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  • Two Sustainability Students See Opportunity Hidden in Laundry-Induced Microplastic Pollution
    par Guest le 3 avril 2026 à 2026-04-03T16:20:58+02:000000005830202604

    Students and faculty at Columbia’s M.S. in Sustainability Management and Sustainability Science programs turned cutting-edge research on microplastics into Moby Filter, a sustainability startup tackling laundry-induced pollution at its source.

  • Argentina Reforms Glacier Protection Law
    par Guest le 2 avril 2026 à 2026-04-02T15:40:14+02:000000001430202604

    A historic glacier protection law is under attack in Argentina as Congress loosens environmental protections.

  • Millions of cropland acres in flood-prone Midwest fields become double polluters, EWG finds
    par Anthony Lacey le 1 avril 2026 à 2026-04-01T18:50:42+02:000000004230202604

    Millions of cropland acres in flood-prone Midwest fields become double polluters, EWG finds Anthony Lacey April 1, 2026 MINNEAPOLIS – More than 4.2 million acres of cropland in four major Corn Belt states sit in flood-prone areas that generate emissions, adding to climate change and threatening drinking water quality, a new Environmental Working Group analysis finds.The acres in Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota and Wisconsin are in the 100-year flood plain – areas with a 1% chance of flooding in any given year. Iowa has over 1.7 million of those acres, with more than 981,000 planted with corn. Wisconsin has the smallest total acreage in the flood plain but the highest share of the four states dedicated to corn, at 59%.Corn is an especially problematic crop in these areas, because of heavy application of nitrogen fertilizer. When fields flood, they can generate nitrous oxide emissions that contribute to climate change and contaminate drinking water with nitrate.This double pollution of the air and water highlights a largely overlooked aspect of the harm agriculture can cause to the environment. Two pollution problemsTackling agriculture’s contribution to climate change is vital, as the sector’s greenhouse gas emissions rise and emissions from other sectors drop. Flood-prone cropland emits nitrous oxide that warms the Earth nearly 300 times more than carbon dioxide. Nitrous oxide already accounts for 52% of total U.S. agricultural greenhouse gas emissions and roughly 6% of all U.S. emissions.Addressing cropland flooding will also help in reducing the amount of nitrate running off into drinking water. High nitrate levels in drinking water can cause blue baby syndrome, a potentially fatal condition that deprives infants of oxygen. Even lower levels of nitrate in tap water have been linked to increased risk of birth defects and cancer.“Flooded cornfields lead to a polluted environment,” said EWG Senior Geographic Information System Analyst Al Rabine, author of the analysis. “Tools exist to fix this. We’re just not using them nearly enough.”The federal government spends billions of dollars annually on farm conservation programs, but EWG’s analysis finds funding is not being directed where it could have the most benefit. Stronger federal and state conservation programs could help farmers adopt practices that reduce climate and water pollution, along with permanently retiring cropland in flood plains where farming poses the greatest risks.Case study in MinnesotaTo examine the problem at the local level, EWG modeled cropland within the 2-year flood plain of the Middle Fork Zumbro River watershed, in Southeast Minnesota. The 2-year flood plain is an area expected to flood, on average, once every two years – it has a 50% chance of flooding in any particular year.The region has long struggled with nitrate contamination in drinking water, in part because it sits atop karst soils through which water and contaminants can easily leach into groundwater. The Middle Fork watershed covers 566 square miles and contains over 100,000 acres of total cropland, more than half of it corn.EWG’s analysis found between 1,619 and 6,435 acres of cropland within the likely 2-year flood plain. Most of the cropland is corn, ranging from 1,083 to 4,058 acres, depending on inundation level – the amount of flooding.This means potentially more than 4,000 acres of heavily fertilized corn fields could flood every other year in this single watershed alone, repeatedly spiking both nitrous oxide emissions and nitrate runoff into local water supplies.Improving conservation programsThe federal government spends billions of dollars annually on farm conservation programs. But EWG’s analysis finds that funding is not being effectively directed to the practices and places where it would have the most benefit.The Environmental Quality Incentives Program, or EQIP, is one of the primary federal working lands conservation programs. But EWG’s Conservation Database shows that six of the 10 most highly paid EQIP practices between 2017 and 2024 were structural: fencing, sprinkler systems, manure pit covers, animal waste storage and irrigation pipelines. Farmers received $2.59 billion for these practices, accounting for 25% of all EQIP spending. Many of these practices provide no climate benefit, and some recipients are factory farms legally required to implement them anyway.The practices most effective at reducing nitrous oxide emissions and nitrate runoff in flood-prone areas – cover crops, crop diversification, reduced tillage and buffer strips – receive far less support than they should.“Federal conservation dollars are not being spent where they’ll make the biggest difference,” said Rabine. “Paying livestock operations to install fencing while flooded corn fields keep double polluting is not a conservation strategy; it’s a missed opportunity.”Opportunities for reformEQIP should be updated to allow states to pay 90% of the cost for practices, such as cover crops and crop diversification, that demonstrably reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Bipartisan legislation already exists to move in this direction.EWG also recommends that the USDA and Midwest state agencies make a priority of funding conservation practices on cropland within flood plains in particular, because that’s where problems are most acute and the benefits of intervention are greatest. Federal and state agencies should also better map and designate flood-prone agricultural land, so conservation resources can be more precisely targeted. ###The Environmental Working Group (EWG) empowers people to live healthier lives in a healthier environment. Through research, advocacy and unique education tools, EWG drives consumer choice and civic action. Areas of Focus Farming & Agriculture Conservation Farm Pollution Flooded cornfields can contaminate drinking water and fuel climate emissions Press Contact Alex Formuzis alex@ewg.org (202) 667-6982 April 3, 2026

