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Wherever you live in South Florida, the flooding you see right now is likely to get worse in the years ahead 鈥 despite billions of dollars in drainage projects intended to protect communities.
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A leading source of U.S. climate pollution could be curbed with more gas-collection systems and better emissions monitoring, environmental advocates say.
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Science and the reality of government planning suggest that it鈥檚 far too expensive and technologically complicated to build a city that can withstand 2 feet of rain in a single day. But it could be a sign of what鈥檚 to come, as unchecked climate change could make rain bombs more common.
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The answer to Florida's ailing coral reefs may lie in a probiotic, not unlike the bacteria found in yogurt.
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Miami-Dade County's latest plan to protect against stronger storms and rising sea levels involves closing off most of Biscayne Bay from the Atlantic Ocean with natural and man-made barriers.
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Broward County is planning to launch an innovative solar project at one Fort Lauderdale park鈥檚 busy basketball courts that will not only keep players cooler but also help cut energy costs to the nearby African-American Research Library and Cultural Center.
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Most researchers agree it鈥檚 not valid to point to a single storm and say it was 'caused' by the warming world 鈥 too many variables. But there鈥檚 a growing consensus that the sea level rise and higher temperatures in the last hundred years have already impacted storms like Ian and may continue to do so in the future.
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When Hurricane Michael tore through North Florida in 2018 as a Category 5 storm, it left more than 3 million acres of felled trees in its wake.
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A Texas company鈥檚 plans to drill for oil in the Everglades may have a tougher time winning approval, now that an administration that鈥檚 skeptical of fossil fuels has taken over in Washington. Burnett Oil Co. has proposed drilling at two sites in Big Cypress National Preserve, important Florida panther habitat that sprawls across both sides of Alligator Alley.
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During 2021 an unprecedented 937 manatees have died in Florida, more than double the five-year annual average only nine months into the year. The staggering loss represents 10% of the animal鈥檚 population in the state, estimated at 8,810.
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Stony coral disease has scorched the already struggling reefs of South Florida and caused some species like Florida鈥檚 picturesque pillar coral to go locally extinct. The threat is so serious that it has produced an unprecedented national research and 鈥淣oah鈥檚 Ark鈥 rescue effort, where almost 2,000 corals have been pulled out of Florida鈥檚 waters and quarantined in aquariums around the country.
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Researchers are 鈥渁t the very start鈥 of studying how shifting conditions could affect blooms. After years of inconsistent funding, even more immediate questions remain outstanding, like what exactly ends a bloom and what causes Red Tide to vary so much in severity from year to year.