Assessing the U.S. Climate in February 2025
NCEI News Feed
https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/national-climate-202502
NCEI News Feed
https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/national-climate-202502
NCEI News Feed
https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/national-climate-202502
NCEI News Feed
https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/national-climate-202502
NCEI News Feed
https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/national-climate-202502
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https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/national-climate-202502
NCEI News Feed
https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/national-climate-202502
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https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/national-climate-202502
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https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/national-climate-202502
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https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/national-climate-202502
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https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/national-climate-202502
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https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/national-climate-202502
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https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/national-climate-202502
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https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/national-climate-202502
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https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/national-climate-202502
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https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/national-climate-202502
Because of you, clean water is flowing where it belongs! Your generosity helps protect the streams, rivers, and lakes that make our neighborhoods thrive. Together, we’re creating a healthier future for our waterways and our community. Watch Our Thank You Video Below! Give BIG Green [...]
The post In Your Neighborhood, Where Clean Water Belongs – Thank You for Giving BIG! appeared first on Fox-Wolf Watershed Alliance.
Fox-Wolf Watershed Alliance
https://fwwa.org/2025/03/10/give-big-green-bay-2025-thank-you/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=give-big-green-bay-2025-thank-you
On March 5, leaders from across Wisconsin’s political spectrum gathered in Muscoda to remember Dave Martin. Martin was a state legislator whose legacy includes authoring Wisconsin’s Wild Rivers Law. The law was unanimously passed by both chambers of the state legislature and signed by Republican Governor Warren P. Knowles in 1965.
While we believe conservation of our priceless natural resources shouldn’t be subject to divisive partisanship, we can look to Martin’s leadership and Wisconsin’s Wild Rivers Law as an example of when our state united around protecting the wild and scenic beauty of our rivers 60 years ago.
River Alliance of Wisconsin Executive Director Allison Werner was invited to give some remarks about Martin’s impact. She chose to share Dave’s own words about a particularly memorable trip down the Pine River to see one of Wisconsin’s truly wild places.
On behalf of River Alliance of Wisconsin, it’s my honor to be able to share a little about Dave Martin and his amazing legacy. I’m going to share excerpts from articles my colleagues, and Dave himself, wrote in celebration of the 40th Anniversary of Wisconsin’s Wild Rivers Law in 2006.
While Dave will best be remembered for his wild rivers leadership, there is an earlier act of legislation that he’s equally proud to have played a part in. As he said, “Now let me tell you about the Wolf River Protection Bill of 1963 – this is a dandy.”
In 1963, he received a call from another northern river protection pioneer, the late Herb Buettner. Herb relayed to Dave that a dam had been proposed on the Wolf River near Pearson. The idea was to create a “lake” and sell lots along its shoreline. Wildlife and sportsmen’s groups shared Dave and Herb’s concerns that “During low water time the dam would have reduced the Wolf River to a trickle downstream and would have drastically changed the character of that beautiful river.”
So he got to work drafting the bill. Time was of the essence in moving this legislation forward. Dave reflected that, “There were a lot of attempts to block it … In fact, Langlade County had already built concrete abutments on both sides of the river at the dam site.” After lots of negotiations, the bill passed, and the dam was never built. In 1968, the 24-mile segment from the Langlade-Menominee County line downstream to Keshena Falls was designated as a Federal Wild and Scenic River.
His work to protect the Wolf River was only one of the inspirations for Dave’s effort to create the Wild Rivers Act. We are also fortunate to have in his own words his reflection of his adventures on the Pine River.
“The most memorable time I’ve ever spent on a northern river was on the south branch of the Pine River. In 1966, right about at the time when the Pine was being designated as a Wisconsin ‘wild river,’ a friend and I put in at Jones Dam and floated downstream in a duck skiff to the cabin that my dad and brother had built on the banks of the Pine in 1960. Along the way, we stopped to camp at what was referred to as Wildcat Rapids.
The trip made such an impression on me because it was a trip of ‘firsts’ for me… the first time I was introduced to what would be characterized as a truly wild area, the first time I saw a woodcock and heard its distinctive whistle, and my first introduction to the boldness of ravens and the ‘camp robber’ tactics of the Canada jay. It was also the first time I was introduced to what became for us ‘those bothersome chubs.’
