Infrastructure

Hydrogen’s water use is minimal compared to other fuels, but permitting delays and regional water access challenges could slow green hydrogen development.

The initiative, led by NCC, will centralize 16,000 tons of annual waste—including large volumes of metal and iron scrap—on a 40,000-square-meter site designed for sorting, recycling, and hazardous material handling.

As reporting deadlines hit, the EU’s methane rule is shifting from policy to pressure point—forcing global energy suppliers to prove compliance or risk exclusion.

Data centers are fueling AI, CleanTech, and more—but rising energy use and grid strain raise urgent questions about their future sustainability and resilience.

Reno is overheating. A new analysis shows it leads the nation in warming, prompting a citizen-led effort to map and cool urban heat hotspots.

Goats are helping cities like Pittsburgh and Toronto control invasive plants, reduce herbicide use, and restore ecosystems—naturally and effectively.

Yupik community seeks UN help as Cold War military sites in Alaska continue to leak toxic waste and threaten Indigenous health.

The Kehlers' business model has proven remarkably successful: 82 cents of every dollar of profit stays within Vermont, with 62 cents staying in Greensboro itself, making it one of the most financially rewarding places to be a farmer in the United States.

EPA visits U.S. Virgin Islands to address waste, water, and industrial oversight, amid ongoing concerns over pollution, infrastructure, and regulatory trust.

Is the EU striking the right balance between industrial support and climate accountability by delaying new ESG reporting mandates?

New York’s infrastructure strategy moves ahead as Dutchess County greenlights a key water system interconnection.

Pittsburgh is converting a former coal plant into a 4.5 GW data center. The gas-fueled site will support AI and high-performance computing.

Urban cemeteries across the globe are nearing full capacity, with cities warning that burial space may soon run out. Pressure is mounting to develop sustainable, scalable alternatives that meet both environmental standards and evolving cultural expectations.

A new OM-SERS system detects and analyzes nanoplastics in water and tissue. This marks a major step in pollution tracking and risk research.

The new law directs up to $2 million annually from railroad car taxes into a dedicated state fund managed by the Department of Transportation.

The Ohio officially launches March 29, 2025, and will be available at Gabriela Hearst’s flagship stores in New York, Beverly Hills, London, and Tokyo, as well as online.

Over 22% of native pollinators face extinction, threatening crops. Diversifying habitats is now key to business and food system stability.

New Sindelfingen Facility Slashes Energy Use, Emissions, and Water Consumption While Enhancing Digital Integration

Next City reports developers indicate increasing construction costs and cuts to federal funding will upend America's affordable housing progress.

Azure Printed Homes is a fast-scaling company revolutionizing prefab and 3D-printed construction with recycled materials.

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