-PTI NEW DELHI: A high level of pesticides was found in 509 samples out of 16,790 comprising veggies, fruits, spices, rice, wheat and other food items in 2013-14, said a latest government report. Most of the vegetables showed relatively higher pesticide residue detection in rainy season followed by summer and Winter seasons, it said. However the samples of meat, milk and surface water did not have pesticides above maximum residue level, it...
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Finance panel report not unanimous -Puja Mehra
-The Hindu The 14th Finance Commission, chaired by former Reserve Bank Governor Y.V. Reddy, has not submitted a unanimous report. Abhijit Sen, commission member, gave a dissent note to the report. The Modi government has not yet announced its decision on the report submitted to President Pranab Mukherjee's office in mid-December. Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitley did not table it in Parliament during the Winter Session. Mr. Jaitley is expected to present...
More »On offer: Cost-effective measures to rid India of air pollution -E Somanathan
-The Hindustan Times Delhi has the dubious distinction of being the world's most polluted city. In fact, the entire country, including the rural areas, is heavily polluted as anyone who has taken a flight in India knows. The fog that engulfs north India in Winter is largely a consequence of the smoke particles in the air on which water condenses easily. Why have matters been allowed to reach this state? One...
More »Veggie, fruit prices soar by up to 100% -Subodh Varma
-The Times of India NEW DELHI: Prices of most food items have been inching up relentlessly through the past year despite several so-called reforms in management of food supply chains. While staples like wheat flour and rice have become marginally costlier, prices of pulses like masoor and arhar have soared by up to 30%. Barring a few exceptions, prices of vegetables and fruits have shot up by 20 to 50%, and...
More »Hudhud, Kashmir flooding 2014’s costliest catastrophes, says report -Rajat Ghai
-Down to Earth While Hudhud caused $11 billion worth of damages, the flooding in the Indian and Pakistani portions of Kashmir was worth $18 billion The floods in Jammu and Kashmir and Cyclone Hudhud in Peninsular India were the costliest natural disasters of 2014, a new report has said. According to the ‘Annual Global Climate and Catastrophe Report' by leading global reinsurance intermediary and full-service capital advisor, Aon Benfield, while Hudhud caused $11...
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