I’d never had an experience like this before, and to this day I don’t believe most people ever have this sort of experience. I remember so well that there was little noise other than the natural sounds of our surroundings. There were no telephones, or other unnatural sound-makers. It was quiet.
I’ve learned a lot about myself and about the natural environment through spending time on the Pine River. One of the tougher lessons I learned was that in a wilderness setting you should never travel without a compass! One time I didn’t take one with me and I got lost. But luckily, I was able to find my way out before darkness by following the river. There was a lot of anxiety involved, but the old river didn’t let me down.
There’s no doubt that all of the experiences I’ve had on the Pine over the past 40 or more years certainly gave me the motivation, energy and drive to work hard on protective environmental legislation while I was in the Assembly. Those experiences on the Pine gave meaning to my work, and still do.”
Thanks to the protections of the Wild Rivers Law that Dave spearheaded, not only Dave but generations of paddlers, anglers, hikers and others can still savor an experience like the 1966 trip he described.
Those protections are being tested right now in Marinette County. There is an effort to terminate the 1991 cooperative agreement between the DNR and the County to manage the land along the Pike River and amend the Marinette County Forest 15-year plan to reflect changes the County wants to make to the forest management activities adjacent to the Pike River. It will take Marinette County residents and leaders to speak with a clear voice about the priceless scenic beauty and ecological value of our wild rivers.
We are so fortunate to have had a man like Dave in Wisconsin, as we look towards the next 60 years of river protections. River Alliance believes Wisconsin’s Wild Rivers Law will continue to protect the Pike River and its truly wild visual horizon for future generations. We will continue to work as hard as Dave did to protect all of the waters of Wisconsin.
This message is made possible by generous donors who believe people have the power to protect and restore water. Subscribe to our Word on the Stream email newsletter to receive stories, action alerts and event invitations in your inbox. Support our work with your contribution today.
The post Dave Martin’s conservation legacy appeared first on River Alliance of WI.
Blog - River Alliance of WI
https://wisconsinrivers.org/dave-martin-remembrance/
It is widely known by lovers of the Great Lakes that their unique shape was caused by glaciers melting and receding northward. That was approximately 20,000 years ago. However, new research published in Geophysical Research Letters suggests this treasured landmass started forming hundreds of millions of years ago, long before the theory of plate tectonics, when Pangea likely separated into the continents we recognize today.
Great Lakes Now
https://www.greatlakesnow.org/2025/03/stunning-new-research-reveals-the-great-lakes-pre-date-north-america/
Advocates for the Great Lakes region are on Capitol Hill this week for the 2025 Great Lakes Commission Semiannual Meeting to meet with lawmakers and talk about the importance of the Great Lakes. Read the full story by Erie News Now.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250307-lake-erie
The New York Department of Environmental Conservation joined the Great Lakes Commission in Washington, DC, to urge federal partners to continue investing in their 2025 Federal Priorities. Read the full story by WDPH – Poughkeepsie, NY.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250307-ny-dec
On Tuesday, the Supreme Court ruled 5-4 in favor of San Francisco in a case about the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) sewage permits issued under the Clean Water Act (CWA). The court ruled that the EPA’s “end-result” water pollution permits are too speculative and that the EPA overstepped its authority in the case of San Francisco v.
