Summary

The Alliance for the Great Lakes (AGL) is hiring a Research Fellow (Fellow) to advance the scientific basis for AGL’s strategic research, policy development, and advocacy to protect, restore, and conserve the Great Lakes for the people and ecosystems that depend on them. This is a one or two-year fellowship position, with the second-year dependent on satisfactory performance. 

The Fellow will be responsible for supporting the Alliance’s research agenda and facilitating the work of the Alliance’s Science Council, with the opportunity to pursue research interests that are related to the Alliance’s two immediate priority areas: 

  • Sustainable Water Management: Assess the existing and potential cumulative effects of large water-using industries on water quantity and quality in the Great Lakes region. 
  • Plastic Pollution: Evaluate what is known about plastic pollution in the Great Lakes, including the primary sources, environmental and human health impacts, associated costs, and opportunities for control.  

The Fellow will conduct literature reviews and meta-analyses of existing research, publish and otherwise disseminate findings, and propose specific ways that the Alliance can advance our efforts to address these critical issues. To successfully fulfill this research charge, the Fellow will collaborate with a newly formed organizational Science Council composed of external academic and technical experts. Additionally, the Fellow may be called upon to evaluate state and federal rulemakings, agency actions, and proposed legislation for scientific rigor and collaborate with Alliance policy staff to propose opportunities to strengthen Great Lakes protections. 

Responsibilities

Research – 60% 

  • Develop the research agenda for the identified priority areas, including research review questions and appropriate research methodologies  
  • Conduct independent and collaborative research projects aligned to the research agenda, including secondary and review research on environmental stressors 
  • Collect, analyze, and interpret data, maintaining detailed and accurate records of all research work 
  • Share preliminary findings with Alliance staff and the Research Advisory Council and incorporate feedback 
  • Draft materials that convey findings in various forms, including but not limited to written reports, data visualizations, and fact sheets 
  • Provide mentorship to the Alliance’s Policy & Research staff to expand their research skills 

Facilitation – 20% 

  • Collaborate with the Vice President of Programs and Vice Chair for Policy to staff the Research Advisory Council 
  • Set Council agendas, compile input, and conduct any necessary follow-up from meetings 
  • Share research progress with relevant Alliance staff 
  • Partner with Alliance staff to leverage findings toward policy advocacy opportunities 

Communication – 20% 

  • Draft two or more white papers or manuscripts and submit them for publication  
  • Work with the Alliance communications team to create digital communication opportunities, such as webinars and website posts 
  • Convene a public forum for discussion of one or more of the issue areas as a culminating activity 
  • Submit abstracts to relevant conferences, including but not limited to the International Association for Great Lakes Research (IAGLR) 
  • Work with Alliance staff and Board of Directors to present to Great Lakes convening bodies such as the International Joint Commission (IJC) Science Advisory Board, Cooperative Institute for Great Lakes Research (CIGLR), etc. 

Additional Duties 

As assigned or needed. 

Work Relationships 

This position will report to the Director of Water Resources. The Fellow will coordinate closely with the Vice President for Programs and the Board of Directors’ Vice Chair for Policy, as well as other members of the Alliance’s research and policy, government affairs, and communications staff. 

Supervisory Responsibilities 

None 

Physical Demands/Work Environment 

No physical demand. This is a primarily remote position, with the expectation to travel to the Alliance’s Chicago office or other locations in the Great Lakes region a few times a year. 

Knowledge/Skills

  • Ph.D. in the natural or social sciences, with prior demonstration of significant environmental coursework and research relevant to the Alliance’s mission and initial issue focus as described in this announcement 
  • Demonstrated excellence in conducting secondary and review research on environmental stressors, particularly within the freshwater environment 
  • Strong written and oral communication skills; preference given to applicants with a proven publication record and experience with public speaking 
  • Experiences connecting research findings to public policy pathways and engaging with natural resource management at the federal and state levels are a plus 
  • Ability to translate complex scientific concepts into language that lay audiences, such as decision makers and advocates, can understand without compromising scientific integrity 
  • Preference for existing familiarity with the Great Lakes freshwater environment or research experience in other large freshwater systems 
  • Understands and upholds Alliance for the Great Lakes values of community, relationships, courage, integrity, and optimism.  
  • Demonstrated alignment with our external and internal operating principles of justice, equity, diversity, and inclusion. 
  • The selected candidate must be able to pass a background check.  

