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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category India.
  • As Asian Luxury Market Grows, a Surge in Tiger Killings in India

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  January 24, 2017  //  By Sharon Guynup

    The original version of this article appeared on Yale Environment 360.

    From 1990 to 2013, the notorious tiger poacher Kuttu Bahelia and his extended family – brothers, uncles, and their wives and children – reportedly killed hundreds of tigers and leopards in the tiger-rich Indian states of Maharashtra and Karnataka, according to law enforcement informants and media reports. “Even if half that [estimate] is correct, it is still a very significant number,” says Belinda Wright, who directs the non-profit Wildlife Protection Society of India (WPSI).

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  • World Economic Forum and OECD on Global Risks and Fragility: Treat the Contagion

    ›
    Reading Radar  //  January 18, 2017  //  By Schuyler Null

    Global-RisksThe World Economic Forum’s 2017 Global Risks Report, like other recent analyses of global trends, notes “rising political discontent and disaffection,” but also significant concern for environmental issues. The forum polled 745 leaders, nearly half of whom are from the business community, on the likelihood and impact of various global risks.

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  • Paradox of Progress: National Intelligence Council Releases Global Trends Report

    ›
    January 11, 2017  //  By Schuyler Null
    star-trails

    Do you experience information overload? Feel like there’s always another crisis to worry about? Sense a kind of chaos? Well, you may be a citizen of the early 21st century.

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  • Mismatched Flood Control System Compounds Water Woes in Southern Bangladesh

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    Guest Contributor  //  January 3, 2017  //  By Nikita Sampath
    Kukumoni-Munda

    In Koyra Number 6, a coastal hamlet bordering the Sundarbans in southwestern Bangladesh, a group of men unload barrels of water from their trawlers – 50 drums holding 30 liters each. They announce their arrival by yelling. And word spreads. This is how this village gets their daily drinking water, from a town nine miles away.

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  • Rachel Cernansky, Ensia

    How “Open Source” Seed Producers From the U.S. to India Are Changing Global Food Production

    ›
    December 29, 2016  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    outredgeous

    The original version of this article, by Rachel Cernansky, appeared on Ensia.

    Frank Morton has been breeding lettuce since the 1980s. His company offers 114 varieties, among them Outredgeous, which last year became the first plant that NASA astronauts grew and ate in space. For nearly 20 years, Morton’s work was limited only by his imagination and by how many different kinds of lettuce he could get his hands on. But in the early 2000s, he started noticing more and more lettuces were patented, meaning he would not be able to use them for breeding.

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  • Masculinity Under the Microscope: Better Accounting for Men in Climate Adaptation

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    December 13, 2016  //  By Anam Ahmed
    Burkina-Faso

    “Before the famine my life was better. I was a man in my own country,” Abdi Abdullahi Hussein, a Somali refugee living in Kenya, tells The Climate Reality Project. “When you have livestock and a farm and it all disappears, it feels like falling off a cliff.”

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  • Green Leadership From a Divided South? China and India’s Divergence Shape Outlook for International Negotiations

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    Guest Contributor  //  December 5, 2016  //  By Leah Stokes, Noelle Selin & Amanda Giang
    delhi-air

    Last month, headlines around the world heralded a breakthrough for international environmental cooperation. During ongoing ozone treaty negotiations in Rwanda, China broke with the developing world, agreeing with the United States to aggressively phase out hydrofluorocarbons, a significant global warming pollutant found in refrigerators and air conditioners. These changes are expected to make a big difference in combating climate change, mitigating half a Celsius degree of warming.

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  • Getting to Sustainable Palm Oil: A Hardware and Software Approach to a Market Problem

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    Guest Contributor  //  November 23, 2016  //  By Noel Taylor
    palm-plantation

    The palm oil sector is at a crossroads. Despite growing awareness of its massive effects on deforestation, the largely unregulated and decentralized industry has struggled to adopt, follow, and document rigorous sustainable sourcing standards.

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