Environment Activism Prime Business!
Indian Holocaust My Father`s Life and Time- Two Hundred SIXTY NINE
Palash Biswas
http://indianholocaustmyfatherslifeandtime.blogspot.com/
Krishna dittos Gates, says India could attack Pakistan
New Delhi: In the backdrop of the US remarks that India would have limited patience if a Mumbai-type attack recurs, External Affairs Minister S M Krishna today said the government will have to be prepared to meet any eventuality.
"Yes, that is a worrying development because having been a victim of an earlier attack, gone through the anguish, the agony, the trauma, I think India certainly will have to be prepared to meet any such eventuality," he said.
Krishna was asked to comment on US Defence Secretary Robert Gates' remarks that terror outfits like Lashkar-e-Toiba were focusing on destabilising India.
"Of course, the defence forces and the Home Ministry are in close touch and coordination with the External Affairs Ministry and it will be our endeavour to maintain peace and tranquillity within India," he said.
Earlier, inaugurating the Delhi Dialogue-II between India and ASEAN, Krishna favoured greater cooperation among developing countries to have an effective voice in international financial architecture and a new global economic order.
He talked about a regional approach on energy matters which can accommodate competing demands and constraints while shifting the focus from competition to cooperation.
Krishna underlined that India was ready to allocate up to $50 million to support several initiatives to strengthen links with the ASEAN member nations.
Al Qaeda targeting India, says Gates
The United States Defense Secretary had on Wednesday warned India about the possibility of it facing more terror strikes from Al-Qaeda and Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT).
Gates who was visiting India, told the media persons: "The LeT which is operating in league with al-Qaeda is dangerous for the whole region of Afghanistan, Pakistan and India."
Gates said terror groups were planning more attacks on India to destablise the country and only cooperation among all the countries will lead to the reduction and if possible elimination of the threat.
"It is important to recognise that there is threat in the entire region from the Al-Qaeda and it has been identified that the area of Afghanistan and Pakistan border is a safe haven for these terrorist groups," he said
"It is the Qaeda along with the Taliban that is acting in Afghanistan. The Tehreek-e-Taliban is focusing on Pakistan and the Qaeda along with the LeT is focusing on not only Pakistan but also on India," Gates added.
Melting Glaciers Scientist Blames Issue on MisquoteBloomberg - - Jan 20, 2010 India Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh said yesterday in New Delhi that while melting glaciers are a "serious" issue, to draw the conclusion they'll ... Climate Scandals Abound Christian Broadcasting Network (blog) Not a great start to the year for the "Warmists" Troy Media Corporation 'Negotiations have dictated our climate change moves'Business Standard - Jan 17, 2010 In this concluding part of his extended interview to Business Standard, Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh talks of his agenda for greening Indian industry: ... India to have 6000 MW solar power by 2017: Ramesh Economic Times India Puts Moratorium On Projects In Critically Polluted Areas Wall Street Journal Genetic Engineers cook up Bt Brinjal TruthDive.com (blog) Cities of 2050 must pack in 40 cr migrantsEconomic Times - 6 hours ago Voluntary organisations working to improve civic amenities and promoting environmental causes also received a fair representation. ... Mercedes strengthens position as premium car market leaderJakarta Post - 11 hours ago "I am optimistic that we will be able to continue our success in 2010 with our new generation S-Class, E-Class and E-Class coupe cars and the environmental ... Mumbai on the growth pathEconomic Times - 18 hours ago Though the city has great potential to become the international finance centre of India, constraints like housing, infrastructure, and environmental ... Nitin Desai: The 40:40:20 WorldBusiness Standard - - 19 hours ago The second 40 per cent consists of the EU, a 10 per cent power, Russia, Japan and India, each of them a 5 per cent power, and a string of 2 per cent powers ... Video: Copenhagen Accord: One Month Later CleanSkies.com Copenhagen and the demise of Green Utopia On Line opinion UN abandons deadline for declaring emissions targets Financial Times British Airways Highlights The Top Ten Landmark Moments in the Evolution of ...India PRwire (press release) - 2 hours ago India, Maharashtra, January 21, 2010 /India PRwire/ -- British Airways is celebrating the most revolutionary decade in air travel that includes landmark ... HPCL introduces green fuel Euro-IV to IndiaEconomic Times - Jan 17, 2010 Where the environment is polluted beyond a certain level, it has caused health hazards for the inhabitants of the area. Although today in India, ... Energy Measures May Go to Jobs Bill as Brown Win Saps Cap-TradeBusinessWeek - - 2 hours ago Last month, China and India, the largest and fourth-largest producer of emissions from burning fossil fuels, promised to curb the growth of greenhouse gases ... Changing taxes for changing timesThe Age - 2 hours ago And some of today's challenges, such as environmental degradation, exploitation and species loss, are the consequence of past generations failing to face up ... |
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Ramesh counters Pawar's view on Bt brinjalThe Hindu - 1 hour ago PTI PTI Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh Countering Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar's statement on introducing Bt brinjal in the market, Environment ... Ramesh rebuts Pawar on introducing Bt brinjal in mkt Press Trust of India Biotech students sound warning against Bt Brinjal Daily News & Analysis Ramesh 'disagrees completely' with Pawar over Bt Brinjal Thaindian.com Environment Agency unveils Morpeth flood defence plansBBC News - 4 hours ago The Environment Agency is proposing the creation of an upstream reservoir to restrict water volumes flowing through the town in the event of flooding. ... Doubt over proposed flood scheme Morpeth Herald Decision on marketing Bt brinjal in a monthTimes of India - Jan 19, 2010 AHMEDABAD: Setting at rest the speculations over the commercial approval of Bt brinjal, Jairam Ramesh, minister of state for environment and forests (MoEF), ... Environment Minister draws fire from groups over BT Brinjal cultivation Newstrack India (blog) Fast against Bt brinjal on January 30 Express Buzz Sen.