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Living and breathing on the front line of a toxic chemical zone
As the Biden administration moves to curb health threats caused by toxic chemicals, the debate hits home for families living near petrochemical plants.
Paula R. Lively/Flickr/Commercial use & mods allowedhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/
Tracking the chemicals in the East Palestine, Ohio, train derailment and fire
Tankers of vinyl chloride were going halfway across the country, government records show, a trip highlighting the risks of transporting chemicals as plastics production grows.
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Biden administration to curb toxic pollutants from chemical plants
The rule would chiefly affect plants along the Gulf Coast, the Ohio River Valley and in West Virginia.
Photo by Karl Hörnfeldt on Unsplash
E.P.A. to tighten limits on mercury and other pollutants from power plants
A new rule would reduce mercury, arsenic, nickel and lead emissions, which the Biden administration said would protect public health.
Photo by Brent Pace on Unsplash
Terry Tempest Williams: I am haunted by what I have seen at Great Salt Lake
Evaporation from heat and drought accelerated by climate change, combined with overuse of the rivers that feed it, have shrunk the lake’s area by two-thirds.
Mark Dixon/Flickr
Toxic chemical rules pose test for Biden
Key industries — including some that the White House is backing through other policies — are lobbying to water down the first major new rules in a generation on chemicals that pose risks to humans.
How widespread are these toxic chemicals? They’re everywhere.
Researchers created a map showing where PFAS compounds, linked to cancer in humans, have been detected in wildlife. It spans the globe.
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