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EPA Pulls Funding From Louisville Air Pollution Study Amid Environmental Justice Rollback

by Ryan Wilmot | Aug 19, 2025 | Headlines

Environmental Health News | 19 August 2025 | The Trump-era EPA canceled a $1 million Louisville air monitoring grant focused on predominantly Black neighborhoods near the Rubbertown industrial corridor, a move critics say undermines vital environmental justice...

Short-Term Air Pollution And Fracture Admissions In Beijing

by Ryan Wilmot | Aug 19, 2025 | Headlines

Frontiers | 19 August 2025 | A Beijing study of over 16,000 hospital admissions found that short-term exposure to PM2.5 and NO₂ was significantly associated with increased fracture-related hospitalizations, particularly among younger patients and men, suggesting air...

Stony Brook Student Cultivates AI To Unmask Hidden Air Pollution

by Ryan Wilmot | Aug 19, 2025 | Headlines

SBU News – Stony Brook University | 19 August 2025 | At Stony Brook University Hospital, undergraduate Amy Chen is leading an ozone garden project, part of NASA’s National Ozone Garden Network, that uses bio-indicator plants and AI to detect and visualize the...

Tractor Replacement Program To Improve Valley Air Quality Has Uncertain Future

by Ryan Wilmot | Aug 19, 2025 | Headlines

ABC30 | 19 August 2025 | California’s Valley Air District has paused its $500 million tractor replacement program, which has cut farm emissions by 30% since 1998 and replaced 14,000 old machines, after funds ran low, though officials hope for renewed state support to...

Clairton Plant Workers Had Been Manipulating Valves Before Deadly Blast

by Ryan Wilmot | Aug 18, 2025 | Headlines

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette | 18 August 2025 | Workers manipulating a gas valve during routine maintenance appear to have triggered a pressure buildup and deadly explosion at the century-old Clairton Coke Works, raising fresh concerns about safety amid U.S. Steel’s aging...

Air Quality Safe After Valero Facility Emissions Incident In Texas City

by Ryan Wilmot | Aug 18, 2025 | Headlines

BIC Magazine | 18 August 2025 | Air quality in Texas City has returned to safe levels after a Valero facility upset released sulfur dioxide, briefly closing nearby roads but posing no ongoing threat to the public.
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