-Elect Brown Is a 'Blank Slate' on Climate, Drawing Concern and OptimismNew York Times - - 1 hour ago A blog about energy, the environment and the bottom line. The Republican state senator who won a special election Tuesday was not heavily involved in ... Shot Heard Round The World It's Getting Hot In Here (blog) How Much PV Capacity Is Actually Installed in Germany?RenewableEnergyWorld.com - - 25 minutes ago "We now expect additional capacity of 3 gigawatts for the year," a spokesman at the German Federal Ministry for the Environment told ... Germany slashes solar feed-in tariff Renewable Energy Magazine (press release) IPCC expresses regret over glacier melting conclusionThe Hindu - - 16 hours ago The Ministry of Environment and Forests had challenged the outcome of the IPCC by bringing out a report of its own which said the health of the glaciers was ... IPCC '07 report kept Govt in dark Hindustan Times Upsurge in action needed for environment: PachauriPress Trust of India - 8 hours ago Dubai, Jan 21 (PTI) RK Pachauri, the head of the UN panel of climate experts, has sought concrete action at the grass-root level to save the environment and ... Video: Copenhagen Accord: One Month Later CleanSkies.com BNF on Copenhagen Sunday Standard Climate change: Don't wait for govt to act, urges Gurmit The Sun Daily Partnerships forged during summit to protect Coral TriangleBusiness Mirror - 3 hours ago This was stressed by Environment Sec. Eleazar Quinto, as he expressed full support for the initiative to protect the region's marine biodiversity, ... Fishing firms draw up commitments to ensure Coral Triangle sustainability BusinessWorld Online Coral Triangle summit marred by protest from local fishers Business Mirror Kerala govt. seeks public consultation on Bt BrinjalThe Hindu - Jan 18, 2010 PTI Minister of State for Environment and Forests Jairam Ramesh holds an indigenous brinjal head of a consultation meet on the Bt brinjal issue in ... India to have 6000 MW solar power by 2017: Ramesh Economic Times 'Negotiations have dictated our climate change moves' Business Standard E & E Awarded Long-Term Contract With Florida Department of Environmental ...CNNMoney.com (press release) - 1 hour ago Ecology and Environment, Inc. (NASDAQ: EEI) was recently awarded a new five-year contract to provide petroleum cleanup management services for Florida's ... Stay up to date on these results: |
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U.N. panel "regrets" exaggeration of Himalayan thaw
Oslo: The U.N. panel of climate scientists expressed regret on Wednesday for exaggerating how quickly Himalayan glaciers are melting in a report that wrongly projected that they could all vanish by 2035.
Leaders of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) "regret the poor application of well-established IPCC procedures in this instance", they said in a statement on the flaw in a paragraph of a 938-page scientific report.
They noted that the projection of a thaw by 2035 did not make it to the final summary for policymakers in its latest report in 2007. The summary projected a faster thaw in the coming years for glaciers from the Andes to the Alps.
India and some climate researchers have criticised the IPCC in recent days for over-stating the shrinking of Himalayan glaciers, whose seasonal thaw helps to supply water to nations including China and India.
A disappearance of the glaciers would badly disrupt flows in Asia that are vital for irrigation. The IPCC leaders said they were strongly committed to ensuring a high standard for the reports.
The offending paragraph says: "Glaciers in the Himalaya are receding faster than in any other part of the world and, if the present rate continues, the likelihood of them disappearing by the year 2035 and perhaps sooner is very high if the Earth keeps warming at the current rate."
On Monday, Indian Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh said that "glaciers are receding, but the report that glaciers will vanish by 2035 is not based on an iota of scientific evidence".
The IPCC statement said that the 2035 projection was based on "poorly substantiated estimates of rate of recession" and that proper checks were not made.
The IPCC's core finding in 2007 was that it was more than 90 percent sure that mankind is the main cause of global warming, mainly by using fossil fuels.
Source: Reuters
Plus:
Glacier meltdown predication a farce
In pictures: How dead is the Dead Sea?
Majority of toys in Indian market toxic
Five great tips on how to beat the cold and still be green
Top 20 critically polluted places in India
The Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) in conjunction with IIT-Delhi recently surveyed 88 industrial clusters around the country, and found 43 "critically polluted" (score above 70 on a 100 point scale) while 32 were "severely polluted" (score 60-70).
We list the TOP 20 places from this infamous record.
Environment Activism Prime Business!
My heart bleeds while I have to write this as I myself loved to be an Environment Activist as I have been associated with Chipko Movement in seventies and my Home City happens to be Nainital situated in the Himalayan Abode!
We literally IGNORED European Media Reports on Controversial role of Indian Environment Icon Rajendra Pachauri exposing his Corporate links during Copenhagen Summit! But the Himalayan Glacier Melting Scandal exposed well the Prime Business, Environment Eco Activism! What a national as well as Global Shame that we may not evade now.
It reminds me the Mid Emergency Warning that Nainital Lake had Destructive Plants and the Lake City was destined to be destroyed very soon. It created such a Panic that even the Birds avoided to visit the Hill Station for Two Years! Not to mention the tourists.
It was in 1975 Winters. The ladies in my village Basantipur, down under the Hills , situated near Nano fame Pantnagar Sidcul, were so much so Horrified that they would not allow me to return to my Home City for my studies. Then, I was a student in B.A. first Year!
Later we did realise the real danger lying in the Geology and deforestation.
We were involved in Chipko Movement deep.
No NGO was working during that period in Uttarakhand.
We also were protesting Tehri dam Project. And very soon, we noticed our Environment Icons like Chandi Prasad Bhatt and Sunderlal Bahuguna being recognised Globally.
This recognition introduced thousands of Environment Eco Activists affiliated to thousands of NGOs fed with Foreign Money and controlled by USA.Rather, this created heavens in Aboriginal Indigenous India for CIA and Mossad activities providing the Green cover. Even the Maoists used the cover Pragmatically. But this Green Cover is now being utilised as an Effective tool for Economic Ethnic Cleansing. Not only US related agencies but the Corporate houses, MNCs and LPG mafia use it for Area control and false Nationalist Mobilisation of Ethnonatinalism to strenghten US Promoted Democracy under Triiblis Zionist Manusmriti War Economy Order!
Very soon, it was a profitable Business to be Environment Activists!
All our beloved Icons of social and environment activism did connect themselves with NGOs and United States of America.
Some of them including Sundarlal Bahuguna, a known SARVODAYEE and Gandhian immersed their flocks into the Great Ganges of Hindutva!
In revelations that embarrass the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) — the UN body that has built the scientific base for action on climate change — and its chairman R K Pachauri, it's emerged that its key conclusion that there was high probability of Himalayan glaciers melting away by the year 2035 was based on unsubstantiated, indeed "speculative," evidence.
The Intergovernmental Panel of Climate Change is the leading body for the assessment of climate change, established by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) to provide the world with a clear scientific view on the current state of climate change and its potential environmental and socio-economic consequences.
