Environmental Integrity Project’s Post

In 2023, the Supreme Court restricted the federal government's ability to limit pollution in ephemeral streams. A new study published in the journal Science estimates that 55% of water flowing from U.S. river basins can be traced to millions of ephemeral streams, indicating that the Supreme Court's ruling could leave large bodies of water vulnerable to pollution. The SCOTUS ruling ended federal protections for up to 4.9 million miles of streams that flow only when it rains (which often look like dry ditches for much of the year), according to officials at the EPA, effectively leaving it to states, with fewer resources and often anti-regulatory leadership, to oversee the streams. In our 2022 report, The Clean Water Act at 50, we found that 55 percent of lake acres that have been studied in recent years and 25 percent of assessed bays and estuaries are impaired and cannot be used safely for one or more public uses. These waterbodies receive most of their water from these ephemeral streams which should be protected by EPA regulations. Read the New York Times article: https://lnkd.in/eGrUmzMs Read the Science journal: https://lnkd.in/eCbxehfy Read our report, The Clean Water Act at 50: https://lnkd.in/en2kfGiF #cleanwater #waterpollution #cleanwateract #streams #waterregulations #riverbasin #usrivers

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The freshwater crisis is the scariest part of climate change 

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