Job Parameters

This position is full-time and consistent with Alliance employment policy. The Alliance has defined salary ranges that are evaluated annually, and it is customary for candidates to join at the lower half of the range to leave room for learning and development in the role. It is uncommon for starting salaries to fall above the mid-point. The salary range for this position begins at $60,000, and we negotiate salaries with final candidates based on their experience in similar roles and expertise related to the qualifications.

Excellent benefits, including medical, dental, short- and long-term disability, life insurance, FSA, 11 paid holidays plus the business days between 12/26 and 12/30 (staff who must work on any paid holidays may take those holidays at another time subject to the employee handbook), 3 weeks’ annual vacation to start + PTO, and Fidelity 401(k) with employer match of up to 6% of salary, eligible after 30 days.

This is a primarily remote position with a strong preference for location in the Chicago area, with an expectation to work from the office once per week. Fully remote staff are expected to travel to the Alliance’s Chicago office a few times a year.

Application Process

Please email your cover letter, resume or curriculum vitae, and three professional references to hr@greatlakes.org. Make sure to include the job title in the subject line. Additionally, be prepared to provide the following upon request: (1) your graduate school transcript, and (2) a writing sample, such as a paper, memorandum, or article for which you were the lead author or principal writer. 

Applications will be accepted and reviewed on a rolling basis starting on April 6th, 2026, and until the position is filled. Materials should be compatible with Microsoft Word or Adobe Acrobat. Applicants will receive confirmation of receipt of their materials, further guidance, and updates about the hiring process by e-mail, with interviews provided for finalists. No phone inquiries, please. 

About the Alliance for the Great Lakes

Our vision is a thriving Great Lakes and healthy water that all life can rely on, today and far into the future. 

The mission of the Alliance for the Great Lakes is 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. 

To achieve our vision and mission, everyone in our organization will live our values of Community, Relationships, Courage, Integrity, and Optimism, and weave the principles of Justice, Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion into all our work.  

 For more information about the Alliance’s programs and work, please visit us online at www.greatlakes.org

The post Research Fellow  appeared first on Alliance for the Great Lakes.

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News - Alliance for the Great Lakes

https://greatlakes.org/2026/03/research-fellow/

Michelle Farley

By Kathiann M. Kowalski

This story was originally published by Canary Media.


Ohio regulators have blocked yet another major solar project because of local pushback, even though a significant number of public comments opposing the array appear to be fabricated. It’s the latest blow to solar in a state that defers to local governments on renewable energy, but not on fossil fuels.

The Ohio Power Siting Board decided last Thursday to deny a permit for the 94-megawatt Crossroads Solar Grazing Center, which would combine solar panels with sheep grazing in central Ohio. Although the project otherwise met all legal requirements, the board concluded that it ​“fails to serve the public interest.”

Regulators acknowledged that Crossroads Solar would have statewide benefits, create jobs, and increase local tax revenue. But they said the project’s merits are outweighed by the existence of ​“consistent and substantial opposition” from local governments and nearby residents.

Critics of the decision are troubled that the regulators basically shrugged off the fact that a substantial number of public comments filed in opposition to Crossroads Solar were duplicative, anonymous, or seemingly faked. A recent Canary Media review found that dozens of comments contained apparent lies about people’s names or residence in Morrow County, where the project site is located. The board acknowledged those concerns in its ruling but asserted that substantial public opposition existed regardless of the potentially fabricated comments.

The controversy about those false comments, along with anonymous or multiple submissions, feeds into broader criticism that the board has reduced renewable energy siting to a local popularity contest.

“When the volume of public input is prioritized over its substance, it weakens trust in the process and makes it harder to build the energy system Ohio needs,” said Nathan Rutschilling, managing director of energy policy for the Ohio Environmental Council.

Like many states, Ohio faces soaring electricity demand and rising power bills. Clean energy could help address those challenges — provided it can get built.