The IPCC is a scientific body. It reviews and assesses the most recent scientific, technical and socio-economic information produced worldwide relevant to the understanding of climate change. It does not conduct any research nor does it monitor climate related data or parameters. Thousands of scientists from all over the world contribute to the work of the IPCC on a voluntary basis. Review is an essential part of the IPCC process, to ensure an objective and complete assessment of current information. Differing viewpoints existing within the scientific community are reflected in the IPCC reports.
The IPCC is an intergovernmental body, and it is open to all member countries of UN and WMO. Governments are involved in the IPCC work as they can participate in the review process and in the IPCC plenary sessions, where main decisions about the IPCC workprogramme are taken and reports are accepted, adopted and approved. The IPCC Bureau and Chairperson are also elected in the plenary sessions.
Because of its scientific and intergovernmental nature, the IPCC embodies a unique opportunity to provide rigorous and balanced scientific information to decision makers. By endorsing the IPCC reports, governments acknowledge the authority of their scientific content. The work of the organization is therefore policy-relevant and yet policy-neutral, never policy-prescriptive.
IPCC's Fourth Assessment Report in 2007, which has been the main reference point for climate-change science, cited a 2005 World Wildlife Fund (WWF) report to say that the Himalayan glaciers would disappear entirely by 2035 -- "perhaps sooner" -- if current trends in global warming continued.
WWF today admitted that its 2005 report "contained erroneous information". "Although scientists remain deeply concerned about glacier retreat in that region, this particular prediction has subsequently proved to be incorrect," the WWF said in a statement.
But the latest episode is a shot in the arm for Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh who has been deeply suspicious of the "alarming" projections made in IPCC report on glacier melt and has insisted that many more studies required to be done to say anything with conclusive evidence.
In fact, just before the Copenhagen conference, his ministry came out with a "discussion paper," authored by a former deputy head at the Geological Survey of India V K Raina, which made the same point.
UN panel re-examines Himalayan glacier thaw report
New Delhi: The UN panel of climate scientists said on Monday it was reviewing a report containing a little-known projection that Himalayan glaciers might vanish by 2035, a finding trenchantly criticised by the government.
The 2007 UN panel report says global warming could cause the Himalaya's thousands of glaciers to vanish by 2035 if current warming rates continue.
"We are looking into the issue of the Himalayan glaciers, and will take a position on it in the next two or three days," Rajendra Pachauri, head of the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), told Reuters in an e-mail.
Other experts have said the 10 major Asian rivers the glaciers feed could go dry in the next five decades. Hundreds of millions of people in India, Pakistan and China would be affected.
Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh on Monday questioned the findings of the 2007 report.
"They are indeed receding and the rate is cause for great concern, Ramesh said of the glaciers, but he told reporters the 2035 forecast was "not based on an iota of scientific evidence".
Other experts have said the 2035 projection was not based on peer-reviewed science. In London, The Times newspaper said the Indian scientist who first made the Himalayan thaw projection in 1999 now acknowledged it was "speculation".
Flaws in IPCC reports can be damaging since the findings are a guide for government policy. The IPCC's core finding in 2007 was that it was more than 90 percent sure that mankind is the main cause of global warming, mainly by using fossil fuels.The national authority for 'clean' projects has approved 1,467 projects, which, if approved by its international counterpart, can net India $6.15 billion by 2012
- Making a difference
Greenpeace has ranked the leading manufacturers of electronic products according to their policies on toxic chemicals, recycling and climate change. So now when you decide to buy a new phone or an LCD TV opt for these 'green' concious company products!
Jakarta: A tiny Indonesian lizard has become big business for impoverished villagers in Indonesia, where growing Asian demand for reptile-based traditional medicines has driven a boom in gecko farming.
http://green.in.msn.com/
- How dead is the Dead Sea?
The Dead Sea is slowly but surely drying up, and could be gone completely in 50 years if no action is taken. But why is it called the Dead sea and what makes its so special?
- UN panel re-examines Himalayan glacier thaw report
New Delhi: The UN panel of climate scientists said on Monday it was reviewing a report containing a little-known projection that Himalayan glaciers might vanish by 2035, a finding trenchantly criticised by the government.
- Glacier melt date hot air, Pachauri faces the heat
New Delhi: In revelations that embarrass the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) — the UN body that has built the scientific base for action on climate change — and its chairman R K Pachauri, it's emerged that its key conclusion that there was high probability of Himalayan glaciers melting away by the year 2035 was based on unsubstantiated, indeed "speculative," evidence.
- "World's least known bird" found breeding in Afghanistan
New York: Researchers have found in Afghanistan the first known breeding area of the large-billed reed warbler, which was dubbed in 2007 as "the world's least known bird species".
- Majority of toys in Indian market toxic: Study
New Delhi: Think before you buy toys for toddlers as even the branded plastic toys sold in the Indian market can cause asthma, lung problems and reproductive problems in children due to high toxic levels, warns a study conducted by the Centre for Science and Environment (CSE).
- Pics of the week
A look at the best pictures of the week that capture the environmental activities around the world.
- Ahmedabad wins Sustainable Transport Award 2010
Washington: The historic Indian city of Ahmedabad has won the prestigious 'Sustainable Transport Award 2010' for the successful implementation of Janmarg, India's first full bus rapid transit (BRT) system.
- Use charcoal to fight global warming
Washington: Biochar, a material used by Amazonian Indians to enhance soil fertility centuries ago, may help slow global warming.
- North East tops environment sustainability index
Chennai: The northeastern states of Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Manipur, Mizoram and Sikkim, along with Uttarakhand, have been rated the highest on the environment sustainable index (ESI), developed by think-tank Centre for Development Finance (CDF) here.
- Millions throng Hardwar for Maha Kumbh
Hardwar: An estimated five million people have thronged the Hindu holy city of Hardwar for a dip in the holy Ganga Thursday that will herald the Maha Kumbh, a religious fair that has few parallel but which has a sharp message this year - protection of the environment.
- Rs.200 crore aid for Sundarbans development
Kolkata: The central government will infuse Rs.200 crore over the next five years for the development of West Bengal's Sundarbans biosphere, Union Minister for Environment and Forests Jairam Ramesh said Tuesday.
- Blog: The world and I
Ah, the Copenhagen climate summit! Around 200 world leaders got together in the Danish capital to decide if our future generations will be able to breathe fresh air and drink clean water.
- Goa to announce draft forest policy soon
Panaji: Facing accusations of tacitly supporting illegal and unchecked mining near forests, the Goa government is set to unveil a draft forest policy this month.
