Informações:
Sinopse
H2O Radio is journalism about water. We follow water wherever it leads us and report on what we find. We interview experts from engineers and scientists to legislators and politicians in order to get the facts. But we also talk to ordinary citizens to ask how water issues affect their lives. Why? Because we're all in this together. This is a conversation about water and our collective water future.
Episódios
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This Week in Water for July 16, 2023
16/07/2023 Duração: 06minWhere’s Crawford Lake—and Why Should You Care? That story and more on H2O Radio’s weekly news report about water. Headines: Canada calls for a moratorium on seabed mining, as a ten-day conference is under way to consider regulations. Mud at the bottom of a Canadian lake shows we're in a dangerous new epoch caused by humans. According to new research, climate change is turning the ocean green. Using “molecular scissors” to make paper that's better for the environment.
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This Week in Water for July 9, 2023
09/07/2023 Duração: 06minPainkillers Are Derived from Crude Oil—but That Could Change. That story and more on H2O Radio’s weekly news report about water. Headlines: Nearly half of homes in the U.S. have PFAS compounds—the so-called “forever chemicals”—coming out of their faucets. Japan’s plan to release contaminated water from the Fukushima nuclear power plant into the ocean got the go-ahead last week. In what's been dubbed the “Death Star” Bill, workers in Texas might not be allowed to take water breaks when it's hot. Common painkillers like ibuprofen and acetaminophen are derived from crude oil, but researchers just made versions using pine trees.
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The Potentially Everlasting Life of a Bottle
15/06/2023 Duração: 06minWhat happens to that beer bottle after you put it in the recycling bin? Jamie Sudler of H2O Radio followed a bottle and learned what happens in Denver.
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Spot On—Getting the Ground Truth About Severe Weather
15/06/2023 Duração: 06minIt’s summer, and along with barbecues, beach days, and gardening, it’s the time of year for severe storms. Although the National Weather Service has many forecasting tools at its disposal, there are blind spots where alerting the public about hazardous situations can be hard to achieve. That’s where “SKYWARN®” comes in.
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This Week in Water for June 11, 2023
11/06/2023 Duração: 06minWhy Curly-Haired People Are Cooler. That story and more on H2O Radio’s weekly news report about water. Headlines: A Ukrainian official is calling the destruction of the Kakhovka dam on the Dnipro River, “ecocide.” El Niño + climate change = record heat (scientists fear). Eating this ocean creature can help stave off type 2 diabetes, a new study found. Curly hair allowed early humans to stay cool and conserve water.
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This Week in Water for June 4, 2023
04/06/2023 Duração: 06minThey Knew the Dangers—but Hid Them from the Public. That story and more on H2O Radio’s weekly news report about water. Headlines: Manufacturers of PFAS compounds took a page from the tobacco playbook and hid the dangers of so-called “forever chemicals.” Arizona will limit new housing construction in the Phoenix area, as groundwater supplies shrink. Cars and trucks contain a hidden source of pollution beyond what's coming from tailpipes. Weevils are not evil.
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This Week in Water for May 28, 2023
28/05/2023 Duração: 06minThe Supreme Court Hangs the Clean Water Act Out to Dry. That story and more on H2O Radio’s weekly news report about water. Headlines: Even conservative justice Brett Kavanaugh thinks the Sackett case that sacks wetlands protections went too far. The recent Colorado River “deal” is short on details and may not be enough to save the iconic river. The Montreal Protocol had an amazing—and unexpected—side effect. How seagulls decide what foods to steal from our picnics.
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This Week in Water for May 21, 2023
21/05/2023 Duração: 05minFootprints You Leave on the Beach Contain Your DNA. That story and more on H2O Radio’s weekly news report about water. Headlines: There is nearly a 100-percent chance that at least one of the next five years will be the warmest ever recorded. More than half of the world’s largest lakes have shrunk over the past three decades. “Human genetic bycatch” is setting off alarm bells. A house made from diapers can help fight climate change.
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This Week in Water for May 14, 2023
14/05/2023 Duração: 05minGetting the Lead Out—with Sponges. That story and more on H2O Radio’s weekly news report about water. Headlines: Wildfires continue to burn in Alberta, Canada, as a “heat dome” develops over the region. A newly developed sponge can pull lead and other toxic metals out of water. How hammerhead sharks “hold their breath” on deep dives. Scientists discover why you may be the unlucky one mosquitoes devour at a barbecue.
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This Week in Water for May 7, 2023
07/05/2023 Duração: 06minWhen a Dustup Is a Good Thing. That story and more on H2O Radio’s weekly news report about water. Headlines: When it doesn't rain in Spain, Europe feels the pain. How dust can help mitigate climate change. As Kermit the Frog would tell you, it’s not easy being green. The FTC says it should be for consumers—but not for imposters. Scientists are “gobsmacked” by all the benefits this plant provides.
