch?

In a scene from the PBS docuseries “NOVA: Chasing Carbon Zero,” Chef Chris Galarza removes an ice cold frying pan from a freezer and places it on an induction burner. Only a moment later, he tosses some chopped peppers in the pan, which immediately start to sizzle. This impossible-seeming trick is one that Galaraza has

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February 1, 2024
5 mins read
#177 February 2024/Air/Energy/Environment/Politics

The Biden administration and big business want to bring hydrogen energy production to the Delaware Valley. It may not be the green solution it’s touted to be

Hydrogen as an element is simple. Each atom has one electron and one proton. It’s first on the periodic table — the most abundant chemical substance in the universe. But hydrogen as a potential climate-friendly energy source is anything but simple. Hydrogen has long been used in dirty industries: cleaved from fossil fuels, it can

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February 1, 2024
10 mins read
#177 February 2024/Climate-Change/Environment

Grid publisher Alex Mulcahy talks with author Elizabeth Kolbert about the solutions that create more problems

What are we doing to this planet, and what are we doing about what we’re doing to this planet? No writer’s body of work surpasses Elizabeth Kolbert’s to answer these questions. Kolbert has been a staff writer for The New Yorker for 25 years, documenting climate change with an unflinching eye. Her first book on

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February 1, 2024
6 mins read
#177 February 2024/Energy/Environment

Philadelphia’s LED streetlight rollout is an energy win that is not without its drawbacks

When he first saw workers changing out the streetlights on his block in Chestnut Hill, Timothy Breslin didn’t think much of it. He went to bed that night in the summer of 2022 without issue. In the daylight, he still didn’t register the changes. But when night fell, his street full of modest rowhomes was

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February 1, 2024
8 mins read
#177 February 2024/Community/Culture/Race and Equity

In the face of rejection and violence, Philadelphia’s Black transgender community helps each other with housing and employment

By age 5, Philadelphia native Tatyana Woodard knew she was different. Born with a male body, she felt like a girl. She preferred girls’ clothes and loved White Diamonds, her grandmother’s perfume. Over time, Woodard’s conviction and hidden stash of feminine outfits grew. “At 16, I was put out of my house due to my

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February 1, 2024
6 mins read
#177 February 2024/Environment

Techno Optimism vs. Techno Pessimism: What could possibly go wrong?

If anything defines us as modern humans it is the degree to which we apply scientific knowledge to accomplish our goals. Long gone are the days when we chipped away at flint blocks to make hand axes, and it has been a couple centuries since we wrote important documents on parchment with quill pens. Technology

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February 1, 2024
1 min read
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