- Blog: The world and I
Ah, the Copenhagen climate summit! Around 200 world leaders got together in the Danish capital to decide if our future generations will be able to breathe fresh air and drink clean water.
- In Idol's ad, his real-life effort to save water
Mumbai: Mumbai's famous resident, Sachin Tendulkar, has stopped taking a shower. He takes his bath using a bucket of water these days and so do his wife and children in a bid to contribute to the city's urgent need to save water.
- Weather files from around the world
There is ample talk around on climate change. But how is it really affecting us? Well, for starters, sunshine state Florida witnessed rare snowfall, Europe is being wrecked by severe icy conditions and Asia too has its frigid zones. It's winter alright, but is this normal?
- Female ants give up sex for greater good
Washington: The fungus-gardening ant is the only species of its kind to have dispensed with sex or males, says a new study.
- Delhi's polluting industries to be made hi-tech
New Delhi: Manufacturing outfits that add to pollution in the capital could soon close down, with the government planning to persuade them to upgrade themselves to knowledge-based industries.
- Greenpeace gives good grades to Apple, Nokia, Sony-Ericsson
Las Vegas: From sinner to saviour: After years of heat from Greenpeace about its environmental record, Apple has become the example par excellence in the eyes of the ecology group after it studied the issue.
- Solar mission goal may be scaled down 80 percent
New Delhi: The goal of India's solar energy mission to produce 20,000 MW of power from the sun by 2022 may be reduced by as much as 80 percent before the prime minister formally inaugurates the mission here Monday, official sources said.
- Arctic blast puts USA in deep freeze
Washington: A new Arctic blast threatened to blanket much of the US in deeper snow and sink temperatures into a deep chill as far south as Florida, turning this winter into the coldest and broadest cold siege since 1985.
- SRK launches 'green' car albeit with irony
The king of Bollywood, Shah Rukh Khan launched the green version of Hyundai's i10 car in New Delhi at the ongoing Auto Expo. India's second largest car company, Hyundai Motors India Ltd, unveiled their electric car during the 2010 Auto Expo.
- PETA does it again!
Animal rights organization, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) really knows how to make a point. Continuing its penchant for bikini clad activists in sub-sero temperatures urging people to go vegetarian, PETA has done it again. This time in Washington, DC, USA.
- Plastic industry supports jail for law-breaking units
Gandhinagar: The plastic industry is willing to support any government initiative aimed at evolving a consensus on deterrent punishment for those who manufacture plastic carrybags of less than 20 microns in violation of existing laws.
- Bio-energy centre launched at IIT-Kharagpur
Kharagpur: The country's first bio-energy centre was launched at the Indian Institute of Technology-Kharagpur Tuesday for undertaking research, teaching and technological implementation of conventional and non-conventional energy.
- All new government buildings to be eco-friendly: Farooq Abdullah
New Delhi: All new central government buildings would have to be eco-friendly, Minister for New and Renewable Energy Farooq Abdullah said Monday.
- Wildfires, snow, and earthquake mark the begining of 2010
While people across the world welcomed the New Year with fireworks, confetti and revelry, Mother Nature had other plans.
- Brown says climate change agreement possible
London: British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said on Sunday he believed a global agreement to combat climate change might still be possible despite the limited results of last month's Copenhagen meeting.
- '09 reloaded: Best of galleries
From the dirtiest cities in India to the best green movies to watch, a list of the most viewed galleries of 2009.
- PETA Campaigns 2009: When saving wildlife became a sexy job!
The People for Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) campaigns have been very active in stripping down for a cause, literally so. We take a look at some of People for Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) campaigns in 2009:
- Fire and rain promised for parched Australia
Sydney: Warnings of "catastrophic" fires went out across Australia's west Tuesday just as farmers in the east of the continent were herding livestock to higher ground following heavy rainfall.
- Probe on to find source of chemicals dumped in Bangalore
Bangalore: Nine barrels filled with an unidentified chemical were found abandoned in a thickly populated area of Bangalore and police and pollution experts are probing the source, an official said Tuesday.
- Over 100 whales die on two New Zealand beaches
Wellington: More than 120 pilot whales died in mass strandings at two New Zealand beaches, it was reported Monday.
- Tata Steel to cut CO2 emissions by 2012
Kolkata: Tata Steel will cut down its carbon dioxide emissions from the current level of two tonnes to 1.8 tonnes for every tonne of steel produced by 2012, a senior company official said Monday.
- MSN's 8 green cities of India
We often talk about the dark side of environment -- the rising pollution levels in our cities, the increasing toxins in the atmosphere, the destruction of forests and wildlife. The depressing list is endless.
- Green@glance: Most read stories of the week
- Moments in the melee: The week that was
From protest demonstrations to a green coloured Santa, as leaders at Copenhagen mull over the future of the earth and global warming issues, we take a look at images that stood out in the melee.
- 2009, one of world's hottest years since 1850
Copenhagen: This year is likely to rank as one of the "10 warmest" since 1850, the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) said Tuesday in a report providing further evidence that the world is heating up.
- Denmark is sitting on a pile of trash!
Copenhagen: Something is rotting in the state of Denmark. Lots of things, actually, and it's a bit of an embarrassment for this Scandinavian nation as it prepares to host a widely anticipated global environmental summit this week.
- To save the Himalayan glaciers, YouTube queen sings in Paradise
As the world braced for bruising negotiations and prayed for a deal at Copenhagen, an icon of the Internet age sang for the glaciers of Kashmir.
- School students to grade MPs on climate change
New Delhi: As the world focuses on the climate change summit in Copenhagen, a group of students here will go door-to-door to the houses of MPs, grading them on their knowledge and spreading awareness on reduction of carbon emissions.
- Green@glance: 10 Most read stories of the week
- The week that was
A Christmas tree made of plastic waste, the world's most deadly industrial disaster - 25 years later and climate change activists running in underwear. A look at images that captured environmental events around the world.
- India to reduce emission intensity 20-25 percent by 2020
New Delhi: Four days ahead of the Copenhagen climate summit, India Thursday announced it will reduce its emission intensity by 20-25 percent by 2020 from the 2005 level.
- Indians more worried than Chinese, Americans on climate change
Washington: Just before world leaders assemble in Copenhagen to discuss climate change, a new global survey shows sharp differences among people in different countries about global warming.