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This Week in Water for April 30, 2023
30/04/2023 Duração: 05minHow Climate Change Means More Pirates. That story and more on H2O Radio’s weekly news report about water. Headlines: Average sea surface temperatures are the warmest they've been in modern history, rising faster than climate forecasts. As sea ice shrinks in the Arctic Ocean and shipping routes open, vessels are facing an unexpected obstacle. How the conflict in Sudan can gum up the delivery of your Coke or Pepsi. Why warmer oceans are creating more pirates.
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This Week in Water for April 23, 2023
23/04/2023 Duração: 06minHow “Crustivoltaics” Could Restore Arid Lands. That story and more on H2O Radio’s weekly news report about water. Headlines: Replacing lead pipes with PVC? A new report says that's leaping from the frying pan into fire. The Great Pacific Garbage Patch is now so big and permanent that creatures are making it their home. There's a “SeaChange” in fighting climate change. Desert “biocrusts” have a brighter future with this new system.
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This Week in Water for April 16, 2023
16/04/2023 Duração: 05minHow Penguins Dump on Climate Change. That story and more on H2O Radio’s weekly news report about water. Headlines: While states continue to negotiate, the feds released possible plans for Colorado River cuts. New climate research says there will be substantially wetter rain and snow days in the future—and “flash droughts.” Lavish lifestyles of the wealthy use a lot of water—and according to a new study, they do so at the expense of the poor. Penguins are ironing out climate change—until they can't.
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This Week in Water for April 9, 2023
09/04/2023 Duração: 06minA New Twist in the Climate Change Story. That story and more on H2O Radio’s weekly news report about water. Headlines: The Colorado River Basin benefited from this past winter's precipitation but will need several years of the same to recover. How storing water in aquifers can heat and cool buildings. Climate change is shifting twisters east of tornado alley. Why Major League Baseball will have more home runs in the future.
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This Week in Water for April 2, 2023
02/04/2023 Duração: 05minA Grueling Sporting Event Is Doing Science. That story and more on H2O Radio’s weekly news report about water. Headlines: The UN voted to send climate change issues to the World Court. Despite studies showing the potential dangers of seabed mining, the process could soon move forward. The “lung function” of the cold, oxygen-rich water near Antarctica could collapse within 30 years. The world's toughest and longest sailing race is doing critical ocean science.
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This Week in Water for March 26, 2023
26/03/2023 Duração: 05minEverything Everywhere All at Once. That story and more on H2O Radio’s weekly news report about water. Headlines: The IPCC says their latest report is their final warning on the climate crisis—yet, still offers hope. The Biden administration has announced land and water protections plus its Ocean Climate Action Plan. Want to save caterpillars? Here's how. Instant beer? Yup, just add water.
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This Week in Water for March 19, 2023
19/03/2023 Duração: 06minThe Looming Threat of “Phosphogeddon.” That story and more on H2O Radio’s weekly news report about water. Headlines: The failure of Silicon Valley Bank could affect the fight against climate change. A first-of-its-kind report on the world’s water resources contains a dire warning. We are facing a shortage of an element critical to life on Earth. Ever heard of mycoforestry? The practice could produce food—and combat climate change.
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This Week in Water for March 12, 2023
12/03/2023 Duração: 06minOne Hundred Days of Solitude…Under the Sea. That story and more on H2O Radio’s weekly news report about water. Headlines: Atmospheric rivers can now be ranked globally like hurricanes for their intensity and duration. Hasta la vista, La Niña. Freddy—"like a B-reel horror movie that never ends." If all goes according to plan, this professor hopes to “come out superhuman.”
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This Week in Water for March 5, 2023
06/03/2023 Duração: 05minHigh Hopes for the High Seas. That story and more on H2O Radio’s weekly news report about water. Headlines: After 20 years of talks, countries have agreed to a historic treaty to protect the high seas. A new study says a dirty ocean can mean dirty air for coastal communities. Here's a reason your strawberries might look red and plump but taste meh. Many insects pee, but this one bug is a smartass at getting rid of its urine.
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This Week in Water for February 26, 2023
27/02/2023 Duração: 06minWilliam Shakespeare…Eco Warrior? That story and more on H2O Radio’s weekly news report about water. Headlines: The first anniversary of the war in Ukraine has passed, and its effects on people and the environment will last for generations to come. There are new concerns about contaminants from the train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio, that stay in the ground for a long time. A new book says Shakespeare was an environmentalist, tackling issues like overfishing, mining, and the fur trade. Attention, clowns! Balloons are no laughing matter in this town.