Great Lakes Now
https://www.greatlakesnow.org/2025/03/what-a-recent-supreme-court-ruling-could-mean-for-the-future-of-the-clean-water-act/
Montreal Mayor Valérie Plante and St. Catharines, Ontario, Mayor Mat Siscoe have been excluded from an annual meeting with White House officials scheduled for Friday amid the ongoing trade war between the U.S. and Canada. Not enough time to process the Canadian mayors’ requests cited as the reason for exclusion, the meeting will proceed as planned with exclusively American mayors. Read the full story by CBC News.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250307-canadian-mayors-excluded
Republican Congressmen Tim Walberg and Bill Huizenga have joined Democratic Congresswoman Debbie Dingell to introduce the Great Lakes Mass Marking Program Act to establish a large-scale fish marking program within the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Read the full story by WSJM – Benton Harbor, MI.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250307-fish-marking
U.S. Senators Gary Peters (MI) and Elissa Slotkin (MI) are leading bipartisan legislation to extend federal funding and protections for the Great Lakes via the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative Act of 2025. Read the full story by Oscoda Press.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250307-great-lakes-funding
A new dredged materials management facility is being built off of Jones Island in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The facility will store polluted sediment removed from Milwaukee’s waterways as part of a larger effort to clean up the Great Lakes. Read the full story by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250307-jones-island
The chaos surrounding the future of scientific research in the Trump administration’s first weeks has meant a bumpy beginning for a new program by the nonprofit Great Lakes Observing System where ice fishing anglers and others on the frozen Great Lakes record ice thickness for research. Read the full story by WXPR – Rhinelander, WI.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250307-ice-research
As the Palisades nuclear power plant inches closer to reopening, a bipartisan group of state lawmakers wants to offer tax breaks, grants and other incentives in hopes of making Michigan a national hub for the nuclear power industry. Read the full story by Bridge Michigan.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250307-nuclear-subsidies
The Canadian federal government is moving to add the PFAS chemical class to the official list of toxic substances, which would not ban them but restrict them in various consumer and industrial products. Read the full story by Radio Canada International.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250307-pfas-canada
The Trump administration’s efforts to cut spending could make it easier for invasive species to thrive in the Great Lakes. Read the full story by WVXU – Cincinnati, OH.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250307-invasive-species
Boaters have a special connection to the Great Lakes. You love the water. You spend your precious free time maintaining your watercraft so you can enjoy all the beauty the Great Lakes have to offer. And you’re also among the first to be impacted when problems occur.
Problems like invasive quagga mussels clogging boat engines and jamming steering equipment or startled invasive carp launching themselves airborne into your passengers. You’ve likely encountered foul, smelly, and potentially toxic algal blooms now appearing on all the Great Lakes. You witness trash floating in the water and discarded plastic littering beaches.
Because you have a special connection to the lakes, you’re in a great position to make a difference in your daily boating routine. First, consider cutting back on plastics, especially single-use items. For over 20 years, thousands of dedicated volunteers in our Adopt-a-Beach clean-up program have removed more than 9.7 million individual pieces of trash and more than 535,000 pounds of litter from Great Lakes shorelines. Of that litter, 86% was plastic. While individuals cutting back on plastics can make a big difference, ultimately, we need stronger rules that hold plastic producers responsible for the plastic pollution they create. Consider learning more about these policies and contacting your representatives in support of them.
For invasive species, making sure boats and trailers are free of all aquatic organisms and plants before putting in or trailering out is key. There’s also power in numbers. Organize your fellow boaters at your marina or boating club. You can even become an Alliance for the Great Lakes Ambassador or host your own Adopt-a-Beach cleanup.
Community is especially critical in tackling broader environmental challenges. Talk to your neighbors and spread the word about the importance of the Great Lakes. Reach out to your elected officials about restoring local shorelines and cleaning up pollution. Did you know there’s an important bill pending right now in the U.S. Congress called the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative? The bill renews critical funding for projects across the Great Lakes that’s set to expire. It goes to habitat restoration, helps farmers with field run-off that fuels algal blooms, cleans up legacy pollution and toxic sediments, and prevents the establishment or spread of destructive invasive species.
To date, the GLRI program has funded more than 7,563 individual projects totaling $3.7 billion, greatly improving the quality of life throughout the region. The GLRI also provides major economic benefits, as it is estimated that for every dollar spent, an additional three dollars of value is added to the regional economy.
At the Alliance for the Great Lakes, we work across the region to protect, conserve, and restore the Great Lakes, ensuring healthy water in the lakes and in our communities for all generations of people and wildlife. The Lakes’ boating community is a vibrant and critical component of that effort, and we invite you to learn more about the Alliance and how you can get involved.
This piece was first published in Great Lakes Scuttlebutt magazine.
The post How Boaters Can Help Protect the Great Lakes appeared first on Alliance for the Great Lakes.
