-
Offshore wind developments and critically endangered right whales are sharing the same waters off our coast, which has raised the question: how safely can they coexist? CAI’s Eve Zuckoff has spent the last few months talking to scientists and cutting through misinformation.
-
Offshore wind developers have submitted detailed bids for new contracts in the first regional selection process involving Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode Island.
-
The sudden collapse early Tuesday brought attention back to hundreds of structurally deficient bridges
-
The feds could eventually release rules limiting the use of treated sludge as fertilizer, meaning more towns will be trying to dispose of theirs. The team at the Massachusetts Alternative Septic System Test Center call this scenario, "Sludgement Day."
-
Holtec talks to CAI about the fate of the water if it were shipped to a licensed disposal facility out of state, as local activists hope.
-
Activists and environmentalists say they’re eager for an update 11 months after the Environmental Protection Agency released a draft report that found a proposed machine gun range on Joint Base Cape Cod could create a “significant public health hazard” by contaminating drinking water.
-
The transportation grant, worth more than $1 billion, would essentially complete the funding for the Sagamore Bridge.
-
Emergency Planning officials with the County say the broadcast range will cover most of the Cape between the three stations.
-
New research from WHOI suggests coral larvae respond to sound when deciding where they’ll make their home.
-
With 12 turbines, the project is much smaller than Vineyard Wind but the largest since the Block Island Wind Farm opened with lower-capacity turbines in 2016.
-
Red lights on the turbines at Vineyard Wind are drawing attention. What happened to the developer's pledge to keep them dimmed?
-
According to officials, the closure will impact some recreational shellfishermen, the city of New Bedford, which had hoped to open up an aquaculture industry within the Clark's Cove area, and two quahog harvesters — effective immediately.