The right to development is not a right to pollute. As the debate over India's Climate Change strategy continues, it is necessary to address some misconceptions about climate equity that are evident in recent pronouncements of the Union Minister for Environment and Forests, Jairam Ramesh, and the writings of his most recent adviser, Dr. Arvind Subramanian. A solution to Climate Change, even an inequitable solution, has to address our planet's energy...
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Big food push urged to avoid global hunger by Richard Black
A big push to develop agriculture in the poorest countries is needed if the world is to feed itself in future decades, a report warns. With the world's population soaring to nine billion by mid-century, crop yields must rise, say the authors - yet Climate Change threatens to slash them. Already the number of chronically hungry people is above one billion. The report was prepared for a major conference on farming...
More »Rate of deforestation has slowed: U.N. report
Ambitious planting programmes in Asia and the United States have helped slow the global rate of deforestation but farmers are still cutting trees to clear land at an alarmingly high rate, a U.N. survey released on Thursday shows. Forests absorb and store greenhouse gases so deforestation can exacerbate mean the effects of Climate Change, said Mette Loyche Wilkie, coordinator of the assessment by the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization. Eduardo Rojas,...
More »India suggests RTI for Climate Change bodies by Priscilla Jebaraj
Reports should be sent to all ‘climate sceptics' during the review process Introduce the “Right to Information” to the U.N.'s Climate Change system, India has suggested to the body (the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change) charged with bringing credibility and accountability to the Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC), the climate science panel which has been in the eye of a storm over the last few months. India wants...
More »Climate Change: women, children most hit
If Climate Change is indeed the biggest global health threat, public health professionals say that women and children in developing countries will be hit hardest. Research has shown that deep inequalities make them the most vulnerable to scarcity and disease when community sources start to shrink. “Malnutrition poses the biggest threat to children,” paediatrics professor Louis Reynolds said. “If temperature rises by 3 degrees centigrade, deaths from malnutrition will go up by...
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