“If we’re going to deny solar the ability to compete in Ohio’s marketplace, I think that’s going to result in an artificially high price for Ohio consumers,” said Democratic state Sen. Kent Smith, who is a nonvoting member of the siting board. He described the board’s Crossroads Solar denial as ​“a dangerous thing for the state in terms of both affordability and reliability.”

An uphill battle for Crossroads Solar

State and local restrictions on renewable energy have proliferated across the country in recent years, and Ohio is no exception. The state’s wind and solar developers face hurdles that fossil fuel companies do not, thanks to a 2021 law that lets counties ban renewable energy developments — an authority they do not have over oil, gas, and coal projects.

Morrow County instituted such a ban across half its townships last year. But because Crossroads Solar was in the regional grid operator’s queue before the 2021 state law took effect, it is exempt from the blanket prohibition.

However, for the past few years, the Ohio Power Siting Board and its staff have denied or recommended against permits for solar farms when all nearby local governments have been against a project. The Ohio Supreme Court has not yet ruled on a legal challenge to that practice, even though oral argument was held more than a year ago.

Initially, it seemed as if Crossroads Solar might escape this fate. Although Morrow County commissioners and the boards of trustees in two townships where parts of the project would be built were against it, the board in a third township — Cardington — remained neutral. Since opposition wasn’t unanimous, the siting board’s staff recommended in early December that regulators deem the project in the public interest.

But shortly after that recommendation, meeting minutes show that one Cardington township trustee changed his position because the staff report ​“did not set well with him.” That led the Cardington trustees to pass a 2–1 resolution opposing Crossroads Solar. The switch-up ultimately resulted in the siting board staff reversing its stance, filing testimony in January that encouraged regulators to rule against the project.

The Power Siting Board relied on that reversal to declare that Crossroads Solar was not in the public interest. It also asserted that there was ​“strong, united opposition to the project” by people in the area. It’s worth noting, however, that many locals supported Crossroads Solar. Its developer, Open Road Renewables, found that nearly half the public comments from people in nearby towns approved of the project, once the duplicate, anonymous, and unverifiable submissions were removed.

Siting practices under fire

The Crossroads Solar case exposes deeper flaws in Ohio’s renewable energy siting process, some say.

It’s problematic that a single person’s vote on a town council ​“essentially derailed the whole project,” said Heidi Gorovitz Robertson, a professor at Cleveland State University’s College of Law. She argued that instead of reciting objections, regulators should evaluate whether those concerns have a factual basis and whether a developer’s plans already address them — and then decide whether any remaining issues actually justify denying a permit.

In the case of Crossroads Solar, Open Road Renewables agreed to address specific concerns about the project. In a late December settlement with the Ohio Environmental Council, the Ohio Chamber of Commerce, and various landowners, the company promised to follow best practices to keep roads clear and clean, use panels with an antireflective coating, minimize impacts to agriculture during construction, file a sheep-grazing plan to manage vegetation, work with a landscaping company to screen the panels from public view, and more.

But the Power Siting Board wasn’t swayed by the compromise, noting that the local governments and individual opponents who intervened in the case didn’t take part in the settlement negotiations, despite being invited to do so.

The board also appeared to buy into several obviously unfounded objections to Crossroads Solar, said Craig Adair, vice president of development at Open Road Renewables. For example, its ruling cited community skepticism about the company’s intention to graze sheep around the panels, since no contracts for such an arrangement had yet been signed. The board also noted opponents’ fears that the permit would later be transferred to another firm that wouldn’t make good on Open Road Renewables’ promises.

But the application’s commitment to use sheep would become part of the permit conditions, Adair noted. And, as a matter of basic contract law, any company that acquired the project would be subject to the same conditions as Open Road Renewables regarding permits, leases, easements, and other agreements.

The board also didn’t examine whether local governments’ objections to Crossroads Solar were based on misinformation, such as a laundry list of concerns about fires, contaminated drinking water, heat islands, and stray voltage.

“It’s taking fact and truth out of the equation, and it’s truly about concerns and politics,” said Doug Herling, a vice president at Open Road Renewables.

