A new four-lane highway is being constructed after cutting tens of thousands of trees in the protected Amazon rainforest for the purpose of hosting the COP30 climate summit in Brazil. The irony of this decision is lost on most.
While the Paris Agreement set a goal to limit human-induced warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, the world is currently on track to heat up by 2.5 to 2.9 degrees Celsius by the end of the 21st century.
A new four-lane highway is being constructed after cutting tens of thousands of trees in the protected Amazon rainforest for the purpose of hosting the COP30 climate summit in Brazil. The irony of this decision is lost on most.
There are always some clichés that make it to the tote bags. 바카라There is no planet B.바카라 But with every passing second, the climate crisis is worsening.
As temperature soars above 50 degrees Celsius in India바카라s Rajasthan and flash floods in Spain kill 224 people, the world moves farther away from the collective goal set in the Paris Agreement to limit human-caused warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius since pre-industrial times.
Instead, the world is currently on track to warm up by 2.5-2.9 degrees Celsius by the end of the 21st century, as per the United Nations Environment Programme.
Environmental damage emerging from human activity extends far beyond humanity, disrupting ecosystems and endangering all forms of life on Earth.
While Sir David Attenborough - a renowned British broadcaster and natural historian - continues to advocate passionately for the planet바카라s wildlife, the catastrophic 바카라Black Summer바카라 bushfires in Australia killed, injured or displaced over 60,000 koalas.
Even though anger sweeps over us at the haunting image of turtles ensnared and suffocating on plastic straws, U.S. President Donald Trump - arguably one of the most powerful men on the planet - not only effectively banned paper straws, he also announced withdrawal from the Paris Agreement.
One executive order after another, we edge closer to an irreversible threshold.
India is no stranger to the ongoing tension between development and ecological preservation 바카라 a cost that falls more heavily on some than on others.
A nation celebrated for its deep religious and cultural roots, India바카라s tribal communities have revered forests and trees as sacrosanct since time immemorial.
바카라To separate the Adivasi from his land is to stop his breathing. If you want to see an Adivasi바카라s extinction, take him away from his land바카라as it is happening at present,바카라 said author and tribal activist Ram Dayal Munda.
In Outlook Magazine바카라s March 1, 2024 issue titled, 바카라Adivasi바카라, we explore the theme of Jal, Jungle, Jameen and the 바카라politics of indigeneity바카라.
Anisha Reddy writes on the tribals in Andhra-Telangana region who have no place to call home as their houses were razed for the sake of a multi-crore irrigation project.
In Outlook Magazine바카라s March 1, 2023 titled 바카라Deliver Us From Greed바카라, the Editor-in-Chief Chinki Sinha says, 바카라 How does one begin in the aftermath of another disaster that brings back the trauma and the despair of the disasters one witnessed or was part of, directly or indirectly. Like the earthquakes in Türkiye and Syria that have killed more than 40,000 people. The tremors spread. Into the memory zone. And the old question returns바카라Why?바카라
As people are displaced not only by climate disasters but also by flawed planning, Umesh Kumar Ray chronicles the lives of those relentlessly battered by the river and forgotten by the state in Kosi: The Sorrow of Bihar.
바카라Dheeraj dhariha mangru chacha mann mat kariau malaal,
Samay pavi ke taruwar Foure, jaanaiye sakal jahaan.
(O Uncle, don바카라t be sad, be patient,
The whole world knows that trees bear fruit in their own time)바카라
Rain - once a symbol of renewal and relief - now batters relentlessly, felling trees and tearing through ceilings alike.
In the Outlook Magazine issue dated July 18, 2022, 바카라Diamond Absolutes바카라 we look at monsoon-triggered floods that kill hundreds of people each year.
In 바카라Rains Are Different For Those Who Experience It, And For Those Who Observe It바카라, Suraj Yengde writes about Nazima, who even though had never seen such floods, her mother said that it바카라s the third time in 18 years the Kopili River, a major tributary of the Brahmaputra, has washed away their house.
While humanity looks to the stars in search of life on other planets, it neglects the one home it already has 바카라 where glaciers are vanishing, microplastics reach the lungs of infants and coral reefs alike, and renewable energy is treated more as a token gesture than a necessity.
This is a war we wage against ourselves.