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Tuesday, June 16, 2026
South Asia could see 40 million climate migrants by 2030

Soumya Sarkar Unless South Asian countries start working quickly, and in cooperation, they could soon be flooded by tens of millions of climate migrants. Tens of millions of people are migrating or are being displaced in South Asia due to disasters brought on by climate change, and the number could

European bison recovering, but freshwater dolphins face extinction: IUCN Red List

While the European bison (Bison bonasus), Europe’s largest land mammal, has moved from Vulnerable to Near Threatened due to conservation efforts, the latest IUCN Red List of Threatened Species™ update, also warns that 31 species moved into the Extinct category, and all of the world’s freshwat

India’s Energy Policy needs Balancing Economic Growth with Human Development

Rudra Narayan Mishra India needs cheap but clean energy towards improving hygiene/sanitation, education, health care, and smoke free energy for cooking to reduce indoor air pollution which will improve living condition and well-being of all, especially women and children. Use of clean energy is a pr

Sow soy and harvest conflict? The case of land occupation in Brazil

Stefano Falcone The modernisation of the agricultural sector can be an important driver of development, decreasing the amount of labour necessary for farming while pushing farmers to relocate in industry. But why would farmers voluntarily renounce their land and look for factory jobs? Since Smith

Countries intend to increase fossil fuel production while research says it needs to be limited by 6% per year

Countries plan to increase their fossil fuel production over the next decade, even as research shows that the world needs to decrease production by 6% per year to limit global warming to 1.5°C, according to the 2020 Production Gap Report. A special issue of the Production Gap Report – from lead

WWF commissioned report acknowledges human rights abuses in WWF projects

WWF published ‘Embedding Human Rights into Nature Conservation: from Intent to Action’, a report from an Independent Panel it commissioned last year to review WWF’s role in relation to reported human rights abuses by some government rangers in the most complex and remote areas where it works.

‘CSI Amazon’: Epic study looks at what’s killing the rain-forest’s trees

Liz Kimbrough A newly published study in the journal Nature Communications provides insight into the patterns driving tree death in the Amazon and may help scientists explain why and how the forest is changing. A newly published study provides insight into why trees die in the Amazon, and why the

Create open data culture to feed hungry world – experts

Fiona Broom The world’s ability to feed its growing — and increasingly hungry — population will depend on a culture of openness in research and data sharing, a debate on the future of agricultural research heard. Making agricultural data accessible is key to accelerating new discoveries

US Coral Reefs vulnerable and in a state of decline

Coral reefs in both the Pacific and Atlantic oceans received a “fair” score in the first-ever condition status report for U.S. coral reefs released by NOAA and the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science (UMCES). While the overall scores were “fair,” the report highlights cor

The news – good, bad and uncertain – on NGO donations in Australia

Terence Wood Most Australian development NGOs actually did quite well with donations amid the very difficult year that was 2019 with stagnant domestic economy, droughts and bush fires. In one way, 2019 was a good year for Australia’s Development NGOs. The Development Policy Centre analyses financi

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