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MNN.COM › Lifestyle › Responsible Living
Infographic: United States of the Environment
We can't all have the most organic farms or the lowest air pollution, but every U.S. state is No. 1 in some environmental or public health category ... and No. 50 in another. Here's a look at each state's strengths and weaknesses.

By:

Russell McLendon
Mon, Apr 04 2011 at 1:15 PM
 321

Related Topics:

Environmental Research, Infographic
In the spirit of two recent infographics that listed the best and worst of all 50 states — the United States of Awesome and the United States of Shame — MNN is taking another look, this time revealing how each state shines and suffers in regard to science, nature, public health or social justice. Check out the maps below, and for more info (or to be reminded which state is which) see the list of states, stats and sources.
 
 
 

Click here to learn more about each state's superlatives

 
Sources for "good U.S." map:
  • Alabama: Lowest rate of alcohol abuse or dependence (U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration)
  • Alaska: Most wetlands (U.S. Geological Survey)
  • Arizona: Most solar power potential (USA Today, National Climatic Data Center)
  • Arkansas: Home of Buffalo River, first U.S. "National River" (National Park Service)
  • California: Most acres of organic farmland (U.S. Department of Agriculture)
  • Colorado: Lowest obesity rate (U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)
  • Connecticut: Highest percentage of adults who had a teeth cleaning in the past year (CDC)
  • Delaware: Lowest cumulative growth in cases of autism (StateMaster)
  • Florida: Most recreational fishing trips per year (National Marine Fisheries Service)
  • Georgia: Most industrial electricity generated from biomass (U.S. Energy Information Administration)
  • Hawaii: Lowest levels of ground-level ozone and smog (American Lung Association)
  • Idaho: Smallest per capita carbon footprint (Forbes)
  • Illinois: Most electricity generated by nuclear power (EIA)
  • Indiana: Burial place of Johnny Appleseed (Johnny Appleseed Festival)
  • Iowa: Largest inventory and sales of organic hogs and pigs (USDA)
  • Kansas: Most acres of wheat and sorghum grown for grain (USDA)
  • Kentucky: Home of Mammoth Cave, longest in U.S. and world (NPS)
  • Louisiana: Home of Mississippi River Delta, largest river delta in U.S. (Water Encyclopedia)
  • Maine: Most plots of organic mixed vegetables less than 5 acres each (USDA)
  • Maryland: Most academic research funding per $1,000 of gross domestic product (National Science Foundation)
  • Massachusetts: Highest percentage of students testing above "advanced" level in 4th-grade science (StateMaster)
  • Michigan: Best access to freshwater (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration)
  • Minnesota: Highest rate of physical exercise (America's Health Rankings)
  • Mississippi: Highest percentage of farms with a black or African-American principal operator (USDA, USDA)
  • Missouri: Most Ozarks (NASA)
  • Montana: Most acres of organic lentils and dry beans (USDA)
  • Nebraska: Highest number of total organic livestock (USDA)
  • Nevada: Fewest Superfund sites (GoodGuide Scorecard)
  • New Hampshire: Fewest hazardous-liquid pipeline accidents per capita (StateMaster)
  • New Jersey: Most commuter rail as a percent of total public transit (StateMaster)
  • New Mexico: Home of Spaceport America, "world's first purpose-built commercial spaceport" (Spaceport America, Space.com)
  • New York: Lowest total energy used per capita (EIA)
  • North Carolina: Highest number of organic Christmas tree farms (USDA)
  • North Dakota: Fewest federally listed endangered species (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service)
  • Ohio: Highest percentage of students testing above "advanced" level in 8th-grade science (StateMaster)
  • Oklahoma: Most alternative-fuel vehicles per capita (StateMaster)
  • Oregon: Most LEED-certified buildings (Forbes)
  • Pennsylvania: Most square footage and sales of organic mushrooms (USDA)
  • Rhode Island: Lowest sulfur dioxide emissions (GoodGuide Scorecard)
  • South Carolina: Most nuclear energy consumed per capita (StateMaster)
  • South Dakota: Largest protected mixed-grass prairie (NPS, About.com)
  • Tennessee: Most caves (Forbidden Caverns)
  • Texas: Most installed wind power capacity (U.S. Department of Energy)
  • Utah: Highest rate of breastfeeding (Kaiser Family Foundation)
  • Vermont: Lowest carbon dioxide emissions (EPA)
  • Virginia: Lowest overall asthma rate (StateMaster)
  • Washington: Highest number of organic apples grown (USDA)
  • West Virginia: Highest-paid coal miners (StateMaster)
  • Wisconsin: Most acres of organic cut flowers (USDA)
  • Wyoming: Lowest public health risk from air pollution (GoodGuide Scorecard)
 
