SEARCH RESULT

Total Matching Records found : 644

Policy Watch: Food & water crisis ahead -RN Bhaskar

-DNA India's rising affluence and water profligacy could trigger a food crisis very soon At first blush, there is a lot to be cheerful about. India's index of industrial production has resumed its climb. Stalled projects are being dusted and revived. There is a good chance that employment figures, too, will begin rising by the end of the next quarter. Then there is more good news. Per capital GDP (Gross Domestic Product)...

More »

Contaminated water leading to cancer, fear Indian villagers -Neeta Lal

-The Third Pole Villagers in India's Greater Noida district could be the latest victims of groundwater contamination with reports of increased cancer cases spurring investigations and concern about the situation elsewhere in the country The perils of groundwater contamination were again in the spotlight recently when media reports about drinking water causing cancer surfaced from five villages in an industrial belt on the outskirts of the Indian capital New Delhi. As medical experts...

More »

'Child stunting drops sharply in India'

-The Hindu India has dramatically reduced not only the number of underweight children but also the numbers of stunted and wasted children, new details of yet-unreleased official nutrition data show. The proportion of children under the age of five who are stunted has fallen from 48 per cent to 39 per cent between 2005-6 and 2013-14, the new numbers show, meaning that India now has 14.5 million fewer stunted children. Stunting is...

More »

Food Corporation of India in need of restructuring as corruption mars operations -Prabhudatta Mishra and Pratik Parija

-Livemint India is closer to breaking up FCI as graft and waste leave 255 million people without enough to eat New Delhi: India is closer to breaking up Food Corporation of India (FCI), an agency at the heart of the world's largest public food distribution programme for the poor, as graft and waste leave 255 million people without enough to eat. "Private companies should buy, store and distribute the grains as much...

More »

Sunderbans' water getting toxic: Scientists -Sahana Ghosh

-IANS Kolkata: Climate change is causing toxic metals trapped in the sediment beds of the Hooghly estuary in the Indian Sunderbans to leach out into the water system due to changes in ocean chemistry, say scientists, warning of potential human health hazards. They predict that after about 30 years, increasing ocean acidification - another dark side of spiked atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide - could in fact unlock the entire stock of...

More »

Video Archives

Archives

share on Facebook
Twitter
RSS
Feedback
Read Later

Contact Form

Please enter security code
      Close