Sunday, December 30, 2018
Bengal chemicals keen on resuming anti-snake venom serum production
Thursday, December 6, 2018
India conducts its first major wind-solar hybrid auction
Hybrid is one in which solar and wind is generated together by placing solar modules and wind turbines alongside each other.
BE
NGALURU: Softbank-backed SB Energy and Gautam Adani led- Adani Green Energy have won 840 MW of the 1,200 MW put on sale at the first wind-solar hybrid auction.
SB Energy won 450 MW at Rs 2.67 per unit of electricity generated while Adani Green Energy won 390 MW at Rs 2.69 in the auction conducted by the Solar Energy Corporation of India (SECI).
Dust from Middle East affects Indian summer monsoon: Study
WASHINGTON: Dust and soot transported from the deserts of the Middle East settle on the snow cover of the Himalaya mountain range and affect the intensity of the summer monsoon in India, a study has found.
pangolin poaching
NEW DELHI: Animal protection bodies Monday asked the Centre to take strict measures to put an end to pangolin poaching after a video footage of the animal being brutally killed was captured by a researcher..
They said the footage, captured by World Animal Protection (WAP) and Wildlife Conservation Research Unit, University of Oxford (WildCRU), shows that not only is this a major conservation issue but also a devastating animal welfare concern.
The footage, taken as part of a two-year study, purportedly shows a pangolin being brutally killed for its body parts to be sold on the black market in Assam.
Monday, December 3, 2018
2.0 in real life
Hundreds of Birds Fall From the Sky During 5G Test in The Netherlands .I saw this video after I had seen the movie 2.0 by Shankar .This video is an eye opener for telecom giants coming up with higher frequency towers.
The radiation from cell phone towers impairs their natural sense of direction and end up landing somewhere ,and they die.This in turn affects the entire food chain and the pest or locusts which they feed on significantly increase causing damage to crops.This is a matter of serious concern since the whole food chain is affected.
https://youtu.be/ah8Bpg6ep1k
Tamil Nadu order to close Sterlite plant against natural justice: NGT panel
Land degradation makes containing floods and droughts tough
Extreme rainfall acidifies land in India's northeastern states
Extreme heat increasing in both summer and winter
Thriving reef fisheries continue to provide food despite coral bleaching
Growing pile of human and animal waste harbors threats, opportunities
Climate change and air pollution damaging health and causing millions of premature deaths
- 157m more vulnerable people were subjected to a heatwave in 2017 than in 2000, and 18m more than in 2016.
- 153bn hours of work were lost in 2017 due to extreme heat as a result of climate change. China alone lost 21bn hours, the equivalent of a year's work for 1.4% of their working population. India lost 75bn hours, equivalent to 7% of their total working population.
- Heat greatly exacerbates urban air pollution, with 97% of cities in low- and middle- income countries not meeting WHO air quality guidelines.
- Heat stress, an early and severe effect of climate change, is commonplace and we and the health systems we rely on are ill-equipped to cope.
- Rising temperatures and unseasonable warmth are responsible for cholera and dengue fever spreading, with vectorial capacity for their transmission increasing across many endemic areas.
- The mean global temperature change to which humans are exposed is more than double the global average change, with temperatures rising by 0.8°C versus 0.3°C.
Greenhouse gas 'detergent' recycles itself in atmosphere
New catalyst produces cheap hydrogen fuel
Oumuamua
NASA Learns More About Interstellar Visitor 'Oumuamua
An artist's concept of interstellar asteroid 1I/2017 U1 ('Oumuamua) as it passed through the solar system after its discovery in October 2017. Observations of 'Oumuamua indicate that it must be very elongated because of its dramatic variations in brightness as it tumbled through space.
Planting more hedgerows and trees could hold the key to helping UK bees thrive once again, a new study argues.