Instead, the board ​“denied a project that has no fuel requirements while we’re in the middle of an oil and gas crisis,” Herling continued, referencing the current supply disruptions caused by war in the Middle East. He also pointed out that solar can be built faster than gas plants, which face yearslong supply chain backlogs, and it doesn’t emit planet-warming and health-harming pollution.

Herling and Adair said the company plans to ask the board to reconsider its ruling. 

Meanwhile, the permit denial ​“sends a dangerous signal to investors,” Adair said.

“I wish the state of Ohio luck in meeting its power needs and keeping power prices from going through the roof,” he said. For renewable energy developers, ​“it’s now a game of Russian roulette as to whether you would get a permit and what those criteria are.” 

The post Ohio blocks big solar farm, despite apparently fake public comments appeared first on Great Lakes Now.

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Canary Media

On Earth Day, April 22nd, at 10am, explore the Fish City living near the waters of a nuclear power plant and get your questions answered LIVE! 

Using cutting-edge underwater robotic camera technology, discover the hidden world beneath the surface of the world’s largest freshwater ecosystem. Explore the aquatic metropolis living near the fish-filled outflow of a nuclear power plant on Ontario’s Bruce Peninsula, where the warm water creates a unique gathering space for a diverse range of species. 

Hosts: Zach Melnick, Inspired Planet Productions

Yvonne Drebert, Inspired Planet Productions   Hidden Below Livestreams are a series of live, underwater explorations of the Great Lakes. Presented by Inspired Planet Productions and Great Lakes Now

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Great Lakes Now

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Mila Murray

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A recent study explores the importance of more diverse viewpoints and ethical considerations when working in archaeology, especially involving Indigenous artifacts.

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Great Lakes Echo

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Due to climate change, the Great Lakes are heating up faster than others globally. Of all the lakes in the world, Lake Superior was identified as one of the fastest warming in 2021, and its neighbors aren’t far behind. Read the full story by Pelham Today.

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Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20260325-warming-regions-ontario-climate-data

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Below Cleveland, Ohio, in a subterranean world many surface dwellers don’t know exists, miners extract a crucial winter mineral — salt. The Whiskey Island salt mine, owned by food giant Cargill, helps supply road salt across the Northeast and Great Lakes, where a colder, snowier-than-usual winter has driven demand. Many municipalities exhausted supplies that typically last through spring. Read the full story by the Associated Press.

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Great Lakes Commission

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https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20260325-lake-erie-salt-mine-winter-roads

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According to a recent poll, 55% of Chicago residents say the Lake Michigan shorefront is Chicago’s most distinguishing feature. Lake Michigan is considered important by 94% of adults in the city and suburban Cook County, Illinois, with 59% saying it’s very or extremely important. Read the full story by Crain’s Chicago Business.

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https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20260325-lake-michigan-chicago-defining-assest

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The Great Lakes shipping season begins when the Soo Locks, which connect Lake Superior with the lower Great Lakes, open for ship traffic just after midnight on Wednesday. But vessels begin to stir several days before the locks open and the first ship of the season left Duluth on Monday. This new season starts with cautious optimism from port officials, who hope for a rebound following a challenging previous year. Read the full story by MPR News.

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Great Lakes Commission

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https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20260325-greatlakes-shipping-season-duluth

Hannah Reynolds

Lake Huron’s water levels are expected to fall about 11–12 inches below the long-term average and several inches below last year, reflecting a broader trend of declining levels across the Lake Michigan–Huron system. The drop is noticeable along shorelines and could affect navigation and coastal conditions, though it is part of normal variability influenced by weather and climate patterns. Read the full story by the Manitoulin Expositor.  

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https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20260325-lake-huron-dropping

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As the St. Lawrence Seaway began its 68th navigational season this week, questions remain about what its operating season should be. The previous season ended in January, the latest closing date in history, as ice slowed down the waterway. Read the full story by WWNY-TV – Watertown, NY.

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Great Lakes Commission

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https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20260325-st-lawrence-seaway-shipping-season

Hannah Reynolds

The Great Lakes region is wasting large amounts of usable “waste heat” from sources like power plants, data centers, and sewage systems, which could instead be captured to provide clean, low-cost energy for heating and cooling. While the technology exists, progress is slow due to financial, political, and organizational barriers rather than technical limitations. Read the full story by Great Lakes Now. 

