Skip to content
  • Echo
  • Echo
  • Home
  • Solutions
  • Water
  • Nearshore
  • Recreation
  • Wildlife
  • Energy
  • Waste
  • About
  • Contact

Great Lakes Echo - Environmental news of the Great Lakes region

Great Lakes Echo (https://greatlakesecho.org/)

  • Home
  • Solutions
  • Water
  • Nearshore
  • Recreation
  • Wildlife
  • Energy
  • Waste
  • About
  • Contact
  • Global Navigation
  • Hot Topics:
  • Law
  • Art

Potential hydrogen source could power trucks while reducing greenhouse gases

By Jake Christie | March 31, 2023

It’s better suited than batteries to power large vehicles that need to travel long distances like semi-trucks, because hydrogen refuels much faster than batteries recharge.

Solutions

Native plant projects help pollinators across state

Funding these projects through grants is important because it increases native plant presence, which helps pollinators thrive.

Echo

Highway reconstruction tries to repair historic mistakes

It will spark new thinking about what can be done when a bridge or a freeway needs to be rebuilt.

Echo

New book for tree lovers is rooted in memory

The idea for the book came from a little notebook into which Dunphy writes what occupies her mind.

More Headlines

Polluter-pay laws could return under Democratic majority
Artificial reefs bring wild lake trout to Lake Huron
Measures taken to reduce Ontario toxic hotspots

Climate

  • Commentary: Global warming, climate change and my ice cream

    Situated at the end of town by the Flat River, Ball’s Softee Creme is the perfect place to grab an ice cream cone with friends during the summer months. However, climate change has summer shops like Ball's Softee Creme opening two months earlier than years prior.

  • More climate

Water quality

  • Detroiters can get another 1,125 gallons of water under discount program

    Detroit water rates have gone up 407% over the last 20 years, and 120% in just the last 10 years.

  • More water quality

Invaders

  • Ancient invention may safely move fish across barriers while blocking invaders, study finds

    In the course of 11 days, a device dating back to 234 B.C. successfully transported 704 fish across the Cheboygan Dam in the northern part of Michigan’s Lower Peninsula with no injuries observed.

  • More invaders

Wildlife

  • Effectiveness of cormorant hunting questioned

    Ecology cautions against overgeneralizing the impact of cormorants on fish populations because what the birds feed on differs by available species, the age and size of the fish they eat, and where they feed in their respective territories.

  • More wildlife

Energy

  • MiWaterNet monitors quality of northern Michigan streams

    This network provides valuable, real time data on a stream’s water quality, level and temperature. 

  • More energy

Art

  • Detroit group reduces waste and improves education by merging art and science 

    The organization teaches kids at its brick and mortar building or travels to communities with a bus filled with recycled materials.

  • More art

Law

  • Feds mum about yellow-faced grassquit trafficker

    The grassquit is a small bird that lives in grassy and weedy subtropical and tropical areas.

  • More law

Nearshore

  • A cost-effective solution to beach erosion

    The bay is eroding quickly, leaving the inland vulnerable. 

  • More nearshore

Urban

  • Great Lakes region is resource rich, so why aren’t cities ‘greener’?

    A recent report from WalletHub, “2022’s Greenest Cities in America,” ranked Buffalo, Madison, Cincinnati and Milwaukee among the Great Lakes region’s best for engaging in cleaner, more sustainable habits.

  • More urban

Farm

  • Minnesota farmer accused of multimillion dollar organic grain scam

    A federal grand jury has indicted a Minnesota farmer for allegedly cheating buyers of more than $46 million by falsely labeling non-GMO soybeans and corn as organic.

  • More farm

Waste

  • Cities of tomorrow are surprisingly old

    A new report by RentCafe documents the nationwide trend. So-called adaptive reuse apartments are more popular than new apartment developments from 2020-2021, the study says. 

  • More waste

Recreation

  • Michigan’s Magnet Man attracts river trash

    The heaviest thing that he has found is a full-sized safe in the Rouge River in Delray, Michigan, taking seven people with magnets and hooks to pull it out.

  • More recreation

Twitter
RSS
Facebook
Email

Commentary

  • Commentary: Nature and fashion

    Finding out what fabric something is made of, the process behind it and everything in between only made me love fashion more. 

  • More Photo Friday

Catch of the Day

  • Melanoma cases higher in rural areas, study finds

    Research shows that rural residents have higher rates of breast, prostate, cervical and colorectal cancer, lower rates of preventative screening and higher death rates from those types of cancer than urban residents.

  • More Catch of the Day

Podcasts

  • First-ever transit service hovercraft in North America plans to hit the water in summer 2023

    More modern versions have switched to a more conventional diesel engine, much quieter and much more fuel- efficient.

  • More podcasts

Climate Stories

COVID-19

  • Communities welcome return of winter festivals

    By Sammy Schuck Most people may know that festivals attract people to Michigan communities. What most may not know is that festivals and events in the state are an annual $1 billion industry, according to Michigan Festivals and Events Association CEO Mike Szukhent. According to Szukhent, the lack of winter festivals last year “hit hard.” […]

  • More COVID-19 stories

  • Great Lakes Echo

Contact Us

Email: GreatLakesEcho@gmail.com
Editor: David Poulson
Phone: 517 432 5417
Email: poulsondavid@gmail.com

Search This Site

Browse Archives

© Copyright 2023, Great Lakes Echo

Built with the Largo WordPress Theme from the Institute for Nonprofit News.

Back to top ↑