Mongabay-India

Your Environment This Week: India’s agricultural journey, Coastal commons, the 1.5 degree target

This week’s environment and conservation news stories rolled into one.

Subscribe to our YouTube channel to watch the latest high quality, original video stories from nature’s frontline in India.

To receive a weekly email roundup of stories, please sign-up for our newsletter.

Solar power helps nuns meet water needs during winters

The installation of solar water pumps has transformed the lives of nuns at the Pangmo Monastery in Himachal Pradesh.

Scientists leap beyond Latin to give local flair to species names

Regional and cultural considerations in naming, enhance species identification and citizen involvement in conservation initiatives.

[Podcast] Environomy: The One That Got Missed

While the economic reforms of 1991 generally strengthened the economic welfare of different classes across the country, for farmers, it marked the start of a decline in their income.

Trade began to be seen as the instrument to drive agricultural growth. To allow private operators to get economies of scale, the idea of land reform was diluted.

In the recent decades, a changing climate is adding an additional layer of vulnerability to the farming community, shares the podcast host in the fifth episode of ‘Environomy’.

[Explainer] Why is it getting hotter?

Scientists say that human-induced global warming, boosted temporarily by El Niño, is the primary reason for record-breaking heat.

[Charts] What is the 1.5°C ‘target’?

The year 2023 surpassed 2016 as the hottest year on record, intensifying focus on the 1.5°C target.

In 2015, countries pledged to limit global warming to “well below” 2°C, and preferably 1.5°C, as part of the Paris Agreement. An outsized focus on crossing the 1.5°C target risks taking focus away from preparing for local impacts.

[Commentary] Exploring gender in forest landscape restoration initiatives

Women led or women supported agricultural value chains are an integral part of Forest Landscape Restoration.

[Explainer] What are coastal commons?

These diverse geographical features support life forms and local livelihoods and contribute to climate change adaptation and mitigation.

[Book Review] A spotlight on India’s vanishing wildlife

The book ‘Biological Apocalypse’ edited by Pronami Bhattacharyya, focuses on wildlife listed as critically endangered, endangered, vulnerable and near threatened, by the International Union for Conservation of Nature.

The book contains updated information on the extensive research and efforts to conserve lesser-known species in the Indian subcontinent.

While the book begins with the editor’s reflection on the five previous extinctions, there are also conservation success stories that leave the readers with hope.

Deaths in human-animal conflict in Wayanad spark protests and debates

Wayanad district grapples with escalating wildlife encounters, including fatal incidents involving elephants and tigers.

Crop covers shield delicate grapes from unexpected weather changes

Unseasonal rains and other weather-related challenges have impacted the livelihoods of grape farmers in Nashik.

Deepak Shinde, a grapes farmers of Malegaon in Nashik district, showing his crops. Shinde credits Digambar Ashok Kate for introducing the cover in his area. Photo by Arvind Shukla.

Exit mobile version