The inside scoop from @leighkboerner.bsky.social: "About 150 employees remained in ORD as of Feb. 13. Most got letters that day saying that they would be reassigned to other offices in March. The letters did not specify which offices."
@edelger
Journalist | covering food, agriculture, water, pesticides and PFAS policy @cenmag.bsky.social | formerly at The New York Times, Texas Observer and Inside Climate News | Signal: edelger.10 Read my work: www.delgererdenesanaa.com
The inside scoop from @leighkboerner.bsky.social: "About 150 employees remained in ORD as of Feb. 13. Most got letters that day saying that they would be reassigned to other offices in March. The letters did not specify which offices."
There's been a barrage of pesticide news recently - from Bayer's class settlement for Roundup lawsuits, and Trump's EO on domestic glyphosate production, to the draft Farm Bill (which will be marked up tonight). I covered how it's all related, and what it all means: cen.acs.org/environment/...
After a court-mandated ban that applied for the 2025 growing season, the US Environmental Protection Agency has reapproved over-the-top use of dicamba for genetically modified soybeans and cotton. cen.acs.org/policy/chemi...
#chemsky ๐งช
Lower levels of PFAS โforever chemicalsโ in North Atlantic whales show regulations work -- by @lizkimbrough.bsky.social for @mongabay.com news.mongabay.com/2026/02/lowe...
The Associated Pressโ reporting on the vulnerabilities of private water well owners to contamination by harmful forever chemicals shows how some well owners are left stranded. Here are takeaways from the investigation.
Come for the interactive quiz on what counts as an ultraprocessed food, stay for the policy outlook on this weirdly bipartisan issue -- from US dietary guidelines to school lunches to state SNAP waivers to front-of-package labeling in other countries.
Earlier this month, a research institute in Venezuela was damaged by US air strikes, marking the latest blow to a research sector already battered by funding and supply shortages.
Read more at @cenmag.bsky.social: cen.acs.org/policy/US-ai...
See How Marine Heat Waves Are Spreading Across the Globe
For his #PulitzerStaffPicks 2025, Mark Schulte, Director of U.S. Education and Outreach, selected "See How Marine Heat Waves Are Spreading Across the Globe" by @edelger.bsky.social for The @nytimes.com.
๐ bit.ly/YIStories25
For @cenmag.bsky.social, I tried to summarize what happened in science policy in 2025. Spoiler: A lot!
Thanks to Ian Banks, @jeremymberg.bsky.social, Arthur Daemmrich, @cdelawalla.bsky.social and @ucs.org Jen Jones for their insights.
Out soon: what to expect in 2026
cen.acs.org/policy/nih-n...
โ'Iโve Seen Hell': Inside the Global Crisis of Seafarer Exploitationโ
For her second #PulitzerStaffPicks selection, Ocean Editor Jessica Aldred chose @katiemcque.bsky.socialโs story โ'Iโve Seen Hell': Inside the Global Crisis of Seafarer Exploitationโ published in @contextnewsroom.bsky.social.
๐ bit.ly/YIStories25
Entangled examined the threats to North Atlantic right whales & theย policiesย to address them. Now, as the series closes, we return to theย peopleย working to change the outcome: www.theglobeandmail.com/canada/artic...
@pulitzercenter.org @theglobeandmail.com
The United Nations effort to negotiate a treaty on plastic pollution appears to be at a standstill. The partiesโ approach needs to change if a treaty is to be reached. But how? cen.acs.org/environment/... #chemsky ๐งช
Advisory panel on vaccine policy in the US votes to scrap recommendation of #hepatitisB vaccination for newborns. One panel member called decision "unconscionable"
@maxhenrybarnhart.bsky.social for @cenmag.bsky.social
cen.acs.org/pharmaceutic...
Boy, retraction is the thing these days. After years of critique, a foundational 25-year old paper on the safety of glyphosate herbicide has been pulled. www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti... 1/2
So, remember that MAHA summit 2 weeks ago that @statnews.com broke the news of and @maxkozlov.bsky.social somehow got into for Nature, even though it was closed to the press?
The organizers posted the entire 6.5-hour conference proceedings to YouTube last week.
cen.acs.org/policy/MAHA-...
All against a backdrop of temperatures continuing to rise, soon to pass 1.5ยฐC. cen.acs.org/policy/COP30...
And, of course, there was everything happening on the sidelines, including greater attention to what might be the hardest-to-abate sector of all: chemicals. cen.acs.org/environment/...
As for countries' actual work, it's split. There's the official, consensus-based track making incremental progress on adaptation but not stopping emissions at their sources (fossil fuels, deforestation). And now there's an unofficial, more ambitious "coalition of the willing" led by Colombia.
Reflections on COP30 now that it's over. (Or is it??) First, idk if this was Lula's goal, but the physical chaos of the venueโfire, deluge, diesel fumesโsure seemed like a metaphor for climate change to me.
cen.acs.org/environment/...
But clearing or converting land to grow biofuels could have unintended consequences. The carbon accounting is controversial, with some saying biofuels could in fact increase GHG emissions. And Indigenous people's land rights, particularly in the Amazon, have been a huge topic of contention at COP30.
Biobased chemical companies took the stage at multiple panels. And biofuels as alternatives to fossil fuels rose to the top of the conversation. Brazil, the host country, is a big player in the industry, with the COP30 presidency announcing a global initiative to quadruple alternative fuels by 2035.
The chemical industry is a huge source of GHG emissions. Decarbonizing the industry will be hard, but as a UNFCCC technology expert said here, there's no way we can avoid it. COP30 reflected that, with what seemed to be more spotlight on chemicals than past summits. cen.acs.org/environment/...
Nov. 14 Policy Watch: US government reopens, is absent from COP 30 climate conference
In other news, the EPA wants to trim PFAS reporting requirements and is pushing back compliance dates for parts of its TCE and methylene chloride rules. cen.acs.org/policy/Nov-1...
Tomorrow at #COP30 I'll be discussing what I learned from my recent @pulitzercenter.org reporting on marine heatwaves and their effects on wildlife and fisheries -- 1:30pm Brazil time at the Ocean Pavilion, alongside fishermen & women, scientists, and policymakers.
Rescheduled for this morning 8 am - if you are in the Blue Zone, come by the Ocean Pavilion and learn about the links between rainforest and ocean to start your day.
The best news from #COP30 so far is that a couple got engaged last night during dinner at a restaurant just outside the venue. It was packed with conference attendees and decidedly not the most romantic ambianceโฆ but good for them!!
Iโm in Belรฉm covering #COP30. Itโs a difficult geopoliticalโand physicalโcontext, as the planet begins to breach the 1.5C goal set 10 years ago and the US withdraws once again from the Paris Agreement. Iโll be continuing coverage throughout the conference, so please reach out if youโd like to talk.
Not since 1935 has anyone experienced a storm like Melissa. Melissa's record wouldn't have happened without climate change, which made the hurricane's winds about 10 mph stronger, according to a rapid attribution analysis by Climate Central. yaleclimateconnections.org/2025/10/cata...
Black and white images showing micrographs of various species of coccospheres, calcifying plankton that play a role in the ocean carbon cycle.
A team of international scientists suggests that ignoring plankton could lead scientists to underestimate how the ocean will respond to climate change. Read more: cen.acs.org/environment/...
#CENChemPics #chemsky ๐งช
Yes, there's lead in protein powders. No, there's no known safe level. But, exposure to trace amounts is inevitable, especially since plants naturally take up lead from the environment. And, people disagree on standards for manufacturers. Latest @cenmag.bsky.social: cen.acs.org/food/food-in...