Sunday, December 2, 2018
Indian Scientists Develop World’s First Low Temperature Thermal Desalination Plant
Scientists at the National Institute of Ocean Technology (NIOT), Chennai have developed world’s first low temperature thermal desalination plant, which could address drinking water problems in India’s ocean island territories and even offshore urban centres along the coastline.
Low temperature thermal desalination (LTTD) is one process that uses the availability of a temperature gradient between two water bodies or flows to evaporate the warmer seawater at low pressures and condense the resultant vapour with the colder seawater to obtain fresh water.
“The 12-13oC cold water available at about 400m depth within 600m from the island is used along with the surface water at about 28oC to produce potable water in the Lakshadweep Islands,” Dr Ramana Murthy, Scientist at NIOT told Indian Science Journal.
Magic Mushrooms
A psilocybin mushroom is one of a polyphyletic group of fungi that contain any of various psychedelic compounds, including psilocybin, psilocin, and baeocystin.
Common, colloquial terms for psilocybin mushrooms include psychedelic mushrooms, magic mushrooms, shrooms, and mush.
Psychedelics and ecology ?
Researchers have noted the relationship between psychedelics and ecology, particularly in relation to the altered states of consciousness (ASC) produced by psychedelic drugs and the perception of interconnectedness expressed through ecological ideas and themes produced by the psychedelic experience. This is felt through the direct experience of the unity of nature and the environment of which the individual is no longer perceived as separate but intimately connected and embedded inside.
Swiss chemist Albert Hofmann, the first person to synthesize LSD, believed that the drug made one aware and sensitive to "the magnificence of nature and of the animal and plant kingdom" and the role of humanity in relation to nature.Stanley Krippner and David Luke have speculated that "the consumption of psychedelic substances leads to an increased concern for nature and ecological issues". As a result, American psychologist Ralph Metzner and several others have argued that psychedelic drug use was the impetus for the modern ecology movement in the late 1960s.
Medical Cannabis
Medical cannabis, or medical marijuana, is cannabis and cannabinoids that are recommended by doctors for their patients.The use of cannabis as medicine has not been rigorously tested due to production restrictions and other governmental regulations.Limited evidence suggests that cannabis can reduce nausea and vomiting during chemotherapy, improve appetite in people with HIV/AIDS, and reduce chronic pain and muscle spasms.
Shrinking Ice cap - Time lapse video by NASA
NASA posted this video to YouTube with this description, “Arctic sea ice has not only been shrinking in surface area in recent years, it’s becoming younger and thinner as well. In this animation, where the ice cover almost looks gelatinous as it pulses through the seasons, cryospheric scientist Dr. Walt Meier of NASA Goddard Space Flight Center describes how the sea ice has undergone fundamental changes during the era of satellite measurements.”
New Water treatment inspired through sea creature
Newly discovered deep-sea microbes gobble greenhouse gases and perhaps oil spills.
New federal climate assessment for U.S. released Report highlights impacts, risks and adaptations.
- Human health and safety, our quality of life, and the rate of economic growth in communities across the U.S. are increasingly vulnerable to the impacts of climate change.
- The cascading impacts of climate change threaten the natural, built and social systems we rely on, both within and beyond the nation's borders.
- Societal efforts to respond to climate change have expanded in the last five years, but not at the scale needed to avoid substantial damages to the economy, environment, and human health over the coming decades.
- Without substantial and sustained global efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and regional initiatives to prepare for anticipated changes, climate change is expected to cause growing losses to American infrastructure and property and impede the rate of economic growth over this century.
Seismic study reveals huge amount of water dragged into Earth's interior
Tuesday, November 27, 2018
Air pollution affects life expectancy worse than smoking, terrorism
Extreme heat increasing in both summer and winter
2°C rise ‘disastrous’ for poor
Monday, November 26, 2018
Northwest China hit by sandstorm as Beijing is smothered in smog
Could an anti-global warming atmospheric spraying program really work?