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20260325-greatlakes-wasting-massive-source-clean-energy

Hannah Reynolds

Water use from data centers is increasing across the Great Lakes region. To help make sense of the impacts, we released a new guide for residents, grassroots organizations, and local leaders seeking clear, accessible information. Join our experts to learn about the guide, the latest on data center development in the Great Lakes, the questions communities need to ask data center developers, and more.

Panelists:

  • Addison Caruso, Staff Attorney, Fair Shake Environmental Legal Service
  • Andrea Densham, Director of Regional Government Affairs, Alliance for the Great Lakes
  • Harshini Ratnayaka, Manager of Government Affairs and Policy, Save the Dunes
  • Helena Volzer, Senior Source Water Policy Manager, Alliance for the Great Lakes
  • Moderated by Don Carr, Media Director, Alliance for the Great Lakes

Related Links:

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News - Alliance for the Great Lakes

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tfazzini

This story is part of a Great Lakes News Collaborative series called Shockwave: Rising energy demand and the future of the Great Lakes. The Great Lakes region is in the midst of a seismic energy shakeup, from skyrocketing data center demand and a nuclear energy boom, to expanding renewables and electrification. In 2026, the Great Lakes News Collaborative will explore how shifting supply and demand affect the region and its waters.

The collaborative’s five newsrooms — Bridge Michigan, Circle of Blue, Great Lakes Now, Michigan Public and The Narwhal — are funded by the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation.


The energy system in the Great Lakes region, as in most parts of North America, is wasteful. Stupendously wasteful.

Consider these data points. Two-thirds of the energy generated by the 2,100-megawatt Pickering Nuclear Generating Station, east of Toronto, comes in the form of heat, not electricity. The excess heat is transferred to cooling water that is dumped into Lake Ontario.

For data centers, a booming, voracious energy user, nearly all the electricity that enters a facility to power servers turns into heat. Ejecting that heat so that the servers continue to support Zoom calls and ChatGPT queries can consume gobs of energy and water.

Even underground business and household waste holds wasted energy. Sewage flows in pipes at an average temperature of roughly 60 degrees F, a thermal energy source waiting for an enterprising soul to tap into and extract the heat.

A movement is underway to do just that – mine the region’s power plants, data centers, and sewers for heat and use it to develop cleaner, cheaper energy that helps reduce or remove carbon emissions from heating and cooling. The same practices cut the expense of adding new electric generating capacity.

Such a transformation is certainly possible and has been embraced in northern Europe. But it will not be easy here. Though the physics and equipment for waste-heat recovery are tested and proven, other barriers – financial, organizational, and political – are more formidable hurdles for a region and a country in which energy efficiency is less valued than energy expansion.

“It’s not a technology issue,” said Luke Gaalswyk, president and CEO of Ever-Green Energy, a district energy company based in St. Paul, Minnesota, that is eyeing wastewater as a heat source. “The engineering of this is well understood. It’s an awareness issue, it’s a funding issue, it’s a priority issue. We, the United States, don’t have the same policy frameworks or funding mechanisms that Europeans do as it relates to these sorts of projects and incentivizing waste-heat recovery.”

Gaalswyk and others see tantalizing opportunities for waste heat in aiding the region’s electric transition. The benefits include cheaper energy, less exposure to fossil fuel price fluctuations, fewer carbon emissions, less land disruption to build new generating and transmission capacity, and less thermal pollution into waterways. But getting there, they say, requires foundational shifts in understanding, attitudes, and public policy. 

Digital Crossroad, a data center facility in Hammond, Indiana, sits on the shore of Lake Michigan. Nearly all the electricity that enters a data center turns into waste heat. Photo © J. Carl Ganter/Circle of Blue

A New Energy Scenario 

Electricity demand in the Great Lakes is growing, in some states for the first time in decades. If the projected buildout occurs, data centers will gobble electricity while the climate-friendly push to electrify everything boosts demand for electrons. 