  • The New Lede’s Brian Bienkowski wins top honors in 2026 North American Agricultural Journalism contest
    par Anthony Lacey le 1 avril 2026 à 2026-04-01T18:43:07+02:000000000730202604

    The New Lede’s Brian Bienkowski wins top honors in 2026 North American Agricultural Journalism contest Anthony Lacey April 1, 2026 WASHINGTON – Brian Bienkowski, the managing editor of the nonprofit investigative news outlet The New Lede, has won first place in the news category of the North American Agricultural Journalists, or NAAJ, 2026 awards.Bienkowski’s award-winning report, “FOIA records reveal EPA leaders’ frequent meetings with industry lobbyists,” is an investigative piece that leveraged documents obtained through public information requests to reveal that top Environmental Protection Agency officials met repeatedly with agricultural and chemical industry representatives in the months following President Donald Trump’s second inauguration, in 2025. The New Lede is an initiative of the Environmental Working Group but functions independently of the organization. All editorial decisions are made solely by The New Lede, without input or influence from EWG.Ken Cook, EWG’s president and co-founder, praised Bienkowski and the NAAJ.“Brian’s reporting cuts to the core of The New Lede’s mission – exposing decisions by policymakers and the agribusiness industry that endanger public health and the environment,” said Cook. “We’re proud to see his work, and the The New Lede team’s broader reporting, recognized by peers at the NAAJ, who uniquely understand its impact.“In an era when local news is vanishing from farm country at an alarming rate, hard-hitting independent journalism like the New Lede’s is essential. Without it, industrial agriculture goes unchecked, and rural communities are left unaware of the threats to their health and environment,” he added.Bienkowski’s report offers an unprecedented look at how regulatory decisions affecting farmers were made behind closed doors with agribusiness executives.The judge, longtime award-winning journalist Bob Burgdorfer, lauded Bienkowski’s work for being “well-written and factual,” noting that it was a “great use of the Freedom of Information Act to see who EPA consults before making decisions that affect farmers.”Second place honorThe New Lede also earned second place in the video category for its compelling investigation into links between Iowa’s outsize cancer rates and agricultural pollution. The recognition shows The New Lede’s commitment to multimedia investigative reporting at the nexus of environmental and agricultural issues.NAAJ, which represents journalists across the United States and Canada, holds annual awards recognizing excellence in reporting on agricultural issues. The organization applauds journalists who illuminate the intersection of policy, industry and public health and the environment.The New Lede played an integral role in the international Poison PR investigation, collaborating with outlets such as Lighthouse Reports and the Guardian to reveal how the pesticide industry and PR firms sought to influence public opinion and discredit critics. The New Lede’s Editor-in-Chief Carey Gillam, along with others involved in the project, received the One World Media Award for outstanding environmental reporting, in 2025. The project was later shortlisted, in August 2025, as one of the top 10 investigations for the Investigative Journalism for Europe awards.Gillam is also the recipient of the 2018 Rachel Carson Book Award of the Society of Environmental Journalists for her 2017 book, “Whitewash: The Story of a Weedkiller, Cancer, and the Corruption of Science.” ###The Environmental Working Group (EWG) is a nonprofit, non-partisan organization that empowers people to live healthier lives in a healthier environment. Through research, advocacy and unique education tools, EWG drives consumer choice and civic action.The New Lede (TNL) is a nonprofit investigative news organization focused on the intersection of agriculture, environmental policy and public health. Through rigorous reporting and multimedia storytelling, TNL shines a light on issues that impact communities, ecosystems and the food system.    Areas of Focus Farming & Agriculture Farm Pollution Press Contact Alex Formuzis alex@ewg.org (202) 667-6982 April 1, 2026

  • A Complicated Future for a Methane-Cleansing Molecule
    par Columbia Climate School le 1 avril 2026 à 2026-04-01T12:54:31+02:000000003130202604

    A new model shows how levels of the “atmosphere’s detergent” may rise and fall in response to climate change.