 Stories About: India
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The Fire Down Below
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14 Feb 2003 |
Daily Grist |
| The Fire Down Below Forget about car emissions for a moment; coal fires, hundreds of which are raging out of control around the world, pump so much carbon dioxide and other pollutants into the atmosphere that researchers at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science yesterday called them a "global catastrophe." Coal fires burn both ... |
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| Topics: China, Colorado, energy, India, Indonesia, Pennsylvania, pollution and waste (all these topics) |
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The Sub-way Continent
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29 Jan 2003 |
Daily Grist |
| The Sub-way Continent If ever there were a city that needed a good subway system, it is New Delhi, India, one of the world's most populous (14 million) and most crowded metropolises. Now the city's got just that, and everyone, from residents to foreigners, is amazed and thrilled by its success. Although the entire 62-mile, 90-station subway system won't be complete until the end of the decade, the first part opene ... |
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| Topics: business, India, placemaking, population (all these topics) |
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99 and 44/100 Percent Confusing
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04 Nov 2002 |
Daily Grist |
| 99 and 44/100 Percent Confusing Five southern African nations are requesting permission to resume ivory trading at an international conference that begins today in Santiago, Chile. They are asking the 160 countries that have signed the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species to allow them to clear out stockpiles -- mainly from elephants that died naturally -- and to sell 14 tons mor ... |
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| Topics: Africa, business, India, Kenya, South Africa, wildlife (all these topics) |
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Delhi Pickle
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30 Oct 2002 |
Daily Grist |
| Delhi Pickle India, the nation that is hosting the eighth in a series of U.N. meetings on climate change, is using the occasion to chastise industrialized nations for pressuring poor countries to cut greenhouse emissions. Speaking at the meeting in Delhi, Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee argued that emissions-reduction programs would undermine efforts by India and other developing nations to strengthen their economies and lift their popul ... |
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| Topics: climate, India (all these topics) |
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A Dehli-cate Balance
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23 Oct 2002 |
Daily Grist |
| A Dehli-cate Balance Delegates from around the world are meeting in New Delhi, India, today for the latest round of international talks on climate change. In part because the world's biggest emitter of greenhouse gas emissions -- the United States -- has rejected the Kyoto Protocol, the meeting is focusing on ways to adapt to climate change rather than on ways to curb it. Delegates will discuss "minimizing vul ... |
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| Topics: climate, India, politics, United States (all these topics) |
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The Sub-zero Continent
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17 Oct 2002 |
Daily Grist |
| The Sub-zero Continent Sun-scorched India is fast becoming one of the world's hottest markets for air conditioners, as manufacturers rush to capitalize on an unsaturated market and a consumer base with rising disposable incomes. The average price for air conditioners in India has dropped by about 20 percent over the past two years, and sales have been booming; LG Electronics, the world's largest AC manufacturer, expe ... |
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| Topics: business, energy, green living, India (all these topics) |
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Nuclear Bombay
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11 Oct 2002 |
Daily Grist |
| Nuclear Bombay Scientists in India say the country could be at risk of a nuclear catastrophe -- and in this case, Pakistan has nothing to do with it. Kakrapara Atomic Power Station is considered the nation's best nuclear plant, but its reactors emit radiation three times greater than the international norm. With 12 other nuclear reactors in even worse shape throughout the country -- most modeled after a plant first built in the U.S. in ... |
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| Topics: India, nuclear power (all these topics) |
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Star Light, Star Bright, I Hope to See a Star Tonight
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13 Sep 2002 |
Daily Grist |
| Star Light, Star Bright, I Hope to See a Star Tonight Not too long ago, the Indian capital of New Delhi was one of the most polluted cities in the world; now, you still might not want to run a marathon there, but the city is making serious strides toward cleaning up its air. Dilip Biswas, chair of the city's Central Pollution Control Board, says pollution has dropped 25 percent since 1995, as levels of sulfur dioxide and ... |
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| Topics: air pollution, India, placemaking (all these topics) |
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Hurricane Hugo
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06 Sep 2002 |
Daily Grist |
| Hurricane Hugo If Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has his way, some developing nations will create an OPEC-like cartel to protect plants and animals from exploitation by the industrialized world. Speaking earlier this week at the close of the World Summit on Sustainable Development, Chavez said, "If these [developed] countries carry off a medical formul ... |
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| Topics: Brazil, business, China, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, India, Indonesia, Mexico, wildlife (all these topics) |
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Another Anderson Scandal
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30 Aug 2002 |
Daily Grist |
| Another Anderson Scandal A court in India has rejected efforts to reduce the charges against Warren Anderson, the former chair of the U.S.-based company Union Carbide, which was responsible for a 1984 gas leak in Bhopal that killed 3,000 people and sickened tens of thousands more. The leak from a pesticide plant in the central Indian city was one of the worst industrial ac ... |
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| Topics: commercial and industry organizations, health, India, pollution and waste, toxics (all these topics) |
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How Now, Brown Cloud
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12 Aug 2002 |
Daily Grist |
| How Now, Brown Cloud A dense blanket of pollution that is hovering over South Asia could cause millions of deaths in the region and pose a threat to the world at large, a group of 200 scientists announced today. Known as the "Asian Brown Cloud," the smog is an estimated two miles thick and covers the entire Indian subcontinent, from Sri Lanka to Afghanistan. The ... |