News - Alliance for the Great Lakes
News - Alliance for the Great Lakes
https://greatlakes.org/2025/03/how-boaters-can-help-protect-the-great-lakes/
By Kelly House, Bridge Michigan
The Great Lakes News Collaborative includes Bridge Michigan; Circle of Blue; Great Lakes Now at Detroit PBS; Michigan Public, Michigan’s NPR News Leader; and The Narwhal who work together to bring audiences news and information about the impact of climate change, pollution, and aging infrastructure on the Great Lakes and drinking water.
Great Lakes Now
https://www.greatlakesnow.org/2025/03/michigan-lawmakers-consider-more-subsidies-incentives-for-nuclear-power/
It seems like every year winter creeps forward into being one of my favorite seasons. It’s not lost on me that this budding love affair began once I gained the courage to venture into Northern Michigan during the months almost everyone will tell you to avoid. The truth is: Metro Detroit isn’t made for the cold and snow, so I’m allowing the North Woods to change my mind.
Great Lakes Now
https://www.greatlakesnow.org/2025/03/ian-outside-a-detroiters-journey-to-calumet-for-copperdog/
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The post Protected: Lake Winnebago, Wisconsin: A Powerhouse Waterway with a Changing Past appeared first on Fox-Wolf Watershed Alliance.
Fox-Wolf Watershed Alliance
https://fwwa.org/2025/03/06/lake-winnebago-history-dams-impact/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=lake-winnebago-history-dams-impact
Green Bay, WI
https://www.weather.gov/grb/030525_winterstorm
Current watches, warnings, and advisories for Brown County (WIC009) WI
Current watches, warnings, and advisories for Brown County (WIC009) WI
https://api.weather.gov/alerts/urn:oid:2.49.0.1.840.0.26a99991c7519fd974697d5192517f41a116f04d.004.1.cap
Current watches, warnings, and advisories for Brown County (WIC009) WI
Current watches, warnings, and advisories for Brown County (WIC009) WI
https://api.weather.gov/alerts/urn:oid:2.49.0.1.840.0.ce4aced518a3a1aa9a1dcd1ea8cf4110b1dacc19.005.1.cap
A question looms for the Great Lakes: with our water protected from diversion to far-flung locales, are we equally ready for an influx of big new water users here at home?
The Great Lakes hold the world’s largest supply of surface freshwater. It is a truly massive amount of water – but also a finite resource that must be managed responsibly for today and tomorrow. The 8 Great Lakes states and 2 Canadian provinces wisely recognized this when they agreed to the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence River Basin Water Resources Compact (Compact) and provincial Agreement. The Compact and Agreement do four things:
The Compact’s prohibition on diversions ensures that Great Lakes water stays in the Great Lakes Basin. Proposals to pipe Great Lakes water for any use to a location far outside the Great Lakes region are legally not in the cards – the Compact prohibits it. Any exception to the diversion prohibition can happen only in a county that is partially in the Basin, and the water must be returned after use. Beyond the legal constraints, moving vast amounts of Great Lakes water away from our region makes no economic or logistic sense. The good news is this means that Great Lakes water will be staying in the Great Lakes.
But our abundance also makes the Great Lakes region attractive to industries that require large amounts of water.
Historically, this meant steel production, petroleum refining, agriculture, and power generation. Today’s growth industries look somewhat different. To be clear, all large-scale water use has the potential to impact our water supply. However, the rapid growth of digital consumption of generative artificial intelligence (gen AI), cloud computing, internet of things, and digital services is driving an unprecedented demand for new data centers. Growth projections vary and depend on a variety of factors, but we can make a few generalizations about the trends in this region:
Hyperscale data centers can take up over 10,000 square feet of floor space and house over 5,000 servers that demand water and electricity 24 hours a day. How much water a data center needs varies depending on the size and type of cooling technology used, but hyperscale data centers can use between 1 and 5 million gallons of water per day (MGD) when evaporative cooling, currently the most common method, is the method used.
To put this in perspective, a hyperscale data center that uses 365 million gallons in a year (or 1 MGD) is equivalent to what roughly 12,000 Americans use in a year.