- 'Dirty Kumars' to give sanitation lessons in Delhi
New Delhi: Mr. Thu-Thu Kumar (who spits), Mr. Su-Su Kumar (who pees in public) and Mr. Kuda Kumar (the litterbug) will soon be seen on bus kiosks, hoardings and even on television and radio trying to instil civic sense in Delhiites.
- Garbage dump goes high on fashion
A Manila based charity is helping turn garbage into fashion items that are proving a hit in London shops
- Make global warming top priority: Dalai Lama to world leaders
Dharamsala: Ahead of the Copenhagen summit, Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama Monday asked world leaders to make finding a solution to climate change their number one priority.
- Zoos to be Earth's last sanctuaries if climate talks fail
London: Zoos and aquariums will become the last places on Earth to see species such as polar bears and coral if climate change negotiations fail at Copenhagen, the world's zoos warned Monday.
- India promises best-ever and first 'Green' Commonwealth Games
Port of Spain: Blending sports with climate change diplomacy, India Saturday said it will hold the first-ever Green Commonwealth Games in 2010 and the best-ever sporting show and underlined that the event will propel New Delhi to a world class city.
- Photofeature: The week that was
Yet another week goes by and we inch closer towards the Copenhagen Climate Summit. We take a look at moments that captured the human spirit for climate protection in the week that was...
- Tihar jail to go green soon
New Delhi: Tihar jail will soon go green. The jail will be turned into a model energy saving building - equipped with solar setup for hot water and cooking, and the waste will be processed for biogas, an official said Thursday.
- Two arrested in Varanasi for noise pollution
Varanasi: In the first such case in this ancient city, two people have been arrested for causing noise pollution. This come four years after the Supreme Court imposed strict norms on noise levels. Police admit they have been indifferent to the problem so far.
- Nepal's rhinos flourish under bodyguards
Kathmandu: After the president, prime minister and other ministers in Nepal, the Himalayan republic has added a new VIP entitled to have bodyguards - its rare one-horned rhinos.
- Fashionista! Models go green on the ramp
The Devil may wear Prada, but if you care about the environment here's what you could sport...
- Solar mission to start with 1,300 MW, reach 20,000 by 2022
New Delhi: India's solar mission will set up, in its first phase, 1,100 MW of solar power through the electricity grid and 200 MW off the grid, with the objective of making solar power as cheap as power from coal by the end of the mission, Minister for New and Renewable Energy Farooq Abdullah said here Monday.
- Brazilian beauty is Miss Earth 2009
Larissa Ramos was crowned Miss Earth 2009 in a gala coronation night event from among 80 beauties from around the world on Sunday.
- Green lessons for school kids - in lap of nature
Lucknow: Imagine riding through a lush green forest, soaking in lessons on the environment. That's what many school students in Uttar Pradesh are about to experience, thanks to the officials of a wildlife sanctuary.
- Miss Earth for a beautiful planet
Every year the Miss Earth Foundation crowns a beautiful young woman for the cause of promoting environmental awareness. The titleholders dedicate their year to promote climate projects and to address issues concerning the environment.
- The week that was
Once again, taking a look at events that highlighted the need for action on climate change and how it has affected mankind and this planet.
- India revises air quality norms after 15 years
New Delhi: With pollution levels rising across the country, India has revised the National Ambient Air Quality (NAAQS) standards after 15 years, bringing about uniform standards for residential and industrial areas.
- 'I own a tree' campaign to save Bangalore's greenery
Bangalore: A silent "green revolution" is in the making in India's tech hub Bangalore as citizens come together to sponsor trees to save the city's "green heritage" which has of late come under threat owing to development activities.
- India Inc getting over green rating blues
New Delhi: Green ratings were a no-no for most Indian companies till a few years earlier. But the ratings have now graduated from just being an initiative of non-government organisations to something both the government and industry would like to embrace fast.
- 40 percent Indian households still powerless: Greenpeace
New Delhi: Despite India's growing electricity generation and increasing carbon emissions around 40 percent of households -- a majority of which are in villages -- do not have electricity, says a Greenpeace report released here Tuesday.
- Sky gazers can expect celestial fireworks tonight
New Delhi: Sky gazers can look forward to an exhibition of celestial fireworks over the next two days as the night sky will be lit up by the Leonid meteor showers expected to peak Tuesday.
- Kerala backwaters in top 25 global destinations: NGC
Last week, MSN Green had listed some of the top eco-destinations in India and God's own country - Kerala - was in the list for its famous backwaters and one of the richest biodiversity in the world. Here's some more good news for the state. National Geographic has rated the Kerala backwaters as the world's 23rd best destination, giving the tourism sector a reason to smile.
- Business experts to discuss green jobs in India
New Delhi: Business experts from across the country will meet in the national capital Monday to discuss green job opportunities available in India.
- The world this week
Glimpses from the days gone by...
- Breathe easy, breathe clean during Commonwealth Games
New Delhi: Athletes and intending visitors can breathe easy about the 2010 Commonwealth Games. India has come up with technology for air quality management even as this city is working on reducing air pollution during the mega event.
- Kolkata facing brutal future in warmer world
New Delhi: Dhaka, Manila, Jakarta and Kolkata are topping a new list of major Asian cities vulnerable to the effects of climate change. Kolkata is the fourth most vulnerable Asian city but number three among those least prepared to adapt.
- Birds chirping more loudly to be heard above city noise
Sydney: Birds and frogs are raising the volume of their calls to be heard above urban noise, says a new study.
- Close calls with dolphins spur people to go green
Sydney: If you want people to care about the environment, give them a close call with a whale, turtle or dolphin.
- Ecosystems can absorb more carbon dioxide than thought earlier
London: Our ecosystems and oceans have a much greater capacity to absorb carbon dioxide than had previously been thought.
- Indian glaciers retreating, we don't know why: Ramesh
New Delhi: Most glaciers in the Indian Himalayas are retreating, but there is "no conclusive scientific evidence" to link this to global warming, Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh said here Monday.
- To save the Big cat
An auction of life-sized lion statues in Nirobi was held to raise funds for lion conservation. Here's a look...
- Jaipur air poisoned by oil depot fire: Pollution board
New Delhi: Air pollution in and around Jaipur was far above maximum permissible limits when the Indian Oil Corporation (IOC) depot on the edge of the city was ablaze, but it had no significant effect in Delhi or Agra, the Central POllution Control Board (CPCB) reported Monday.
- Prince Philip joins British Hindus to fight climate change
London: Hindu leaders in Britain have teamed up with Prince Philip and the UN to launch a long-term action plan that will engage with the community worldwide in the fight against climate change, an Oxford University centre said.