Sources for "bad U.S." map:
  • Alabama: Origin of U.S. fire ant invasion (Oak Ridge National Laboratory)
  • Alaska: Most airports per capita (StateMaster)
  • Arizona: Most groundwater-irrigated acres on farms with annual sales of $500,000 or higher (USDA)
  • Arkansas: Most tons of poultry waste (GoodGuide Scorecard)
  • California: Highest levels of ground-level ozone and particulate pollution (GoodGuide Scorecard, America's Health Rankings)
  • Colorado: Most fatalities from avalanches (Colorado Avalanche Information Center)
  • Connecticut: Highest rate of pancreatic cancer (CDC)
  • Delaware: Fewest national parks (NPS)
  • Florida: Most recreational boat crashes (U.S. Coast Guard Boating Safety Division)
  • Georgia: Worst water pollution from urban runoff (GoodGuide Scorecard)
  • Hawaii: Highest number of federally listed endangered species (FWS)
  • Idaho: Lowest per capita funding for public transit (American Public Transportation Association)
  • Illinois: Most accidents involving hazardous materials (StateMaster)
  • Indiana: Most unrecycled trash per capita (Entrepreneur)
  • Iowa: Most tons of hog waste (GoodGuide Scorecard)
  • Kansas: Most cases of pathogens in water (GoodGuide Scorecard)
  • Kentucky: Highest overall cancer death rate (National Cancer Institute, CDC)
  • Louisiana: Fastest loss of wetlands (EPA)
  • Maine: Highest rate of esophageal cancer (CDC)
  • Maryland: Worst access to clean freshwater (EPA)
  • Massachusetts: Highest rate of thyroid cancer (CDC)
  • Michigan: Highest risk from Asian carp (EPA, Michigan Department of Natural Resources)
  • Minnesota: Highest autism prevalence among 8-year-olds in public schools during 2009-2010 school year (Thoughtful House)
  • Mississippi: Most cases of pesticides in water (GoodGuide Scorecard)
  • Missouri: Site of 1983 Times Beach evacuation due to dioxin contamination (EPA)
  • Montana: Most cases of sediment pollution in water (GoodGuide Scorecard)
  • Nebraska: Highest rate of carbon monoxide poisoning (CDC)
  • Nevada: Lowest annual rainfall (USGS)
  • New Hampshire: Highest rate of mesothelioma (CDC)
  • New Jersey: Most Superfund sites (GoodGuide Scorecard)
  • New Mexico: Lowest percentage of total surface water (StateMaster)
  • New York: Highest public health risk from air pollution (GoodGuide Scorecard)
  • North Carolina: Fewest librarians per capita (StateMaster)
  • North Dakota: Fewest clean-energy businesses (Pew Charitable Trusts)
  • Ohio: Most cumulative growth in cases of autism (StateMaster)
  • Oklahoma: Lowest consumption of fruits and vegetables (America's Health Rankings)
  • Oregon: Highest rate of adult asthma (CDC)
  • Pennsylvania: Most dams in need of repair (Association of Dam Safety Officials)
  • Rhode Island: Highest rate of female breast cancer (CDC)
  • South Carolina: Fewest acres of organic farmland (USDA)
  • South Dakota: Most tornadoes per capita (StateMaster)
  • Tennessee: Most combined sewer overflows (GoodGuide Scorecard)
  • Texas: Most carbon dioxide emissions (EPA)
  • Utah: Slowest growth in clean-energy jobs from 1998-2007 (Pew Charitable Trusts)
  • Vermont: Highest rate of brain cancers (CDC)
  • Virginia: Most cases of ammonia pollution in water (GoodGuide Scorecard)
  • Washington: Highest number of invasive aquatic snail species (USGS)
  • West Virginia: Most coal-mining deaths (Mine Safety and Health Administration)
  • Wisconsin: Highest binge-drinking rate (America's Health Rankings)
  • Wyoming: Most energy used per capita (EIA)
 
 
Also on MNN:
  • Get local news from MNN State Reports
  • See more environmental infographics

You might also like:

anonymous
WIGal Jun 02 2011 at 10:55 PM

If you wait a minute, I'll get myself a beer and join you

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anonymous
hick from upstate May 14 2011 at 1:35 AM

both of these maps are stupid. there are various examples of things that are listed as good that are not or are just ridiculous and bad that aren't anything. Most nuclear power isn't good, that's for sure. One can tell by many of these why the state is listed as such. For example the avalanches or the NYC pollution and whatnot. almost totally pointless maps.

