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Thursday, July 16, 2026
Mahanadi river in India is Coal Rich but Water Stressed

Large scale industrialisation, especially extraction of coal from the Mahanadi basin, rapid urbanisation and climate change are some of the major causes for water stress situation in the river.

Making forests the focus of global bioeconomies

Gabrielle Lipton On 11 October, the European Commission launched a new strategy to create a comprehensive bioeconomy – a ‘biosociety’ – and ultimately a carbon-neutral future. The strategy centers on waste reduction, ecosystem protection and a 100-million-euro fund to incentivize private

Hydropower project in DR Congo : A Deal for Chinese and European companies

On October 16, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) government announced a 14 billion USD joint and exclusive development agreement with a consortium of Chinese and European developers to construct the Inga 3 hydroelectric dam, following years of delay and controversy. The Chinese consortium is le

Model shows pathway to feeding the world

Barbara Axt Earth has the capacity to feed the world’s population on a healthy diet if countries make fundamental changes to their food production systems and consumption, a study has found.   The study, published in Nature on 10 October, modelled the changes needed to feed 10 billion people

Chinese logging put Solomon Islands rainforests at risk

New evidence suggest hugely unsustainable rates of logging and high risk of illegal practices in the Solomon Islands are putting China’s trade diplomacy at risk Using satellite imagery and drone photography, the Paradise Lost report highlights how the Solomon Islands’ tropica

Top Madagascar shrimp co. moved millions among tax-haven shell companies

Aziz Ismail, 85, a French citizen born in Madagascar, bought into Madagascar’s shrimp business in 1973. His empire, known generally as Unima, now includes at least eight privately held companies in Europe and Africa that are mainly involved in seafood from Madagascar, where operations are centered

Coconut rhinoceros beetle: a huge threat in Solomon Islands and the Pacific

Luke Kiddle, Andrew Piper, Bob Macfarlane A new invasive strain of the coconut rhinoceros beetle (CRB), Oryctes rhinoceros, is present in Solomon Islands and is spreading rapidly. CRB is the most serious insect pest of coconuts, essential for food security and cash income, resulting in signific

World Bank, Asian Development Bank, still pouring billions into fossil fuels in climate-vulnerable

World Bank, the Asian Development Bank, and the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank are investing almost $5 billion in fossil fuels in 10 Asian countries. Three of the world’s biggest development banks have kept investing heavily in fossil fuels in some of the world’s most climate-vulnerable co

Indian Environmental Activist G D Agarwal passes away fasting for saving Ganga

These #martyrs of a lost cause, fighting #battles with #science and #religious sentiment together , against an obdurate and entrenched #bureaucracy, #politicians with double speak, a people resigned and full of indifference and apathy, dreaming of a clean and free flowing #river, was the stuff of le

Why do we demolish buildings instead of de-constructing them for reuse?

Nate Berg Dismantling buildings piece by piece to preserve the reusable parts within keeps materials out of landfills and creates more jobs that demolition. Just a few years after starting a non-profit reselling used building materials in the early 1990s, Ted Reiff’s organization, The ReUse Peopl

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