Mexico pulls a “land-based Panama Canal” out of its hat

Trains idle at what is set to become the country’s largest railway complex in Matías Romero, Oaxaca, a city of under 40,000 people, according to Mexico’s 2020 census. When construction is completed, by the end of 2025, the complex will comprise a range of facilities, including dispatch and education centers that will train personnel from across the region.
Trains idle at what is set to become the country’s largest railway complex in Matías Romero, Oaxaca, a city of under 40,000 people, according to Mexico’s 2020 census. When construction is completed, by the end of 2025, the complex will comprise a range of facilities, including dispatch and education centers that will train personnel from across the region.

By Sonia Ramírez, EcoNews

In southern Mexico, bulldozers and rail crews are reshaping one of the narrowest slices of land on the continent. Millions of tons of earth are being moved to finish the Interoceanic Corridor of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, a 303 km rail bridge that links the Pacific and the Gulf of Mexico.

Officials present it as a modern dry canal that can rival the historic Panama Canal and help keep global trade moving even when water runs short.

A rail bridge across a biodiversity hotspot

The corridor connects the ports of Salina Cruz on the Pacific and Coatzacoalcos on the Gulf through upgraded tracks, highways, and a string of industrial parks.

Official planning documents describe a logistics platform designed for heavy container trains, with the main rail line stretching a little over 300 kilometers and engineered for port-to-port journeys in under six hours. Planners say the system could eventually move around 1.4 million containers per year.

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On paper, that sounds like efficiency. Trains move large volumes of freight using far less fuel per ton mile than trucks, and several studies suggest rail can cut freight-related greenhouse gas emissions by roughly three quarters when it replaces long-haul road transport.

For shippers tired of watching vessels queue for canal slots, the idea of loading goods onto a train for a same day crossing has obvious appeal.

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Pa.’s largest coal-fired power plants would stay open until 2032 in proposed DEP deal

The Keystone Generating Station is located in Plumcreek Township, Armstrong County. The coal-powered power plant is scheduled to close before the end of 2028. (Photo by John Beale for the Pennsylvania Capital-Star)
The Keystone Generating Station is located in Plumcreek Township, Armstrong County. The coal-powered power plant was scheduled to close before the end of 2028. (Photo by John Beale for the Pennsylvania Capital-Star)


By Peter Hall PA Capital Star -April 22, 2026

 The commonwealth’s two largest coal-burning power plants, which were slated to cease operation in less than three years, would remain in service through 2032 under an agreement with the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection.

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Instead of shutting down, owners of the Keystone and Conemaugh generating stations in Indiana and Armstrong counties have agreed to make upgrades to reduce ash and heavy metal pollution from the wastewater the plants discharge into western Pennsylvania waterways.

Under a proposed consent decree, the plants’ owners would have until 2028 to complete the upgrades with periodic deadlines for progress. The DEP filed a motion seeking a judge’s approval Tuesday in Indiana County Court of Common Pleas.

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Ohio court may OK fracking-waste wells despite pollution concerns

A legal challenge to the fossil fuel project faces dismissal, which would let the developer advance even as similar local pushback stifles Ohio’s solar buildout.

Aerial view of a site with fracking equipment surrounded by forest
Gas fracking in West Virginia. Waste from fracking can contain heavy metals, radioactive chemicals, and other chemical compounds. (iStock Editorial/Getty Images Plus)

By Kathiann M. Kowalski, Canary Media

Ohio is a notoriously difficult state for building renewable energy. Many counties ban wind and solar outright, but even in those that don’t, state regulators often rely on local opposition to deny permits for developers.

Fossil fuel companies, on the other hand, do not face these hurdles. This discrepancy is underscored by the fact that plans to build two fracking-waste wells in Ohio’s rural Washington County are poised to move ahead despite objections from residents, environmental groups, and nearby town governments. DeepRock Disposal Solutions aims to use these deep holes in the earth to push toxic liquid waste from fracking oil and gas into porous rock layers far underground.

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Last week, a Franklin County Court of Appeals magistrate — a court officer who handles preliminary matters as well as detailed issues in complex cases — recommended the dismissal of a lawsuit filed by Buckeye Environmental Network in opposition to the wells. The group argues that the state illegally relied on outdated rules when permitting the project, which risks contaminating local groundwater supplies.