Most of the water used in evaporative cooling is used consumptively – meaning the water is not returned to the watershed, but rather, as the name implies, lost to evaporation. The increased pace of this consumption is also alarming. A new report shows that in 2023, U.S. data centers directly consumed about 17.4 billion gallons of water, and the authors expect that figure to double by 2028. Yet only 1% of the water in the Great Lakes is renewed each year, underscoring the hard choices and complex planning that goes into keeping sustainable amounts of water available.
Other cooling methods such as liquid immersion or direct-to-chip cooling consume less water and electricity by directly using water to cool equipment but can introduce contaminants in the process. These methods may be more efficient from a water consumption standpoint but will pose water quality questions. Air cooling is another alternative but uses more electricity. Finally, the reuse of non-potable water and recirculation have the potential to offset consumptive use, but these technologies are not contemplated by most states’ laws and therefore take more time and effort to finalize partnerships and to permit. There also isn’t good data to show how many data centers are adopting them.
Generating electricity to meet data centers’ needs via coal, natural gas, or nuclear fired power plants also requires water. Some refer to this relationship between water and energy generation as part of the “water-energy nexus.” Per the Great Lakes Regional Water Use Database, 70% of Great Lakes reported water use in 2023 was associated with generating electrical power. That’s overall water use (not the percentage of consumptive use), and that percentage generally matches each state’s water use as well. Because the electric utility is the entity that reports its water use and corresponding consumptive use to the Database, we don’t have a clear understanding of what the total water footprint of an individual data center or the data center industry is.
New research also shows that it’s taken just four years for the total capacity of hyperscale data centers (megawatts of load a data center can handle) to double, while both the number of facilities and average capacity rapidly climb. To meet the demand on existing power grids, states will have to add capacity while also meeting state renewable energy targets. In some states, that may necessitate reactivating or expanding nuclear power plants. That’s already happening in Michigan (Palisades), New York (Three Mile Island), and Ontario (Bruce). In others like Ohio, it’s driving the construction of new natural gas plants. The corresponding increase in the cumulative use of water by data centers – both in their indirect energy needs and direct cooling needs must be better quantified and understood.
Data centers should be transparent about their total water footprint from the early stages of proposed development. They should also have systems in place to accurately measure water use. It’s estimated that less than one-third of data centers are currently tracking water usage. In the Great Lakes states, when a large water user obtains its water through a municipal water system that has the capacity to supply it, the obligation to track and report water usage rests with that system – not the water user.
Without information about what a data center proposes to use up front and reporting to determine how much water is being used, it’s not possible to fully understand and assess the impact of an individual data center or any large water using industry on a water resource. Better accounting and reporting requirements are needed to guide decision making and protect water resources.
At the same time, state legislatures, economic development agencies, and local governments are inviting data centers to locate in the Great Lakes region with tax incentives and other benefits packages. But when decisions are being made about where to incentivize development, water doesn’t appear to be holistically factored into the equation. That can and should change as states (like Ohio and Indiana) are undertaking studies to better understand water demand and capacity. If not, states may max out an area with data centers and not have the capacity to handle any other type of growth or economic development. Without careful planning, it could also have unintended consequences like depleting groundwater availability in existing private drinking water wells and wells used for agricultural irrigation.
A data center can employ as few as 10 to more than 100 people, depending on its size – but supports 6.5 jobs for every one job directly employed. If data centers turn out to be the economic development engine they have been touted as, then that may drive population growth, further increasing the demand for both water and electricity. For example, the Columbus, Ohio metropolitan area, where data centers are being constructed at a very rapid rate, was the fastest growing city in the U.S. for the second half of 2023.
Climate change impacts on surface and groundwater supplies compounds these issues and underscores the need for detailed planning and informed resource management. State laws and regulations are currently not designed to proactively manage water resources in anticipation of how climate change will reshape surface and groundwater flows, large scale water uses, and population patterns. This is especially true for groundwater. While the majestic surface waters of the Great Lakes are prominent in the minds of many, between 40-75% of Great Lakes state residents get their drinking water from groundwater – much of it connected to the Great Lakes.
States should be examining all large-scale water uses of groundwater, including for data centers, to determine whether they’re appropriate in a given watershed or basin and whether those uses pose enough of a threat to other nearby watersheds that the use should be avoided altogether. This examination should include assessment of not only whether supply can meet demand, but what impact the use will have environmentally and ecologically on the resource.
