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Sunday, June 7, 2026
Watch: Seed vault holds key to human survival

Among the most important buildings in the world, the Seed Vault holds the key to human survival: more than 880,000 seed samples, the largest collection in the world. Follow world-renowned scientist Cary Fowler into the heart of the Arctic, where the Svalbard Global Seed Vault lies nestled in the fro

Food , Sustainable Development / 03/03/2017
What we need are farms that support farmers, consumers AND the environment

Andrea Basche and Marcia DeLonge U.S. agriculture has trended for several decades — as a result of policy, economics and other drivers — toward systems that are more simplified over both space and time. This has had adverse consequences for food, energy and water. Editor’s note: This Voices

BBC banned from India’s tiger reserves after “shoot on sight” investigation

The Indian government has reportedly banned the BBC from filming in any tiger reserve nationwide for five years, after its South Asia correspondent investigated “shoot on sight” conservation in the country. Justin Rowlatt investigated the impact of deadly conservation tactics on tribal communiti

Sindh People March to Protect Indus River

The 2017 Sindh Awami Caravan will be carried out under the theme; Protection of our rivers and delta. Taking into consideration the aims and objectives of the Caravan, the Pakistan Fisherfolk Forum has planned to highlight the restoration of rivers in general in the River Indus Muhammad Ali Shah, Dr

Data platform launched by UNEP to track SDGs

Environment Live is the dynamic UN knowledge platform, designed to collect, process and share the world’s best environmental science and research, has introduced new tools to review progress towards the implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals Built and maintained by UN Environmen

Modern Communication technology at the centre of better work-life balance: New ILO report

New ILO-Eurofound report shows that the use of modern communication technologies facilitates a better overall work-life balance but, at the same time, also blurs the boundaries between work and personal life. The expanding use of digital technologies such as smartphones, tablets, laptops and desktop

India’s militant rhino protectors are challenging traditional views of how conservation works

Bhaskar Vira In Kaziranga, a national park in north-eastern India, rangers shoot people to protect rhinos. The park’s aggressive policing is, of course, controversial, but the results are clear: despite rising demand for illegal rhino horn, and plummeting numbers throughout Africa and South-East A

Cities , Water / 02/02/2017
River Basin Management needs sensitive and responsible cities

Industrial and urban wastewater cause maximum pollution of our rivers Rivers enter into cities as rivers but come out of them as dirty dead drains.  This has to change. We can’t take pride in an urban growth that pollutes, decays and destroys our rivers. Rivers gave us the civilizations; the onus

The secret lives of urban waste pickers

Tang Damin Wu Ka Ming and Zhang Jieying’s new book documents the unknown lives of waste pickers living on the outskirts of Beijing It’s possible to think of cities as organisms, their metabolisms at work in places and at times we don’t notice. Rarely do we stop and question where our waste goe

Toilets that churn gold for the soil

Nidhi Jamwal On an average, the annual faecal matter and urine of one human being contains 4.6 kg nitrogen, 0.6 kg phosphorous and 1.3 kg potassium, all recyclable. Till two years ago, Kairi, a Tharu tribe village of 138 families in Pashchim Champaran, Bihar, did not have even a single toilet. Fed u

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