- Two hot Goa night clubs to be demolished
Panaji: The Goa coastal zone management authority (GCZMA) has ordered the partial demolition of arguably the state's most popular night spots -- Club Tito's and Mambos -- for violating coastal regulatory zone (CRZ) norms.
- The world this week
A look at global environmental events and concerns in the week gone by...
- Beauties with a cause
Ninety of the most beautiful environment diplomats from all over of the world paraded for the 2009 Miss Earth Beauty Pageant press presentation in Manila. The contestants declared their personal environmental campaigns, with the theme for this year's competition focused on beauties for a cause. Here's a look...
- Sops for green power in Delhi climate plan
New Delhi: Encouraging use of solar power, increase in use of energy-saving lighting, setting up of an electronic waste facility, more CNG buses, promoting use of bio-fuel and shutting down coal-fired power plants form the highlights of the Delhi government's 65-point three-year agenda to fight climate change.
- IP rights critical to clean technologies and related jobs
Clean technologies can be a source of not just environmentally friendly energy needs but also help in creating millions of jobs provided a strong intellectual property system is in place to achieve this.
- Haryana saves Rs.9 lakh energy bill at governor, CM houses
Chandigarh: The palatial residences of Haryana's governor and chief minister in Chandigarh have been refurbished with new energy-efficient lighting worth nearly Rs.23 lakh that has brought down electricity bills at the two places by nearly Rs.900,000 annually.
- Tribals demand first right to forests, write to PM
New Delhi: Over 150 tribal villagers and forest dwellers Tuesday protested here against non-implementation of Forest Dwellers Act and submitted a memorandum to the prime minister demanding first right to forests.
- Merkels says no climate change plans without India, China
Washington: German Chancellor Angela Merkel, on a visit to the US, today said there can be no agreement on efforts to tackle climate change at the UN conference next month in Copenhagen without taking India and China on board.
- Indians very pessimistic about tackling climate change: report
London: Optimism that climate change can be managed has fallen more sharply in India than in any other major economy of the world, according to an annual index published Monday.
- Toyota plays God, develops new flower species
If cars were not enough, auto company Toyota has created two new flower species to offset the CO2 created by its Prius assembly operations.
- "Devastation unlimited"
Even as officials wait for the fire at Indian Oil Corporation's fuel depot on the outskirts of Jaipur to 'die on its own', the impact of the devastation is undeniable.
- Climate change: Tribals want free-hand to heal nature
New Delhi: To tackle the devastating impact of climate change, tribals in the country say if given a free hand they can correct and heal nature using traditional knowledge and expertise, they are privy to.
- Five chief ministers to sign declaration on environment
Shimla: Concerned over the impact of global warming, chief ministers of five Himalayan states will sign the Shimla Declaration Friday, the concluding day of a two-day meet on environment that began here Thursday.
- The world this week
Glimpses from environmental and climate change concerns across the globe in the week gone by.
- Delhi hailed for getting its 'Green' act together
New York: Twelve of the worst pollution problems in the developing world are being cleaned up, demonstrating that tens of thousands of others also could be improved, according to a report released on Wednesday.
- Chhattisgarh serves notice to 15 industries for pollution
Raipur: The Chhattisgarh Environment Conservation Board Wednesday served notices to 15 steel making units ion the state for defying pollution control norms.
- Jammu and Kashmir to introduce water conservation law
Alarmed by the disastrous effects of climate change such as receding glaciers and drying streams, the J&K government will bring a law to force water conservation
- Health centres have to manage waste effectively: Experts
Thiruvananthapuram: Efficient management of bio-medical waste by hospitals and health care institutions remains a matter of grave concern in the country, experts said at a seminar in this Kerala capital Monday.
- Activists form human chain against climate change
New Delhi: Students and activists from across the country and abroad gathered at Delhi's historic Red Fort Saturday and formed a human chain in the shape of a huge '5' to mark a global mobilisation programme against carbon emissions.
- Aviation sector wants tax sops to lessen carbon emissions
New Delhi: The International Air Transport Association (IATA), a global aviation industry lobby, Friday asked governments for more tax concessions to help carriers invest in fuel-efficient aircraft.
- Climate change bigger challenge than terrorism: Nasheed
New Delhi: With global warming threatening to render an estimated 300,000 people refugees every year, climate change is a far bigger challenge than international terrorism, Maldives President Mohamed Nasheed said today.
In December, the nations of the world and most of its leaders met in Copenhagen to agree on ambitious and immediate global action to combat climate change. That complete vision did not emerge. The task has therefore become more, not less, urgent. The window of opportunity to tackle the climate problem closes more rapidly the longer nations delay to act together.
About 120 U.N. world leaders are aiming to try to end deadlock at the climate summit in Copenhagen that is meant to agree a new deal on Friday for fighting global warming. Following are possible scenarios:
Jakarta: A tiny Indonesian lizard has become big business for impoverished villagers in Indonesia, where growing Asian demand for reptile-based traditional medicines has driven a boom in gecko farming.
http://green.in.msn.com/copenhagensummit/
IPCC retracts 2035 alarm on Himalayan glacier melt
NEW DELHI: For the first time in its history, the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) — a panel of 2,500 of the best climate
It admitted that proper ''procedures'' were not followed while reaching the conclusion which not only created a massive scare , particularly in India, but also placed New Delhi often on the backfoot in climate debates leading up to the Copenhagen summit.
The Nobel-prize winning body, however, attempted to soften the blow by couching its words. Its statement said: ''It has come to our attention that (the statement on Himalayan glaciers) refers to poorly substantiated estimates of rate of recession and date for the disappearance of Himalayan glaciers. In drafting the paragraph in question, clear and well-established standards of evidence, required by IPCC procedures were not applied properly.''
That non-application of procedure is an euphemism for the boo-boo becomes apparent from the kind of carelessness that went into writing the report.
For one, the report is said to have borrowed from a 1996 Russian study by V M Kotlyakov and bungled on the glacier melt deadline predicted by it — the study set the deadline at 2350, while the IPCC made it 2035, perhaps due to a small typological error, but which in effect advanced the deadline by over 300 years!
What's remarkable is that this deadline was hotly contested by the Indian government. The IPCC team, led by TERI chief R K Pachauri, brushed aside these objections and didn't even care to double-check its facts, even though the conclusion of its findings meant as dramatic a development as the disappearance of Himalayan glaciers in the next 25 years.
