New York Great Lakes Research Initiative for Science and Education

The Need to Expand New York’s Great Lakes Research Capacity.
T
he Great Lakes Research Consortium in cooperation with our member institutions announces our plans to significantly improve New York’s Great Lakes research infrastructure. We plan on expanding our current network of field stations, vessels and educational facilities throughout New York’s Great Lakes-St. Lawrence region. Our number one priority is to improve the Great Lakes through scientific understanding and technological advances. There are few issues more important for Upstate New York than the health of the Great Lakes environment.

Consider the following:
  • Nearly three million New Yorkers depend on the Great Lakes for drinking water.
  • Over six million people annually visit parks along New York’s Great Lakes corridor.
  • Clean fresh water is likely to be the most important resource for future economic development and settlement patterns in the US.
  • Nearly 80 million tons of cargo move through New York’s Great Lakes ports.
  • Anglers spend around $134 million per year at New York’s Great Lakes fishing locations. Many upstate small businesses cater to the fishing public.
  • Better than half the land in New York’s Lake Erie and Ontario basins is in agricultural use.
  • Among the Great Lakes states, New York ranks first in hydroelectricity production, supplying around 10% of the entire state’s power demand.
  • New York has the second longest shoreline of any of the Great Lakes States. We have a significant portion of what is, in effect, the North Coast of the United States.
  • The products and services of water protection, environmental clean-up and habitat restoration are a multi-billion dollar industry and one that is guaranteed to grow. New York can and should be in the lead.
Great Lakes Research
Consortium scientists have
been warning for some time
that despite the clean-up successes
of the last two decades,
New York’s Great Lakes are highly altered ecosystems, unstable and prone to crisis.

The Growing Great Lakes Crisis

The Crisis of the Late 1960s and 70s

The Scientific Response

The Origins of the Great Lakes Research Consortium

The Need to Support Science in New York

New York Has Not Recieved Its Fair Share of Federal Great Lakes Funding


New York's Great Lakes Facilities Network
  1. Great Lakes Center at Buffalo
  2. Great Lakes Center at Brockport
  3. Environmental Research Center at Oswego
  4. GLRC Headquarters
  5. Cornell Biological Field Station
  6. SUNY ESF Thousand Islands Biological Field station
  7. Great Rivers Center
  8. Lake Champlain Research Institute


To learn more about the facilities of the GLRC network, their current research projects, research specialties, facilities, and needed upgrades, click on any location above

 

 

Please contact GLRC
with any questions or comments
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