Thermal networks, such as district heating systems that circulate hot water or steam to multiple buildings, garner less attention. Comparable to a home radiator at scale, they have been part of the urban energy landscape for more than a century, predating the invention of the gas-powered automobile. College campuses have them, as do hospital complexes. Cities like St. Paul, Chicago, Rochester, and Lansing use district heating or cooling in their downtown cores. Toronto has a district cooling system that uses water drawn from deep in Lake Ontario to cool 80 buildings.

Waste heat – or, heat that is currently regarded as waste – could be a new reservoir of energy for district heating systems.

To find one source, building owners need only to look beneath their basements. Promoting sewer thermal energy is a passion project for Paul Kohl, the board chair of the Sewer Thermal Energy Network, a trade association founded in 2023 to advocate for an unsung energy source. “We thought, let’s get people talking about it,” he said.

Kohl’s primary pitch is that sewer thermal energy goes hand-in-hand with reducing greenhouse gas emissions from buildings. Say an office complex wants to stop burning fuel oil for heat and instead wants to install a heat pump. An air-source heat pump, which extracts heat from ambient air, is a common option. But it can be problematic in an era of constrained electricity supply.

“What we’re finding is there are certain entities that are really excited about electrifying their building stock but they’re running into electrical demand problems,” Kohl said. “They can’t get enough electricity from the supplier.”

Enter sewer thermal. The building owner could instead tap into the sewer line running beneath the property and circulate the wastewater through a water-based heat pump that extracts the heat. The sewage is always contained and is not a health risk for those in the building. The water-based heat pump still uses electricity, but because of water’s superior capacity to transfer heat, its electricity demand is about half that of an air-based unit. In short, the well-understood thermal dynamics of water translates into substantial energy savings.

The sewer is a heat resource that constantly renews itself – people take showers, do laundry, and wish dishes every day, using hot water in the process. The heat that went into the water could be used again. So why aren’t there more such systems? Kohl cited two major obstacles. One is knee-jerk revulsion, typically from the general public. “The ‘ick’ factor,” he said. 

The second is an unwillingness from utilities to allow other organizations to access their pipe infrastructure when it is not the utility’s mandate to do so. The utilities, he said, are more concerned with regulatory compliance and ensuring the integrity of their pipes.

Asked if his organization operates like a matchmaker, uniting parties that otherwise might not have met, Kohl turned the analogy around. A matchmaker works only if there are willing participants, he said. “A lot of water and wastewater utilities are the consummate bachelors. So they’re like, ‘If I never have to do this, great.’”

What brings utilities into the market? Progressive leadership, Kohl said.

The 800-megawatt Palisades Nuclear Plant, in Covert Township, Michigan, shuttered in 2022. Holtec, the plant owner, is preparing to restart the facility while also building a pair of 340-megawatt small modular reactors on the site. Photo J. Carl Ganter/Circle of Blue

Leading Lights

That leadership is on display in pockets around the Great Lakes region, from both the public and private sectors. 

In St. Paul, Ever-Green Energy has drawn up plans to tap the heat in the 172,000,000 gallons of wastewater that flows daily out of the Metropolitan Council’s treatment plant and into the Mississippi River. The $150 million project would use the wastewater heat to replace the natural gas that currently fuels half of the district energy system, which is the largest hot water system in the United States.

Project proponents, including the City of St. Paul and Ever-Green, applied for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s climate pollution reduction grant in 2024 but they were not selected. (Ever-Green’s wastewater heat project in Duluth also was not selected for the grant.) Though Clean Heat St. Paul, as the project is known, is currently unfunded, leaders continue to advocate for it.

“It presents an enormous opportunity for our community, for our state, to build a project that would generate global recognition around what’s possible with linking up wastewater and district heating,” Gaalswyk said.

Across the border, Toronto Western Hospital, part of the city’s leading hospital system, partnered with Noventa, an energy company, to install the world’s largest raw sewage thermal system. Completed in 2025, the project provides about 90 percent of the hospital’s heating and cooling. 

Also in Toronto, Enwave, a district energy company, operates the Deep Lake Water Cooling system that uses cold water drawn from Lake Ontario to cool 115 buildings before the water is sent to taps as drinking water. Enwave, which operates systems across eastern Canada, is now adapting that system to utilize waste heat from the cooling operations so that heating and cooling work in tandem. At the same time, the company is considering sewer heat recovery from a wastewater treatment plant in Mississauga, Ontario.

