TIME REMAINING TO ACHIEVE CLIMATE ABUNDANCE
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Times Evoke
- War -and no peace
- ‘Fossil fuels, finance and inequality profoundly shape climate action. COP28 saw progress here’
- Why You Can't COP-Out
- ‘Earth saw five mass extinctions due to natural change — the sixth is driven by human actions’
- 'To save Panama's golden frogs, we learnt to collect, bathe and feed them — and even checked them into a hotel'
- ‘Over aeons, an arms race grew between plants and insects — it also caused pesticide resistance’
- ‘Earth’s crust is still forming — its interior shapes surface habitability through outgassing and recycling of volatiles’
- ‘Sediments contain Earth’s archive — they hold fossil and chemical clues about climate change’
- Our Earth's history - and its mystery
- ‘Trees evolved over time to survive climate change — the fall colours of sugar maples are now at risk’
- The world is a garden
- ‘From timber to temperance, humans sought diverse solutions from plants — thus, acacias reached India’
- ‘The fossil record shows how plants shaped Earth— they sculpted ecosystems from rivers to rain’
- ‘Water’s second age, when we learnt to manage it safely, is ending — we face its consequences now’
- ‘Water reflects power — European imperialists used it to expand, creating new hierarchies of access’
- The amazing story of water
- ‘Water bodies are often seen as real estate which must be built on — that causes a cycle of floods and droughts’
- ‘Our study found 208 bird species in Udaipur — Indian cities can provide hope for biodiversity’
- ‘The Iguazu National Parks first ‘nationalised’ a border — the focus on saving nature came later’
- 'India's wildlife, decimated by hunting and forest exploitation, found succour in national parks'
- A walk in the park
- 'South Africa's national parks protect wildlife and ecosystems - they face the pressures of land and inequality'
- ‘Hybridisation can spread gainful genes between species — this helps butterflies mimic signals’
- 'Nature’s mechanisms ensure rich plant diversity — climate change is impacting these'
- G20 expectations
- ‘From voices of the marginal to voiceless species, G20 can help to forge environmental justice’
- ‘G20 is the biggest part of the world economy, emissions and climate finance — India’s leadership of it is remarkable’
- ‘From its enzymes to its role in the food chain, the little firefly is a big part of the cycle of life’
- ‘India’s Chandrayaan-3 is a spectacular feat — it can explore water on the moon for a colony’
- ‘We’re wrecking our life support system — that’s the big story’
- ‘Social media reinforces polarisation on climate change — this impacts policies’
- Of science, sense and sensibility
- ‘Climate change is here to stay — Indian media reports on its complexity better than the West’
- ‘Plantations grew with colonialism — tea impacted both humans and ecology’
- 'Our 505-million-year-old jellyfish fossil finds show how life began and Earth transformed'
- ‘The Anthropocene has colonial roots — its technological leaders gained from empires like India’
- ‘Humans have created a new epoch on Earth — its markers include plutonium to chicken’
- 'The horse symbolises both wildness and taming in the Anthropocene'
- Our post-nature world
- ‘Small fireflies light up entire forests with their glow — but they perish facing artificial lights’
- 'A positive IOD can enable a normal Indian monsoon'
- Earth's cloud computing
- ‘Over millions of years, mountains, ice sheets and oceans shaped the Indian monsoon’
- ‘Butterflies migrate with the rains, flying over mountains and against the winds’
- ‘Plants are evolving ways to slow down global warming — but we must let them remain intact’
- ‘Our lives depend on plants — we must have plant literacy to understand climate change’
- ‘Like millets, baobab trees travelled from Africa to India — and even to Australia’
- ‘Ancient flower fossils can have beautifully intact petals’
- God save the green
- ‘Environmental photographers can help us imagine how a world without wildlife will look’