IPCC's lack of rigour also becomes clear from the fact that it shunned peer-reviewed science reports published in well-known journals, and instead lifted references from a report by WWF, an NGO, that supports strong action on climate change. It now transpires that WWF had picked up this alarmist view from a pop-science magazine, the New Scientist.
In turn, the magazine had quoted an Indian scientist, Syed Hasnain, then with Jawaharlal Nehru University, but currently working for TERI.
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/5482973.cms
IPCC Secretariat
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telephone +41 22 730 8208 / 54 / 84 · fax +41 22 730 8025 / 13 · email IPCC-Sec@wmo.int · www.ipcc.ch
Geneva, 20 January 2010
IPCC statement on the melting of Himalayan glaciers1
The Synthesis Report, the concluding document of the Fourth Assessment Report of the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (page 49) stated: "Climate change is expected to
exacerbate current stresses on water resources from population growth and economic and land-use
change, including urbanisation. On a regional scale, mountain snow pack, glaciers and small ice
caps play a crucial role in freshwater availability. Widespread mass losses from glaciers and
reductions in snow cover over recent decades are projected to accelerate throughout the 21st
century, reducing water availability, hydropower potential, and changing seasonality of flows in
regions supplied by meltwater from major mountain ranges (e.g. Hindu-Kush, Himalaya, Andes),
where more than one-sixth of the world population currently lives."
This conclusion is robust, appropriate, and entirely consistent with the underlying science and the
broader IPCC assessment.
It has, however, recently come to our attention that a paragraph in the 938-page Working Group II
contribution to the underlying assessment2 refers to poorly substantiated estimates of rate of
recession and date for the disappearance of Himalayan glaciers. In drafting the paragraph in
question, the clear and well-established standards of evidence, required by the IPCC procedures,
were not applied properly.
The Chair, Vice-Chairs, and Co-chairs of the IPCC regret the poor application of well-established
IPCC procedures in this instance. This episode demonstrates that the quality of the assessment
depends on absolute adherence to the IPCC standards, including thorough review of "the quality
and validity of each source before incorporating results from the source into an IPCC Report" 3. We
reaffirm our strong commitment to ensuring this level of performance.
1 This statement is from the Chair and Vice-Chairs of the IPCC, and the Co-Chairs of the IPCC Working
Groups.
2 The text in question is the second paragraph in section 10.6.2 of the Working Group II contribution and a
repeat of part of the paragraph in Box TS.6. of the Working Group II Technical Summary of the IPCC
Fourth Assessment Report.
3 This is verbatim text from Annex 2 of Appendix A to the Principles Governing IPCC Work.
http://www.ipcc.ch/pdf/presentations/himalaya-statement-20january2010.pdf
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Rajendra K. Pachauri
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rajendra K. Pachauri | |
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Photo by Mikhail Evstafiev | |
Born | August 20, 1940 (1940-08-20) Nainital, Uttarakhand, India |
Nationality | Indian |
Occupation | Chief, Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Director General, TERI, a research and policy organization in India. |
Religious beliefs | Hindu |
Rajendra Kumar Pachauri (born August 20, 1940) has served as the chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) since 2002. He has also been director general TERI, a research and policy organization in India, and chancellor of TERI University. He has become an icon for the LGBT community in India as a result of offering internships to younger members of the LGBT community in order to promote acceptance within the country. He has also been the chairman of the governing council of the National Agro Foundation (NAF), as well as the chairman of the board of Columbia University's International Research Institute for Climate and Society.
Pachauri has been outspoken on climate change and said, "What is happening, and what is likely to happen, convinces me that the world must be really ambitious and very determined at moving toward a 350 target."[1] 350 refers to the level in parts per million of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere that top climate scientists such as NASA's James Hansen agree to be a safe upper limit in order to avoid a climate tipping point.[2]
At the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony when the award was shared between Al Gore and the IPCC on December 10, 2007, Pachauri represented the IPCC. [3]
Contents[hide] |
[edit] Background
Pachauri was born in Nainital, India. He was educated at La Martiniere College in Lucknow[4] and at the Indian Railways Institute of Mechanical and Electrical Engineering in Jamalpur, Bihar.
He began his career with the Diesel Locomotive Works in Varanasi.
Pachauri was awarded an MS degree in Industrial Engineering from North Carolina State University, Raleigh, in 1972, as well as a joint Ph.D. in Industrial Engineering and Economics in 1974.[5]
He served as Assistant Professor (August 1974 - May 1975) and Visiting Faculty Member (Summer 1976 and 1977) in the Department of Economics and Business at NC State.
On his return to India, he joined the Administrative Staff College of India, Hyderabad, as Member Senior Faculty (June 1975 - June 1979) and went on to become Director, Consulting and Applied Research Division (July 1979-March 1981). He joined TERI as Director in April 1981. [3]
He lives in Golf Links, New Delhi.[6]
HEC Paris appointed Pachauri Professor Honoris Causa in October 2009.[7] He is a strict vegetarian, partly due to his beliefs as a Hindu, and partly because of the impact of meat-production on the environment.[8]
[edit] Career
Pachauri was on the Board of Governors, Shriram Scientific and Industrial Research Foundation (September 1987); the Executive Committee of the India International Centre, New Delhi (1985 onwards); the Governing Council of the India Habitat Centre, New Delhi (October 1987 onwards); and the Court of Governors, Administrative Staff College of India (1979-81) and advises such companies as Pegasus Capital Advisors, GloriOil, the Chicago Climate Exchange, Toyota, Deutsche Bank and NTPC.[9]
On 14 July 2008, Pachauri received the title UNIDO Goodwill Ambassador.
Pachauri has been awarded the prestigious Padma Bhushan by the Indian government and 'Officer of the Legion of Honour' by the French government.