“The idea is you’re trying to capture waste heat in whatever form you can find it in,” said Carson Gemmill, vice president for solutions and innovations at Enwave.

More trade associations are embracing that logic. The Boltzmann Institute, a group of engineers focused on obstacles to electrification, persuaded the Ontario Society of Professional Engineers to start a campaign in September 2025 to advocate for thermal energy systems. Since the province is considering new nuclear power plants and building small modular reactors, including four 300-megawatt units at Darlington Nuclear Generating Station, the institute would like to see their designs incorporate waste heat reuse.

“In Ontario, the heat rejected from nuclear power plants is quite a bit greater than the heat required for heating with natural gas in the whole province,” said Michael Wiggin, a Boltzmann Institute director who is also leading OSPE’s thermal energy advocacy. “So there’s an enormous possibility to use the heat from these power plants to heat cities.”

Waste heat can flip conventional narratives on their head. Data centers today are maligned for their energy needs. Yet what if their waste heat was put to beneficial use? 

That’s the objective in Lansing, Michigan, where Deep Green, a London-based company, has proposed a 24-megawatt, $120 million data center project that would transfer its waste heat into a district heating system run by the Lansing Board of Water and Light, a water and power provider. The Lansing City Council is set to vote on the project on April 6.

“Previously, we didn’t consider heat as an asset because we didn’t need to,” Mark Lee, CEO of Deep Green, wrote in a January 2026 blog post. “There was an abundance of power, cheap energy, and less awareness of environmental impact. That’s changing: electricity prices are high, grids are congested, and there’s pressure to meet net-zero and [environmental, social, and governance] targets.”

Barriers to Entry

Even with these first steps, energy experts agree that North America, as a whole, is playing catch-up. Scandinavian countries have been reusing waste heat for decades. Stockholm has a 3,000-kilometer district energy pipe network that serves 800,000 residents and more than 90 percent of the city’s buildings. More than 30 data centers feed waste heat into the system. In Oslo, sewer thermal provided nearly 7 percent of the energy for the city’s district heating system in 2025. As a whole, the system provides 30 percent of Oslo’s heating and hot water demand. China, a more-recent entrant in the market, has developed world-champion projects in Qingdao and elsewhere.

Committed cities and governments can reach scale quickly. “The Chinese had nothing hardly in the early 90s, now they’ve got perhaps the most district heating installed capacity in the world,” Wiggin said.

Rapid growth in waste-heat recovery will not happen in the Great Lakes region on its own. Without policy signals, electric companies, data center operators, and water utilities don’t have the incentives to innovate and cooperate, Kohl said. And for waste heat, collaboration is the key to success.

What are those policy signals? Gaalswyk focused on carrots: tax breaks for companies that install heat recovery systems and a quicker permitting process for those that incorporate efficiency measures.

Wiggin, by contrast, outlined the sticks. A tax on waste heat. State or provincial efficiency standards.

Kohl mentioned both measures. Massachusetts, he noted, set aside state funds for waste-heat recovery feasibility studies. New York, meanwhile, passed a law in 2022 to develop a regulatory framework for thermal energy networks. The law requires the largest investor-owned utilities to submit pilot projects for development.

Those in the district energy industry see waste heat as a massive opportunity, one that begins in the early stages of project development, whether it’s a data center or a nuclear power station. Incorporating waste-heat recovery into a project’s initial design is easier than retrofitting the facility in the future.

“Our thesis is data center projects that are bringing additional layers of community benefit to communities will find more success in building trust and gaining the necessary social license to operate,” Gaalswyk said. “A really important aspect of that is heat recovery, free heat.  Again, it’s not a technology issue. We have the heat pumps, we have the industry that can design heat offtake. It’s a matter of figuring out how to get a diverse stakeholder group to work together to realize these benefits in tandem.”

The post The Great Lakes Are Wasting a Massive Source of Clean Energy appeared first on Great Lakes Now.

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Great Lakes Now

Great Lakes Now

https://www.greatlakesnow.org/2026/03/24/the-great-lakes-are-wasting-a-massive-source-of-clean-energy/

Brett Walton, Circle of Blue

Explore the Fish City living near the waters of a nuclear power plant and get your questions answered LIVE!

