THERE'S ONLY ABOUT THREE THOUSAND IN CALIFORNIA ... Slough for potential impacts from the Moss Landing battery plant fire. Sea otters are a threatened species under the Endangered Species Act.
After the Feds Kept Grizzlies on the Endangered Species List Last Month ... the Nuance Two weeks after a devastating fire in Moss Landing, California, at one of the world’s largest battery ...
The blaze began Jan. 16 after a fire suppression system failed inside a battery storage area at the Moss Landing Power Plant ... a home to endangered species. Jan. 29, 2025 LG declined to comment ...
manganese and cobalt — materials used in lithium ion batteries — in soil samples at the Elkhorn Slough Reserve after the recent fire at the nearby Moss Landing Power Plant. The toxic metals ...
The fire at the Moss Landing ... species. They help to protect the kelp beds offshore by consuming sea urchins, and they help to protect the sea beds here in the slough," University of California ...
Research scientists at San Jose State University say that the Moss Landing ... California's largest estuaries and host to a bounty of marine life including endangered sea otters and hundreds of ...
About two weeks after a fire at Moss Landing Power Plant in Monterey County ... soils and different marine species to investigate uptake of the heavy metals. This further research will help ...
Fishing report compiled by California Outdoors Hall of Fame member ... counting up to 80 Dungies and over 500 dabs per trip. Out of Moss Landing, private boaters report a significant number ...
Three heavy metals were found at concentrations thousands of times greater after the fire. The implications for wildlife hang ...
The County of Monterey is holding its weekly news briefing on Wednesday and says they are expecting to release "big news" relating to the Moss Landing battery storage facility fire.
With construction near homes, schools and businesses, a growing call for more limits on key renewable technology ...
“We share the goal of wanting an incident like Moss Landing never to happen again,” said Alex Jackson, California director of the American Clean Power Association, an industry group.