A program to reduce Earth's heat capture by injecting aerosols into the atmosphere from high-altitude aircraft is possible, inexpensive, and would be unlikely to remain secret.Those are the key findings of new research published today in Environmental Research Letters, which looked at the capabilities and costs of various methods of delivering sulphates into the lower stratosphere, known as stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI).
The researchers examined the costs and practicalities of a large scale, hypothetical 'solar geoengineering' project beginning 15 years from now. Its aim would be to halve the increase in anthropogenic radiative forcing, by deploying material to altitudes of around 20 kilometres.
Four ways our cities can cut transport emissions
Better wastewater treatment in India with Dutch expertise
The Arctic is turning brown because of weird weather – and it could accelerate climate change
Saturday, November 24, 2018
How whales became biggest animals on Earth
Blue whales have a maximum recorded weight of 173 tonnes and can grow up to 29.9 metres in length. However, until a few million years ago, whales rarely grew over 10 metres.
Researchers said that evolutionary shift, which took place at the beginning of the Ice Ages, corresponds to climatic changes that would have reshaped whales' food supply in the world's oceans.
Goa may go Kerala way, warns ecologist Madhav Gadgil
Representative photo. (PTI)
PANAJI: Noted ecologist Madhav Gadgil has warned Goa may face the same fate as the flood-battered Kerala if it does not take precautions on the environmental front.
Not cool: ACs will make world 0.5 degree Celsius warmer by 2100
NEW DELHI: Increasing incomes and urbanisation will see increase in room air conditioning units from 1.2 billion to 4.5 billion in the world by 2050 when Indiaalone may account for one billion units, posing a serious challenge to the global community which is fighting climate change and rising temperatures.
India will, in fact, see a phenomenal growth during the period - from 26.3 million installed stock of room air conditioner (RAC) units in 2016 to over 1 billion in 2050.
Dead sperm whale in Indonesia found with 6 kg of plastic in stomach
JAKARTA: A sperm whale has been found dead in Indonesia with 115 plastic cups and 25 plastic bags in its stomach, raising concern among environmentalists and throwing the spotlight on the country's rubbish problem. The items were part of nearly six kilograms (13 pounds) of plastic waste discovered in the 9.5-metre (31-foot) carcass when it washed ashore in Wakatobi National Park, in Southeast Sulawesi province, on Monday.
Booze delivery
Mumbaikars take home delivery for granted .Almost anything can be delivered home and most would assume that alcohol is another such item but it is still illegal.
The sale goes pretty high on days when there are cricket matches ,most wine shops still provide delivery personnel who even buy cigarettes and snacks for their customers .
Now ,the excise is pretty strict these days they impose heafty penalties on the violators .Remember the Duzo app in Bangalore which offered similar services .
Liberalizing alcohol sales has many things in its favour from preventing dangerous drinking and at the most basic level - treating citizens like adults.
Post in your views in the comments below
Friday, November 23, 2018
Current climate models underestimate warming by black carbon aerosol
Is Antarctica becoming more like Greenland?
Presence of textile microfibers from washing machines in marine floors
Evolution: South Africa's hominin record is a fair-weather friend
Thursday, November 22, 2018
HYDERABAD HIGH COURT URGES PLASTIC BAN IN TELGANA,ANDHRA PRADESH SHRINES
Green light to thermal power plants only after 'human risk' evaluation
New thermal power plants in India will now have to comply with 'human health and environment ' criteria as part of their mandatory environmental clearance procedures. The Union environment ministry has notified a new list of standard conditions, bringing for the first time an exclusive health assessment as an essential point to give green nod to such plants.Under its new order, issued on Monday, the company will have to take into account chronic exposure to air and noise pollution which may adversely affect health of not only workers but also of people living in its vicinity. This baseline health status within the study area will be part of the company's application, seeking environment clearances for setting up new thermal power plants anywhere in the country.
