Annie Ropeik
Reporter: Climate, Energy, Environment, SeacoastAnnie has covered the environment, energy, climate change and the Seacoast region for NHPR since 2017. She leads the newsroom's climate reporting project, By Degrees.
Annie has spent a decade reporting for public radio stations and collaborations across the country, including in Indiana, Delaware and Alaska. Her work has aired on NPR programs, the BBC, CBC and CNN, and earned national honors from the Public Media Journalists Association and state press clubs.
Annie studied classics at Boston University and grew up in Maryland. Her favorite outdoor spot in New Hampshire is Adam's Point on Great Bay in Durham. She is a member of the Society of Environmental Journalists.
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New Hampshire experienced more days over 90 degrees and higher average and overnight temperatures in the summers over the past 50 years, as human activity…
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A new bill backed by Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D) would share the revenue from offshore wind development with coastal states like New Hampshire. The bill…
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Today, NHPR launches a new series from our podcast Outside/In. It's called Windfall, and it investigates the birth of a new American industry: offshore…
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Photographer Bob Consentino says the pandemic was the most creative period of his life, thanks in large part to an Army Corps of Engineers dredging…
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Northern New Hampshire is officially back in a drought, and most of the rest of the state remains abnormally dry as of this week, according to the…
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The daring jumping spider is New Hampshire's new state arachnid.Last Friday, Gov. Chris Sununu signed the bill making the designation official, alongside…
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The Bull Moose record store chain is apologizing, re-hiring workers and promising pay raises after controversy over the sudden closure of its Salem…
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Deepening drought is raising fears of another bad year for wildfires. It's also expected to trigger more water cutbacks in a number of states.
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Utility and municipal officials are asking Seacoast residents to take more water conservation measures as the state’s dry spell continues.Almost all of…
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New Hampshire's lakes are seeing more toxic algae blooms than normal this early in the season, according to state officials. Over a dozen cyanobacteria…