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'Women most vulnerable to climate change'

Women, the primary caregiver in family, are the most vulnerable group to climate change, said the speakers at a seminar yesterday. They also laid emphasis on gender-sensitive adaptation of climate change and disaster management. The speakers said the poorer the women are, the higher are their vulnerability and sufferings. They …

Bangladesh to be worst sufferer of global warming: seminar

Policy planners on Monday said Bangladesh, among the least developed countries, would be the worst suffer of global environment degradation and rise in the sea level. The government has to pay due importance to environmental issues and take infrastructural development plans to face the challenges, they said at a seminar …

Myopic budget

The 2008 Union budget must be remembered. Not because it heralds the news of an early election. But because it comes at a time when the world is battling four different but linked developments. First, the impending US recession, which is already costing our financial markets to tumble. Second, record …

Possibility of cold war over Arctic meltdown (Editorial)

With oil above 100 dollars a barrel and Arctic ice melting faster than ever, some of the world's most powerful countries -- including the United States and Russia -- are looking north to a possible energy bonanza. This prospective scramble for buried Arctic mineral wealth made more accessible by freshly …

Crying need: Assess impact of drying rivers on water projects

Scientific evidence on climate change leading to drying up of rivers in Gujarat is overwhelming, as it points to significant risks of water scarcity. Experts say, Gujarat needs judicious investments in infrastructures that conserve, enhance and utilize water optimally with a long-term view. When huge investments for water projects like …

Experts talk on global warming

Public health experts stressed the urgent need to address global warming and its dangerous effects on health at the recently concluded three-day long 52nd National Conference of Indian Public Health Association. The Indian Association of Preventive and Social Medicine (IAPSM) and the Indian Public Health Association (IPHA) have urged the …

Lankan scientists, others to study climatic changes

Lankan scientists, others to study climatic changes National Botanical Research Institute (NBRI) in Lucknow in assistance with foreign scientists, will undertake a joint project to study climate change and its impact on flora in the South Asian region. The project that will witness participation of scientists from Nepal, Sri Lanka, …

Regional cooperation for Saarc farmers

Agriculture experts of South Asian countries have recommended the setting up of regional information centres to alert farmers in the area on movement of pests and spread of crop dieseas in the wake of climate change. A three-day meeting on Science-based Agricultural Transformation towards Alleviation of Hunger and Poverty which …

Extreme climate threatens to shrink Gujarats rivers

Gujarat is a waterstressed state going by the definition of such areas as those having water availability below 1700 cum/ca/annum (cubic meter per capita per year). According to Priyadarshi Shukla, member of Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and IIM-A faculty, the Sabarmati river basin has an annual per capita …

Editorial: Do bacteria control our weather?

We have all heard tales of frogs, toads and fish raining from the heavens: these are rare events triggered by freak weather. But there are land and water-based life forms that seem to be present in the atmosphere just about all the time. These include algae, fungi and bacteria. What …

Dinosaurs were no strangers to climate change

Dinosaurs might have known a surprising amount about what we think of as a quintessentially modern problem: global warming. Fossilised vegetation from 65 million years ago in the late Cretaceous period, reveals that central Siberia was a lot like modern-day Florida, with lush ferns and lots of rain.

Save the trees

Scientists and policy-makers will meet in Bonn this June to discuss one of the most pressing concerns to come out of December's United Nations climate meeting

Climate change may lead to food shortage

Nobel Peace Prize winner and chairman of the Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change (IPPC), Dr R.K. Pachauri, today said decline in production of wheat in the country might be due to global climate change. He said the only way to mitigate the adverse impact of global climate change, which may …

Nobel: Two Puneites in thank you list of Pachauri

When R K Pachauri, chairman of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) received the Nobel Peace Prize in December last year on behalf of the IPCC, which bagged the award jointly with Al Gore, he had clearly mentioned that he would first want to pay tribute to the thousands …

Climate change causes infectious diseases

An integrated approach is needed to face the challenges of human and animal diseases, as climate change contributes to emergence of new infectious diseases, experts told a seminar yesterday. The British Council organised the seminar titled 'Infectious diseases: A vision for future detection, identification and monitoring' as part of a …

Sceptics of warming seize on cold spell

The world has seen some extraordinary winter conditions in both hemispheres over the past year: snow in Johannesburg last June and in Baghdad in January, Arctic sea ice returning with a vengeance after a record retreat last summer, paralyzing blizzards in China, and a sharp drop in the globe's average …

In The Deep

Human impact on oceans cause for global concern Are we taking our oceans for granted? It looks like we are, because we perceive them

Japan May Invest $1.93 Bn In Climate Fund - Report

Japan is planning to invest up to $1.93 billion in an international fund aimed at encouraging the use of renewable energy technology in developing countries, the Nikkei financial daily said on Sunday. The fund, to be set up jointly with the United States and Britain, is expected be the largest …

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