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Corporate CEO’s earn a workers lifetime salary in less than a week

Richest 1 percent bagged 82 percent of wealth created last year – poorest half of humanity got nothing Eighty two percent of the wealth generated last year went to the richest one percent of the global population, while the 3.7 billion people who make up the poorest half of the world saw no in

Climate , Data & Reports , Energy / 01/20/2018
Methane from Indian livestock adds to global warming

S. Singh Methane produced by India’s livestock population, considered the world’s largest, can significantly raise global temperatures, says a new study designed to help predict climate change linked to greenhouse gas (GhG) emissions from farm animals. Results of the study carried out by the

Small hydropower plants damaging Balkan landscapes

Eight hydropower projects in Albania, Croatia and Macedonia financed with European public money have damaged biodiversity and are in urgent need of increased monitoring and restoration measures, says a study by CEE Bankwatch Network. See the full the study and available languages  The hydropower p

‘A vicious cycle towards extinction:’ Hunting and trade can push even abundant wildlife populations to the brink

Mike Gaworecki Researchers at the University of Queensland looked at something called the anthropogenic Allee effect (AAE), a theory that proposes a critical population level threshold below which the likelihood of a species going extinct increases substantially due to rising prices for rare animals

UN says lift in global economy brings opportunities to tackle major development issues

A three per cent upturn in the global economy has paved the way to readjust policy towards longer-term issues, such as addressing climate change, tackling existing inequalities and removing institutional obstacles to development, according to a new United Nations report on global economic prospects.

India’s energy subsidies favour fossil fuels over renewables

Soumya Sarkar Although subsidies to renewables have risen substantially, central government handouts to coal mining and coal-fired electricity continue to be high, which contradicts India’s stated aims on reducing carbon emissions An inventory of energy subsidies provided by the central government

Menstrual hygiene management in the Pacific: women’s and girl’s experiences

 Yasmin Mohamed and Chelsea Huggett There has been limited research on menstrual management in the Pacific, and the Last Taboo project is helping to bridge this gap. How does a market vendor manage her menstrual period while she’s at work in rural Papua New Guinea (PNG) and without access to to

Liquid Gold: Pain Doctors Soak Up Profits By Screening Urine For Drugs in US

Fred Schulte and Elizabeth Lucas Kaiser Health News, with assistance from researchers at the Mayo Clinic, analyzed available billing data from Medicare and private insurance billing nationwide, and found that spending on urine screens and related genetic tests quadrupled from 2011 to 2014 to an esti

Australia is a global top-ten deforester – and Queensland is leading the way

Noel D Preece and Penny van Oosterzee Eastern Australia ranks alongside these in the top 10 of the world’s major deforestation fronts – the only one in a developed nation. When you think of devastating deforestation and extinction you usually think of the Amazon, Borneo and the Congo. But east

In India, air pollution 2nd largest killer and children are growing smaller lungs

Landmark studies shows air pollution is now the second largest killer in India and another recent study in Journal of Indian Paediatrics shows children in Delhi are growing up with smaller lungs compared to the children of developed world  Centre for Science and Environment expresses deep shock at

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