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.
Settings Menu
Page 247 of 286
School Composting...The Next Step In Recycling
How to get a manual about school composting in Connecticut.
School Composting Pilot, June 2003 Update
An update of a school composting pilot project in Mansfield, CT.
School Composting Bins, School Composting Manual and Website
Information about a grant project for composting at a school in Mansfield, CT.
Food Residual Composting Facilities
The following tables identify the permitted composting and anaerobic digestion facilities allowed to accept food waste and the facilities undergoing permit review by the DEEP.
Active Leaf Composting Facilities
A list of leaf composting facilities in Connecticut.
Commercial Organics Collection Pilot Begins
Information about a commercial organics recycling project in Groton and Stonington, CT.
Norwalk River Dam No. 2 Rehabilitation
Norwalk River Dam Rehabilitation Project
Dams in the Connecticut
Sculpins are sensitive to environmental degradation, requiring good-quality, coldwater streams to survive.
Letterboxing Clues for Naugatuck State Forest
CT Letterboxing Clues for Naugatuck State Forest
Sculpins have a flattened head, large frog-like mouth and eyes, a scaleless body, and large fan-shaped pectoral fins.
Pawcatuck Watershed Nutrient Project
Connecticut has been awarded a SNEP grant to address nutrient issues in the Pawcatuck watershed in partnership with Rhode Island.
Low-Income Energy Water Advisory Board
LIEWAB information on members and meeting
A small family limited to marine waters of the Western Hemisphere.
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.
Recycling
Connecticut disposes of 2.4 million tons of trash annually, an estimated 1,370 pounds of trash per person per year. That's too much! Learn more about how we manage our waste and how to help us move toward more waste reduction, reuse and recycling.
DEEP Programs & Services
DEEP conserves, improves and protects Connecticut's natural resources and the environment, and makes cheaper, cleaner and more reliable energy available to people and businesses. Find DEEP's programs and services here.