Climate Change
Addressing climate change presents residents, businesses, nonprofits, and municipalities a chance to create, evolve, and maintain a sustainable environment, a robust economy, and a higher quality of life today and tomorrow.
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How to Become a Wildlife Rehabilitator
Information on how to become a Wildlife Rehabilitator in Connecticut.
The BOW Workshop brings women together for immersive outdoor learning in a relaxed, community-focused setting.
DEEP launches 2025 DEEP Climate Resilience Fund
(HARTFORD) — The Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (DEEP) is pleased to announce a call for applications and a draft Request for Proposals under an expanded DEEP Climate Resilience Fund. DEEP is making available up to $33 million in state funds and up to $11.8 million in federal funds for projects that protect communities and critical infrastructure from extreme weather. This opportunity is open to municipalities, non-profit organizations, and other entities, and includes new funding categories that will support a wide range of community and energy resilience projects. In recent years, Connecticut has experienced widespread impacts from extreme weather, including historic flooding in the Naugatuck Valley, unprecedented wildfires, and the hottest summer weather on record. These climate-driven hazards have caused hundreds of millions of dollars in damage to homes, roads, bridges, and businesses. Connecticut’s communities have endured these recent challenges from extreme weather just as federal support for resilience is becoming less certain.
Update and information about avian influenza and testing of dead birds.
Energy Price and Supply Information
Connecticut, regional, and national energy and supply information
Boating Infrastructure Grant Program
Boating Infrastructure Grant Program funds are available to public and private agencies and marinas and other facilities that provide transient tie-up opportunities for non-trailerable (26' or over in length) recreational boats.
Learn more about this endangered, maybe native, and definitely not parasitic fish!
Damn building, overfishing and pollution all likely contributed to the demise of Atlantic sturgeon in Connecticut.
Although central mudminnows look superficially like minnows or killifish, they are actually more closely related to pickerel and pike.
A Fisheries Guide to Lakes and Ponds of Connecticut