As climate change continues to dramatically alter precipitation patterns, laws will also need to change and adapt in concert to ensure there’s enough water to support economic development and protect our most precious shared freshwater resource, the Great Lakes.
The post Data Centers Are Increasing in the Great Lakes at What Cost? appeared first on Alliance for the Great Lakes.
News - Alliance for the Great Lakes
News - Alliance for the Great Lakes
https://greatlakes.org/2025/03/data-centers-are-increasing-in-the-great-lakes-at-what-cost/
By Zoya Teirstein
This story was originally published by Grist. Sign up for Grist’s weekly newsletter here.
On Tuesday, President Donald Trump initiated a trade war with Canada and Mexico, America’s two largest trading partners. Following through on weeks of threats, he imposed 25 percent tariffs on imported goods from Mexico and Canada and a lower 10 percent tariff on imports of Canadian energy resources.
Great Lakes Now
https://www.greatlakesnow.org/2025/03/how-trumps-trade-war-could-impact-us-electricity-prices-and-state-climate-plans/
Current watches, warnings, and advisories for Brown County (WIC009) WI
Current watches, warnings, and advisories for Brown County (WIC009) WI
https://api.weather.gov/alerts/urn:oid:2.49.0.1.840.0.4bfe8b8a47a8f4133beca92c9af71a96dd8f2cd5.001.1.cap
Current watches, warnings, and advisories for Brown County (WIC009) WI
Current watches, warnings, and advisories for Brown County (WIC009) WI
https://api.weather.gov/alerts/urn:oid:2.49.0.1.840.0.bdcd1a0739ebf282aefee666e7def7a12b986923.005.1.cap
As the Trump administration continues to take unprecedented steps to cut federal spending, a coalition of regional agencies is appealing for continued funding for Great Lakes restoration. Read the full story by the Democrat and Chronicle.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250305-great-lakes-funding
Michigan environmental advocates are making the case to continue funding for climate research as the federal government looks to drastically reduce its workforce. Attorneys have filed multiple lawsuits against firings and argue that funding cuts threaten the health of the Great Lakes. Read the full story by WWTV-TV – Cadillac, MI.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250305-funding-cuts
Canada-U.S. relations are at a historic nadir in 2025, but, despite the two countries’ spiraling political relationship, construction is pressing on for the enormous Gordie Howe International Bridge — a mammoth representation of this once-unbreakable alliance planned to connect Michigan and Ontario. Read the full story by blogTO.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250305-border-crossing-status
The state of Michigan announced that 32 projects will share $3.6 million in funding through the Michigan Invasive Species Grant Program for efforts that address the prevention, detection, eradication and control of aquatic and terrestrial invasive species. Read the full story by the Manistee News Advocate.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250305-michigan-grant-program
The common tern, a small colonial waterbird that breeds in the Great Lakes basin, was designated as a threatened species in Michigan. Human disturbance and displacement by other species are to blame. Read the full story by Great Lakes Now.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250305-endangered-terns
The Brandon Road Project, a billion-dollar project to block invasive carp from entering Lake Michigan, has been halted over worries the Trump administration will pull their end of the funding. Read the full story by Outdoor News.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250305-carp-barrier-hault
Wisconsin-based walleye-farming and aquaponics firm, Aqua Garden, has signed the 100% Great Lakes Fish Pledge, a commitment by fish farmers and processors to sell all parts of their fish in an effort to reduce byproduct waste. Read the full story by SeafoodSource.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250305-fish-pledge
Last week’s cuts to staff at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration are raising alarm among Great Lakes advocates, who say critical water quality and weather forecasting efforts will be compromised. Read the full story by Planet Detroit.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250305-noaa-layoffs
Research continues to find the cause of Lake Michigan’s mysterious holes that were found while looking for a shipwreck in summer 2024. Read the full story by WGBA – TV – Green Bay, WI.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250305-lake-michigan-sinkholes
Chautauqua County in New York is continuing to help the village of Fredonia explore the possibility of getting water from Lake Erie. The Chautauqua County Water District would like to sell water from Lake Erie to the village of Fredonia. Read the full story by the Observer.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250305-fredonia-water