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anonymous
ataxia May 17 2011 at 7:57 PM

"hey, let's generate power cheaply and effectively by smashing atoms together! then we could power homes without exhausting limited resources better suited to other causes and it's relatively clean! Just don't build that shit on a fault line!"

no, no, clearly you are right. this is just a bad idea, and should not be pursued by anyone. Let's just keep pumping up liquified dead reptiles so we can keep paying more and more and more as the supply dwindles.

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anonymous
matt May 18 2011 at 12:21 AM

uranium is a limited resource.

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anonymous
Enter your namY... May 20 2011 at 4:39 PM

Plus most of the supply comes from Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan - not exactly the most stable places in the world.

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anonymous
I know the truth May 23 2011 at 9:39 PM

Australia and Canada are ...then Kazistan

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anonymous
WhatTheHeck May 14 2011 at 1:10 AM

And to think, someone actually got paid to play with their crayons and come up with this B.S.

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anonymous
McSquack May 14 2011 at 12:47 AM
Most of the areas of "wetlands" in Alaska are also called Tundra, and are vast areas withouts roads connecting them to the rest of the state. Yet people live there in small villages of primarily native Yu'pik, or Inupiat people. Every village has an airport, because in the Winter it is the only way to get supplies in. During the summer most (but not all) get supplies by barge up the many rivers found in those wetlands. Perhaps a better one to mention is the highest rate of resource extraction
.... More
jobs, or 4 x 4 vehicles, or V8 engines per capita.
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anonymous
CreamCity May 12 2011 at 7:10 PM

You say binge drinking, we say casual Tuesday. #getonourlevel

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anonymous
CO up in yo grill May 11 2011 at 8:54 AM
I don't understand why Colorado's rate of avalanche deaths is a environmental issue. If anything, more people die in avalanches in the mountains because of all the snow that melts into pristine water for the creeks and streams in the summer, so the avalanches are, in a twisted way, an environmental plus. Plus that means we're cutting back on the use of explosives to control in avalanche control, even though that's mostly due to cutting back funds for controling avalanches that aren't in range of
.... More
the highways and ski resorts.
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anonymous
Guest May 10 2011 at 6:01 PM

Most invasive snails?

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anonymous
Whoever you Wan... Jun 02 2011 at 9:32 PM

I know, right! "Run!!! The snails are invading!!!" lol... Okay, I know that's not what it means but it still creates a hilarious image

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anonymous
Paw May 10 2011 at 3:36 PM

Texas got more AR-15s and Aks in private hands than any udder state per capita I reckon. I'm fixin' to get me anuther one befur they takes away our rites. Y'all can get a hunnert roun clip too. Now, what does that haf to do wit the 'vironment? Well, if you got a buncha M-16/Ar-15s/Aks and the right boys, ya'll can controll yer 'vironment no matter wat happen.

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anonymous
Tennessee May 11 2011 at 5:05 PM

People like you are an embarrassment to southerners.

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anonymous
Florida May 19 2011 at 1:17 PM

And you are unable to see that a serious issue (The 2nd Amendment to the Constitution) is being addressed using humor (talking southern).

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anonymous
Connecticut May 29 2011 at 12:10 PM

You're all the same to me.

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anonymous
Manda Jun 13 2011 at 9:09 PM

Obviously you people have never been to Texas, which is the state that could kick all the other state's asses. Remember, Texas doesn't NEED y'all =)

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anonymous
Yank Jun 17 2011 at 11:24 AM

And it ain't all that great. It comes as no shock that it is the largest CO2 emitter. I've seen folks start their cars just to go from one strip mall store to the other, no more than an .25 mi away. I was just at the Drive-In last night and someone left their car running the whole time, through two movies! It wasn't even that hot outside due to the wind. Pathetic.
And I would like to see a person who feels the urge to drive a block because they'd rather not walk try and kick my ass...

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anonymous
Guest Aug 12 2011 at 5:50 PM

I've seen that everywhere, not just Texas.
Texas does have the highest emission rate, but not per capita. Wyoming actually has the highest CO2 emission rate per capita. Texas doesn't even make the top 10.

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anonymous
Guest Jun 17 2011 at 9:53 AM

You should secede then....we won't miss you

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anonymous
AmericanIdiotSavant May 08 2011 at 11:50 PM

Ohio has the highest "growth rate of autism" AND "the top 8th grade science students". Chew on that one for a while.

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anonymous
smartypants May 09 2011 at 6:11 PM

That's michigan...lol

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anonymous
Read Before Com... Jun 09 2011 at 1:00 PM

Michigan is "Greatest Access to Freshwater" and "Greatest Threat to Asian Carp."
just sayin.

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anonymous
Ha May 19 2011 at 12:39 PM

Yeah, that's not Michigan. Try again.

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anonymous
get smarter mr ... May 09 2011 at 8:32 PM

u might want to get out a map if you think thats michigan? lol to you

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