First Organised census for Indian Dolphins to be carried out in India
- For the conservation of Indus dolphins - one of the world’s rarest mammals - the Punjab government along with WWF-India are conducting the first organised census on their population.
- Found only in India and Pakistan, the Indus dolphins are confined to only a 185 km stretch between Talwara and Harike Barrage in India’s Beas river in Punjab.
- the most flourishing population of the Indus dolphin, platanista gangetica minor, is found across Pakistan where their numbers are estimated to be around 1,800 over a stretch of 1,500 km of the Indus river.
- According to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), construction of critical barrage is associated with the large-scale decline in the area of occupancy, “which have not ceased”. IUCN suspects the population size of the Indus river dolphins has reduced by more than 50% since 1944.
Early warning system to aver human elephant conflict
- A research team from Bannari Amman Institute of Technology, Sathyamangalam, had designed the “smart fence for early elephant warning”. It was recently installed at Ammapalayam village on the Bhavani Sagar – Mettupalayam Highway where elephants frequently cross the road.
- The team headed by Sanjoy Deb, and comprising L. Rajasekar, R. Ramkumar and S. Selvakumar, designed the system that would send an SMS (short messaging service) to farmers and forest officials upon detecting elephants.
- The new smart fence is composed of a detection module, warning module and a drive-away module. The detection module is a long distance laser fence indigenously designed by the team and can be operated up to 400 metres.
Unpredictable weather fallout on climate change
- After the 2004 tsunami, many scientists believed that the possibility of a tidal wave could be predicted with the help of technology in the future. But, nobody could predict the recent tsunami in Indonesia.
- “For the first time in history, a cyclonic storm crossed over the Western Ghats this year. Gaja, the result of a depression over the Bay of Bengal, crossed over to Kerala over the Western Ghats and entered the Arabian Sea.
- This time, as many as three cyclones were found when Gaja was making a landfall.
- He claimed that the burning of fossil fuels — petrol, diesel, etc. — was the main reason for climate change as it had affected the greenhouse gas cover around the earth, leading to a rise in atmospheric temperature.
- “People living on islands such as Maldives and Andaman and Nicobar have reportedly purchased land in Srilanka.
- “Conserving the existing ecosystem is the best way to counter climate change.
Centre's polthene ban in nurseries puzzles Jharkhand forest department
Navi Mumbai buildings to get cash for being eco - friendly
The Navi Mumbai Municipal Corporation (NMMC) waste segregation & composting, rainwater harvesting and solar power generation. The motivation for NMMC is to improve its ranking in the 2019 Swachh Surveskshan survey conducted to rank India's cities on various sanitation and cleanliness parameters. The annual incentives will range from Rs 10,000 to 25,000 per category for two years, beginning from January 2019. The plan has been chalked out to involve housing societies in clean and green city drive by encouraging them to adopt environment - friendly measures.NMMC, ranked first in the country last year for solid waste management, is gearing up to turn the city into a zero - garbage area before the next survey. Its aim is to boost its 85% waste segregation record to 100%.
(TOI)
WCCB,enforcement officer to get UN environment officer award on Wednesday
EU says plastics recycling pledges fall short
EU says plastics recycling pledges fall short
Tito Mboweni introduces Carbon Tax Bill
Pollution has Ahmedabad in a killer choke-hold
Hyderabad High Court urges plastic ban in Telangana, Andhra Pradesh shrines
Bengal chemicals keen on resuming anti-snake venom serum production
Bengal chemicals and pharmaceuticals ltd(BCPL). which had forayed into anti-snake venom serum(ASVS) manufacturing India nearly half a ce...
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Is there scientific consensus on a model? Yes. This is precisely what the IPCC report on. Fifth Assessment Report - Climate Change 201...
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The dam crisis the govt decision to allocate an additional 34.66 billion to strengthen dams is a good step to protecting against any futu...
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More than 4000 years ago, the Harppa culture thrived in the Indus river valley of what is now modern Pakistan and northwestern India, where...