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Climate & environment

Is the answer to Maryland’s blue crab shortage in Italy?
As Italy struggles with too many blue crabs in its waters, we can’t help but ask: Can we have them?
JC Hudgins shows a blue crab he caught in the Chesapeake Bay in Mathews, Va., on Friday, June 10, 2022.
Tree canopies can bring relief to Baltimore neighborhoods heating up with climate change
Nationally and in Baltimore, low-income areas have disproportionately less leafy tree canopy than wealthier ones.
The Baltimore Tree Trust plants trees in underserviced neighborhoods. Here, trees line the streets along North Milton Avenue in the Broadway East neighborhood.
Calling all paddlers: Baltimore is getting a water trail system
Baltimore will soon have an official network of water trails to take in the city’s sights by canoe, kayak or stand-up paddleboard.
Paddlers make the 5-mile round trip journey from Canton Waterfront Park to the Inner Harbor during the annual Floatilla on June 10, 2023.
Blue blood from horseshoe crabs is needed for medicine, but a declining bird relies on crabs to eat
The horseshoe crab has been scuttling in the ocean and tidal pools for more than 400 million years, playing a vital role in the East Coast ecosystem along with being a prized item for fishing bait and medical research.
Horseshoe crabs spawn at Reeds Beach in Cape May Court House, New Jersey, on Tuesday, June 13, 2023. The biomedical industry is adopting new standards to protect the sea animal that is a linchpin of the production of vital medicines.
Why would anyone sail the oceans by themselves? It’s complicated.
As the Chesapeake sailing community follows the search for missing Baltimore sailor Don Lawson in the Pacific Ocean, there are probably more than a few people looking at what he was trying to do — set a world record for solo circumnavigation — and wonder, why would anyone do that?
Solo sailor Peter Gibbons-Neff aboard Terminal Leave during a sail between France and the Azores as he prepares for the Mini Transat, a 4,000 nautical mile solo ocean race across the Atlantic Ocean.
Beautiful weather returns Sunday after heavy storms and power outages
After dangerous heat and damaging storms created precarious conditions earlier this weekend, a cold front led to a bright and sunny start Sunday.
The weather was warm and sunny on February 23, 2023 with a high of seventy-two degrees
Baltimore temps could hit 100 degrees Friday. Here’s how residents beat the heat.
The heat index — how hot it feels — could climb to 110 degrees.
Nora Aldabbagh has been living in her tent outside My Sister’s Place Women’s Center for over a year, and worries about where she can spend the day during extreme temperatures.
Lawmakers introduce bill to create Chesapeake Bay national park, with plan to minimize traffic
The recreation area would knit together a network of cultural and environmental landmarks that one day could stretch across the 64,000-square-mile Chesapeake watershed in a single unit under the administration of the National Park Service office in Annapolis.
A sailboat cruises by the Thomas Point Shoal Light near Annapolis. The 140-year-old lighthouse is one of four sites proposed for a new national park on the Chesapeake Bay.
A chance encounter with a baby sea turtle in the bay delights students
In a charming surprise, a group of students participating in a summer leadership course with the Chesapeake Bay Foundation found a young sea turtle in the bay in Dorchester County.
A screen grab from a video shows the moment a Chesapeake Bay Foundation staff member pulled a juvenile sea turtle out of a clump of "scraped" seagrass.
It’s going to be dangerously hot in Baltimore Thursday and Friday
The temperatures in Baltimore and around Maryland are expected to reach dangerous levels Thursday and Friday.
Smoke turns the sky hazy in downtown Baltimore in this photo of the Inner Harbor waterfront as the Domino Sugar sign sits in the distance.
Sewage backed up in your house? Baltimore may not help you clean it up as required.
Since 2017, the city has never come close to spending the $2 million it was required to budget for cleanups in a modified federal consent decree.
The Baltimore City Hall logo with Mayor Brandon Scott’s name beneath it is seen after a press conference inside Baltimore City Hall on Friday, June 23, 2023.
Weather alert: Storms this evening, then turning hot
A severe thunderstorm watch has been issued for Baltimore City and Anne Arundel, Baltimore, Calvert, Caroline, Carroll, Cecil, Charles, Harford, Howard, Kent, Montgomery and Prince George’s counties until 8 p.m.
Scattered thunderstorms are possible in Baltimore Thursday.
You may see an increased number of dead fish in the Inner Harbor. Here’s why.
Experts explain the causes of this common summer phenomenon.
A dead eel floats by a bridge between Pier 4 and Pier 5 in the Inner Harbor.
Gov. Wes Moore outlines new approach to Chesapeake Bay cleanup
Gov. Wes Moore on Thursday announced that Maryland would be the first state to respond to a recent study pointing out roadblocks to faster progress on cleaning up the Chesapeake Bay.
Gov. Wes Moore introduces a new focus for Chesapeake Bay clean-up efforts during an event at the Wye Island Natural Resources Management Area in Queenstown.
Greenbury Point should be part of a Chesapeake Bay national park
Greenbury Point, which covers 250 acres owned by the Navy that juts into the Chesapeake Bay near Annapolis, should be a centerpiece of a new national park.
Parts of the Greenbury Point environmental conservation area is open to the public when the Navy is not using the site for training.
Extreme heat, unhealthy air quality from Canadian smoke. Know the signs to beat the heat.
Temperatures are expected to be well into the 90s all week, increasing the chance of heat-related illnesses.
A group of people cool off in a fountain at the Inner Harbor.
‘The clock is ticking’: VP Harris visits Baltimore to announce $20B to combat climate change
The Biden-Harris Administration is pledging $20 billion to fund clean energy programs across the country, including in underserved communities. The vice president described the funding as “the largest investment in financing for community-based climate projects in our nation.”
Vice President Kamala Harris speaks at Coppin State University on July 14, 2023. (Kaitlin Newman/The Baltimore Banner)
Baltimore approaching deadline to expand sewage backup assistance program, advocates say
Under the order, the city will have to assist any sewage backup caused by problems in the city-owned portion of the pipe system
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) logo is displayed on a door at its headquarters on March 16, 2017 in Washington, D.C.
A skipjack returns to Annapolis. Not everyone is happy.
This was supposed to be a triumphant summer for the Wilma Lee, bought by the Annapolis Maritime Museum four years ago. It is the only vessel of its kind in Maryland’s state capital since the Chesapeake Bay Foundation sold the Stanley Norman in 2020. A lease with the city was intended to return this symbol of Chesapeake heritage to City Dock — the waterfront public square of Annapolis — and boost private charters to help keep it afloat.
Capt. Rick Flamand talks to summer campers aboard the Wilma Lee, an 80-year-old skipjack, during a morning cruise out of Annapolis.
DPW asks residents to limit water use in Baltimore, counties after pumping station fire
The request comes after a Thursday morning fire at a DPW drinking water pumping station in Baltimore County strained the region’s drinking water system.
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