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Md bill trades cost-saving energy efficiency for short-term relief

Advocates say Maryland lawmakers passed energy proposals, including one on nuclear subsidies, without adequate analysis or public debate during the 2026 session.

By Aman Azar, Canary Media

Maryland lawmakers’ new solution for rising utility bills reduces a surcharge funding an effective energy-efficiency program, offers rebates by raiding the state’s clean energy fund, and includes subsidies for nuclear power that advocates say may prove costly over time.

Passed in the final minutes of this year’s session, the Utility RELIEF Act also puts a one-year moratorium on forecasted ratemaking, in which utilities charge customers based on projected infrastructure investments rather than actual spending.

The federal government loomed large over the session. The Trump administration is rolling back regulatory protections from industrial pollution and attacking clean energy projects such as offshore wind, which states like Maryland were banking on to meet emission-reduction goals. Gov. Wes Moore was under pressure to both patch a gaping budgetary hole fueled in part by huge federal layoffs and to assist ratepayers, who are reeling from high energy prices driven by data center growth.

Moore has until May 13 to sign or veto the bill. But early in the session, the governor, along with Democratic leaders in the House and Senate, presented the energy legislation as the best way forward. They say it will lead to more energy generation in the state, increase utility oversight, and save Maryland families at least $150 per year on their energy bills.

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New study says elderly and poor at greatest risk of coastal flooding

A person lugs a shopping cart filled with belongings along a flooded street in New Orleans on April 10, 2024.

By Seth Borenstien, Associated Press

 More than 17 million people along the U.S. Atlantic and Gulf coasts are at the highest risk of flooding, with New York and New Orleans standing out, according to one of the most comprehensive studies ever of flood risk.

Researchers at the University of Alabama used 16 different factors, including the geographic hazards, the population and infrastructure exposed, and the vulnerability of people living there. They then brought in past damages from the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s database and applied three artificial intelligence tools to figure out flood risks from Texas to Maine, calculating that 17.5 million people were at “very high” risk and an additional 17 million were at “high” risk, the next level.

The authors looked at all sizes of flooding and examined separately what FEMA considers the most extreme, which are the top 1% of events. The study found 4.3 million people along the coasts to be at the highest risk of extreme flooding, while 20.5 million were at high risk, the second-highest level.

They found many vulnerabilities in the eight highlighted cities, from Houston, which flooded during Hurricane Harvey in 2017, to New York, which was inundated during Hurricane Sandy in 2012.

Wednesday’s study in the journal Science Advances found that New York City has 4.75 million people at the two highest risk levels for all flooding, with more than 200,000 buildings likely to be damaged.

And while the number of people at risk in New Orleans is far lower, about 380,000, it involves 99% of the city’s population. That does not mean that 99% of the people will be affected in the next hurricane or nontropical flood, but that they might be, depending on the storm’s individual path and rain pattern, said study coauthor Wanyun Shao, a climate scientist at the University of Alabama.

“Just look at the magnitude,” Shao said. “Those numbers are shocking, alarming.”

The elderly and poor are most at risk

“When the next big storm hits New York City, when the next Hurricane Katrina-like hurricane makes landfall in New Orleans, people will get hurt, especially those socially vulnerable populations,” Shao said, referring to the poor, the elderly, children, and the uneducated.

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Essex County (NJ) celebrates Earth Day this Sunday

EARTH DAY 2026
Sunday, April 26; 11 am to 3 pm
For all ages. 

Yay, it’s EARTH DAY! Bring your family, friends, and neighbors to our annual outdoor festival honoring beautiful planet EARTH, the sustainer of all life! On this special day, the Essex County Environmental Center will make a special effort to share its wonder and appreciation for the natural world with patrons, partners, and friends. Enjoy a day filled with crafts, games, and recreational opportunities, such as canoeing and hiking. Enjoy demonstrations, information, and a local eco-vendors’ sale. Environmental Center staff and partner groups will be on hand to guide you throughout this exciting Earth-centric day! Seeking eco-vendors with a sustainable mission. For more information, call 973.228.8776. FREE EVENT (items may be for sale)


No Registration Required

PLEASE NOTE:  OUR EARTH DAY EVENT HAS BEEN MOVED TO IT’S SCHEDULED RAIN DATE, SUNDAY, APRIL 26, 2026.



PLEASE NOTE:  OUR EARTH DAY EVENT HAS BEEN MOVED TO IT’S SCHEDULED RAIN DATE, SUNDAY, APRIL 26, 2026.

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