[edit] Work with the IPCC
On 20 April 2002, Pachauri was elected Chairman of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a United Nations panel established by the WMO and UNEP to assess information relevant for understanding climate change.[10]
[edit] 2007 Nobel Peace Prize for IPCC
The IPCC shared the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize with former U.S. Vice President Al Gore,who had earlier criticised Pachauri when he was first elected in 2002.[11] In its press release, the Nobel Prize Committee said:
...the Nobel Peace Prize for 2007 is to be shared, in two equal parts, between the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and Albert Arnold (Al) Gore Jr. for their efforts to build up and disseminate greater knowledge about man-made climate change, and to lay the foundations for the measures that are needed to counteract such change."On 11 December 2007, Pachauri (representing the recipient IPCC) and co-recipient Al Gore delivered their acceptance speeches at an awards ceremony in Oslo, Norway, on a day when delegates to a United Nations climate conference were meeting in Bali, Indonesia.[12] Pachauri began by drawing attention to his conviction that the Hindu philosophy of "'Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam', which means 'the whole universe is one family,'" must dominate global efforts to protect the global commons."[13] Returning to this theme throughout his speech, he pointedly reminded his audience of the words of the president of the Maldives in 1987:
"...a mean sea level rise of two meters would suffice to virtually submerge the entire country of 1,190 small islands, most of which barely rise two meters above sea level. That would be the death of a nation."[13]Pachauri repeatedly emphasized his concerns regarding the implications of climate change for the world's poorest nations, referring to studies that:
"...have raised the threat of dramatic population migration, conflict, and war over water and other resources, as well as a realignment of power among nations. Some also highlight the possibility of rising tensions between rich and poor nations, health problems caused particularly by water shortages and crop failures... "One of the most significant aspects of the impacts of climate change... relates to the equity implications of changes that are occurring and are likely to occur in the future. In general, the impacts of climate change on some of the poorest and most vulnerable communities in the world could prove extremely unsettling."[13][edit] Controversy
In a series of articles, the Daily Telegraph asserted that Pachauri has a conflict of interest between his role as the chairperson of the IPCC and his roles as an advisor on energy and environment to a range of companies and organisations.[14][15] Later reports focussed on Pachauri's membership of the board of ONGC,[16] research grants for TERI[17] and alleged financial anomalies at TERI Europe.[18] Pachauri has denied all allegations.[19][20]
[edit] Awards and Recognitions
- In January 2001, he received the Padma Bhushan.[6][3]
- In January 2008, he was awarded the second-highest civilian award in India, the Padma Vibhushan.[21]
- In November 2009, Pachauri received the 'Order of the Rising Sun - Gold and Silver Star' in recognition of his contribution to the enhancement of Japan's policy towards climate change. He was bestowed with the decoration by Emperor Akihito.[22]
- In November 2009, Pachauri was rated fifth in the list of "Top 100 Global thinkers" by Foreign Policy magazine, for "ending the debate over whether climate change matters."[23]
[edit] Interviews
Pachauri was a keynote speaker at the 2008 Metropolis Congress in Sydney in October 2008. Pachauri addressed world mayors and industry leaders on the impact of climate change on urban development in the 21st Century.
He also delivered a lecture in January 2007 at Techfest 2008 (held at Indian Institute of Technology Bombay) in Mumbai and Kolkata regarding environmental issues and the problem of global warming via video conferencing.
He gave a keynote lecture during Convocation '09 at Dhirubhai Ambani Institute of Information and Communication Technology in Gandhinagar.
Pachauri spoke at the 45th annual Nobel Conference on the campus of Gustavus Adolphus College in St. Peter, Minn., on Tuesday, Oct. 6, 2009.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20090825/sc_afp/climatewarmingunipccpachaurico2
- ^ http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2007/12/nasas-james-han/
- ^ a b c "Dr. R.K. Pachauri". http://www.climatescience.gov/Library/bios/pachauri.htm. Retrieved 2008-07-26.
- ^ R. K. Pachauri biography on I love India website
- ^ NCSU Distinguished Alumni
- ^ a b "Padam Awards: Civilian Awards announced on January 26, 2001". Ministry of Home Affairs: Government of India. http://mha.nic.in/uniquepage.asp?ID_PK=490. Retrieved 2010-01-02.
- ^ MBA Channel: HEC appoints Rajendra K. Pachauri Professor Honoris Causa
- ^ "UN climate panel head formed global consensus", Reuters profile, 2007-10-12
- ^ http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/private/person.asp?personId=9089242&privcapId=22361&previousCapId=138823&previousTitle=General%20Catalyst%20Partners
- ^ "Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Elects Dr. Rajendra K. Pachauri as its Chairman" (PDF). IPCC. 20 April 2002. http://www.ipcc.ch/pdf/press/media-flash-20april2002.pdf. Retrieved 5 December 2008.
- ^ Pachauri buries Gore feud after Nobel - Reuters 2007-10-12
- ^ "Gore Accepts Nobel Prize With Call for Bold Action", Mary Jordan, Washington Post, p. A14, 2007-12-11.
- ^ a b c Transcript of Nobel Prize speech from Democracy Now! website.
- ^ Booker, Christopher, and Richard North, "Questions over business deals of UN climate change guru Dr Rajendra Pachauri" The Daily Telegraph, December 20, 2009.
- ^ Booker, Christopher, "The questions Dr Pachauri still has to answer", The Daily Telegraph, December 26, 2009.
- ^ Singh, Ajmer, "Pachauri in a spot as climategate hits TERI", India Today, January 10, 2010.
- ^ Mendick, Robert, "Taxpayers' millions paid to Indian institute run by UN climate chief", The Daily Telegraph, January 16, 2010.
- ^ Booker, Christopher, and Richard North, The curious case of the expanding environmental group with falling income", The Daily Telegraph, January 17, 2010.
- ^ Pachauri, Rajendra, "Climate change has no time for delay or denial" The Guardian, January 4, 2010.
- ^ The Hindu, "TERI denies charges against Pachauri", Chennai: Dec 24, 2009.
- ^ "Padma Awards announced". http://www.pib.nic.in/release/release.asp?relid=34924. Retrieved 2010-01-07.
- ^ "Pachauri, Krishnamurthy conferred with high Japanese honour", newKerala.com (New Dehli), November 3, 2009, http://www.newkerala.com/nkfullnews-1-143527.html, retrieved 2010-01-07
- ^ http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2009/11/30/the_fp_top_100_global_thinkers?page=full
[edit] External links
- Official website
- Dr R K Pachauri's - Blog
- Biography
- Biography
- Nobel Prize acceptance speech Video, audio, and print transcript from Democracy Now!.
- Dr. Pachauri discusses the climate change negotiation process with Climate Change TV
- Lord Browne interviews Dr Pachauri about climate change, Winter 2007
- [1] UN scientist backs '350' target for CO2 reduction
- World Questions Congress' Commitment to Climate Change, Chair of World Climate Change Panel Says U.S. Lobbyists May Stall Obama Agenda
- [2] The Politic interviews Rajendra Pachauri about the Copenhagen Conference of 2009 -- December 2009
- [3] Pachauri's ideas for 'carbon trading' and 'sustainable technologies'
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