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| Topics: Afghanistan, air pollution, Asia, energy, health, India, Sri Lanka, wilderness (all these topics) |
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Double-blind Test
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18 Jun 2002 |
Daily Grist |
| Double-blind Test The threat of nuclear war between India and Pakistan seems to have abated slightly -- for the moment -- but what about the consequences of India's nuclear testing? Four years after the country exploded nuclear devices in underground tests in the Thar desert near the Pakistan border, villagers are questioning the government's pat assurance that no radioactivity was released. In Khetolai, ... |
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| Topics: health, India, nuclear power, Pakistan, ranching (all these topics) |
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Go Get 'em, Tigers
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13 May 2002 |
Daily Grist |
| Go Get 'em, Tigers The world's largest mangrove forest, Sundarban, spans the border between Bangladesh and India, but the countries don't have a joint plan to manage the 3,700-square-mile area. The United Nations is hoping to change that. Two U.N. entities, the International Partnership Fund and the Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization, are p ... |
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| Topics: Bangladesh, deforestation, India, land stewardship, national forests, United Nations, wilderness (all these topics) |
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Pax With the Devil
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21 Feb 2002 |
Daily Grist |
| Pax With the Devil Enron is seldom called "socially conscious" these days -- but that's how some investment companies routinely described the company in the not-too-distant past. The Pax World Balanced Fund, which promotes investing in good corporate citizens, and the Domini 400 Social Index and Calvert Social Index, which screen stocks ba ... |
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| Topics: business, commercial and industry organizations, energy, green living, India, United States, wind power (all these topics) |
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No Small Thing A review of Power Politics |
Michelle Nijhuis |
17 Jan 2002 |
Arts and Minds |
| When your first novel wins the Booker Prize, sells 6 million copies, and earns you a publicity trip around the world, what do you do next? Arundhati Roy, author of the 1997 novel The God of Small Things, decided she wanted to switch from fiction to the hard facts. A year after Roy's big debut, the New Delhi resident published a slim volume called The Cost of Living. The book consisted of two political essays. One attack ... |
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| Topics: dams, energy, India (all these topics) |
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Worse for the Tern
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20 Nov 2001 |
Daily Grist |
| Worse for the Tern Here's another possible casualty of the war on terrorism: migrating birds. An Indian ornithologist announced today that more than 200 species of birds that migrate from central Asia to India every year could be adversely affected by chemicals in the bombs exploding in Afghanistan. Such birds, including the Siberian crane, the shoveller duck, the crested poacher, and the Arctic te ... |
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| Topics: Afghanistan, Asia, India, wildlife, World Wildlife Fund (all these topics) |
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Bus-ted
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18 Oct 2001 |
Daily Grist |
| Bus-ted The city of New Delhi has less than four months to convert all diesel buses to natural gas, following an order today by India's Supreme Court. New Delhi has missed several previous court deadlines, and at least 9,000 of the city's 12,000 public buses still rely on diesel fuel. The Supreme Court orders have sparked strikes by drivers of buses, taxis, and auto-rickshaws. Although compressed natural gas is c ... |
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| Topics: air pollution, energy, India, placemaking (all these topics) |
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The Bus Stops Here
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28 Sep 2001 |
Daily Grist |
| The Bus Stops Here India's Supreme Court today postponed a Sunday deadline for all buses in Delhi to convert from diesel fuel to compressed natural gas, saying that commuters would be inconvenienced if diesel buses were taken off the road because the city has done little to comply with a court order to improve air quality. About 9,000 of the 12,000 municipal buses in Delhi still run on diesel. The court gave the ... |
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| Topics: air pollution, energy, India, placemaking (all these topics) |
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They Paved Pears and Rice and Put Up a Parking Lot Pavement is replacing the world's croplands |
Lester R. Brown |
01 Mar 2001 |
Main Dish |
| As the new century begins, the competition between cars and crops for cropland is intensifying. Until now, the paving over of cropland has occurred largely in industrial countries, home to four-fifths of the world's 520 million automobiles. But now, more and more farmland is being sacrificed in developing countries with hungry populations, calling into question the future ... |
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| Topics: China, food and agriculture, India, placemaking, United States (all these topics) |
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Wheels of Progress?
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Suzy Becker |
09 Jun 2000 |
Ha. |
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| Topics: India, placemaking (all these topics) |
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Bhopal -- or RuPaul
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Ben White |
02 Dec 1999 |
Muckraker |
| Friday marks the 15th anniversary of a very unhappy occasion. On Dec. 3, 1984, a Union Carbide industrial plant in Bhopal, India, released a deadly cloud of the gas methyl isocyanate into the air, killing at least 6,500 people (and some say more) and injuring tens of thousands. Ever since, Union Carbide and Bhopal have been inextricably linked. But those who may not know a great deal about what happened in India won't find any enlightenment at Uni ... |
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| Topics: air pollution, business, greenhouse-gas emissions, India, Muckraker, politics, toxics (all these topics) |
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A Passage From India An American reflects on the problem of poverty |
Donella H. Meadows |
08 Nov 1999 |
Global Citizen |
| Almost 30 years ago I returned from a long stay in India with my mind, body, and senses full of dust and color, peace and violence, holiness and crassness, all the contradictions of a land so different from my own. I thought I would remember always the faces of the villagers. I was pained by the enormous gulf between the quality and quantity of their food and homes and possessions and the foo ... |
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| Topics: green living, India (all these topics) |
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