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Sunita Narain is an Indian environmentalist and the director general of the Centre for Science and Environment. She is also the editor of Down To Earth and was awarded the Stockholm Water Prize in 2005 for her work in promoting water literacy.
Sunita Narain is an Indian environmentalist and the director general of the Centre for Science and Environment. She is also the editor of Down To Earth and was awarded the Stockholm Water Prize in 2005 for her work in promoting water literacy.
The increase in natural gas prices could have significant implications for public health
The Himalayan region has seen unchecked construction activity, illegal mining, unscientific road building and hydropower projects built next to each other
We are blind to those who walk. That's why pavements are the first casualty of street widening to accommodate cars
Instead of becoming the messenger of the new co-operative world, solar energy is getting embroiled in battles
With monoculture taking over, the only biodiversity that will remain will be stored inside the cold and controlled environments of gene pool labs
Since glass traps heat, buildings require more air conditioning. As a result, energy use goes up
We need a food safety model based on societal objectives of nutrition, livelihood and safety
Current policies on containing air pollution, particularly in cities, are regressive
Grid-based solar power only reaches only households that are connected to energy supply, and simply subsidises costly solar for an already-reached population
The FM wants credit for acting on environment, but does the wrong things
Every time people lose faith in the political establishment, urban middle classes embrace fascism and the poor take up arms against the state
At the Doha climate change conference, the world agreed to strengthen the framework for future action. But it is now that action is needed
Since cities have little money to cover operational costs of running buses, they do not invest in new buses or modern infra