Using cutting-edge underwater robotic camera technology, discover the hidden world beneath the surface of the world’s largest freshwater ecosystem. Explore the aquatic metropolis living near the fish-filled outflow of a nuclear power plant on Ontario’s Bruce Peninsula, where the warm water creates a unique gathering space for a diverse range of species.

Hosts:
Zach Melnick, Inspired Planet Productions
Yvonne Drebert, Inspired Planet Productions

Hidden Below Livestreams are a series of live, underwater explorations of the Great Lakes. Presented by Inspired Planet Productions and Great Lakes Now.

The post Fish City | Hidden Below: Live appeared first on Great Lakes Now.

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Great Lakes Now

Great Lakes Now

https://www.greatlakesnow.org/2026/03/24/fish-city-hidden-below-live/

Great Lakes Now

for immediate release One Week Left to Get Free Shirt for Fox-Wolf Watershed Cleanup Free Shirt Deadline Approaching for Fox-Wolf Cleanup Volunteers APPLETON, WI — Volunteers have one week left to register for the 2026 Fox-Wolf Watershed Cleanup and guarantee a free event t-shirt. The annual cleanup takes place the morning of Saturday, [...]

The post MEDIA RELEASE: One Week Left to Get Free Volunteer Shirt appeared first on Fox-Wolf Watershed Alliance.

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Fox-Wolf Watershed Alliance

Fox-Wolf Watershed Alliance

https://fwwa.org/2026/03/24/media-release-2026-volunteer-shirt/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=media-release-2026-volunteer-shirt

Dan Beckwith

Invasive carp, weighing up to 100 pounds and eating 10% of their weight in algae every day, could pose an existential threat to the Great Lakes. A multi‑layered barrier project at the Brandon Road Lock and Dam has been stalled after the Trump administration paused the funds, leading state leaders to press for its release. Read the full story by USA Today.

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Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20260323-invasive-carp

Taaja Tucker-Silva

After decades of delays, the vision for the Port of Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, gets government attention and this time city officials say the timing is right for the project, and to help diversify the Sault’s economy. Read the full story by The Sault Star.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20260323-sault-shipping

Taaja Tucker-Silva

Increased consumption is depleting water sources in the Great Lakes region, most notably groundwater. Consumption keeps climbing and the depletion is raising concerns for residents, water experts, and lawmakers. Read the full story by Crain’s Detroit Business.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20260323-groundwater-protections

Taaja Tucker-Silva

Despite the abundance of water in the Great Lakes, this region is not immune to drought, flooding, or threats to water quality and water quantity. Water security is about mitigating the risks to water quality and quantity to maintain vibrant economies, and social, cultural, and ecological integrity. Read the full story by Crain’s Detroit Business.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20260323-water-security

Taaja Tucker-Silva

The boiler from the 1914 shipwrecked Silver Spray remains just offshore of Chicago in the Morgan Shoal, the ancient shallow bedrock in Lake Michigan. Chicago residents and advocates fear an Army Corps erosion plan to protect the lakefront could harm this rare natural refuge. Read the full story by the Chicago Tribune.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20260323-morgan-shoal

Taaja Tucker-Silva

Officials in Avon Lake, Ohio, will soon take the next step in redeveloping the former power plant site along Lake Erie into a public park and mixed-use district that could eventually include restaurants, housing, marinas and hotels. Read the full story by The Plain Dealer.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20260323-avon-redevelopment

Taaja Tucker-Silva

This year a very thin ice bridge formed on Lake Superior between Michigan’s remote Isle Royale and the mainland, but the Isle Royale wolf and moose study, now entering its 68th year, detected no wolf movement across the ice. Read the full story by MLive.

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Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20260323-isle-royale-wolves

Taaja Tucker-Silva

A visionary plan for how Lake Erie’s Sandusky Bay might look years from now was generally well-received by residents. But those who attended the plan’s rollout also had a lot of concerns about how access would be maintained for boaters if the Sandusky Bay Initiative’s most ambitious project is built. Read the full story by the Toledo Blade.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20260323-sandusky-bay

Taaja Tucker-Silva