Tag: stall

  • EU environmental watchdog criticises calls to stall pesticides cut

    EU environmental watchdog criticises calls to stall pesticides cut

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    The EU’s environmental watchdog has hit back at calls to stall a 50% cut in the use and risks of synthetic pesticides and a 20% cut in fertiliser use by 2030, arguing that the Ukraine crisis provides scant justification for delay.

    EU states with the backing of powerful farm unions and centre-right parties have blocked the proposed pesticide reform unless the European Commission completes a second impact study by 28 June to assuage food security fears.

    Among campaigners and scientists, anxieties are rife that the bloc’s flagship green farming pledge could be unceremoniously buried.

    Dario Piselli, a European Environment Agency (EEA) expert and author of a new analysis published on Wednesday, said there were “compelling” reasons not to hesitate further with the draft law.

    “There’s limited justification to use the war as a reason for postponing action,” he told the Guardian. “Food security as an issue is not only to do with immediate food supply – and a lot of the concerns there have subsided a bit compared to the beginning of the war – but with medium-long term security which is influenced by other things [like] climate change and the impact of a loss of biodiversity on food production.”

    Since 1990, farmland bird and grassland butterfly populations have plunged by more than 30% in Europe, while almost one in 10 of the continent’s bees face extinction, mainly because of habitat loss caused by intensified agriculture.

    In 2020, pesticide thresholds for human safety were breached at more than one in five rivers and lakes across Europe, the EEA paper says and 83% of agricultural soils tested in 2019 were also found to contain pesticide residues.

    Almost the same percentage – 84% – of people tested across five European countries in 2021 were found to contain at least two pesticides in their bloodstreams, according to a large human biomonitoring study cited by the paper.

    Environmentalists say this is partly down to increased pesticide sales volumes in the EU, which remained stable between 2011 and 2020 at about 350,000 tonnes a year, compared with annual averages closer to 220,000 tonnes between 1992 and 2003.

    One EU country, Denmark, has cut sales by using pesticide taxes linked to product toxicity, but the commission does not expect the present modest rises in pesticide prices to affect demand.

    By contrast, fertiliser sales in countries such as Germany have fallen by up to 40% after prices doubled between May 2020 and the end of 2022, owing to high gas costs and war-related supply disruptions.

    One EU diplomat said this had caused “mixed feelings” in Europe’s capitals about the commission’s green farming reform. “Last year the Germans were desperate to push the proposal forward but how this will end up I don’t know,” the official said.

    Another EU diplomat added: “If the pesticides regulation is dead, there is no one to blame but the commission itself. The moment it stepped away from a scientific and evidence-based approach in favour of ideology and dogmatic solutions, it condemned its flagship legal proposal.”

    The commission’s targets for EU nations, which take into account actions already taken, would force Italy to cut its pesticide use and risks by 62%, Germany by 55% and France and Spain by 54%, according to a report in Politico.

    Hostility to the measures is strong among Europe’s agricultural business class and in several governments, where the EU’s green deal commissioner, Frans Timmermans, is viewed darkly.

    “Unless EU citizens suffer from hunger and protest in the streets, he does not care,” the first diplomat said.

    In a concession to such sentiments, Brussels last year shelved a proposed ban on pesticide use in ecologically sensitive areas – so long as low-risk pesticides were used instead. But it will not abandon the goal of a less chemically drenched countryside, despite the “complex” impacts of the Ukraine conflict on food security, said Stefan De Keersmaecker, a commission spokesperson.

    “We must continue making progress in the discussions so that the proposal can become a reality to protect farmers, pesticide users, citizens, vulnerable populations, and the environment,” he said. “European citizens have a clear desire to reduce the use and risk of pesticides.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Those responsible for climate change cannot ask India to stall development: Minister

    Those responsible for climate change cannot ask India to stall development: Minister

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    New Delhi: India is free to use its resources to fulfil the energy needs of its people and countries historically responsible for climate change cannot ask it to stop its development, Union Environment Minister Bhupender Yadav said on Tuesday.

    Addressing an event organised by trade association ASSOCHAM, he said India believes in climate justice which means everyone has access to resources to lead a dignified life.

    “When we talk about stopping the use of fossil fuels… We say India is moving towards renewables. But it does not mean that those who historically emitted greenhouse gases for their growth ask us to stop our development.

    “We believe in both climate change and climate justice,” Yadav said.

    The minister said India wants to fulfil the energy needs of the entire population and bring a change in their lives.

    “We do not want to keep anyone in the dark. We have the power and freedom to decide how we use our energy resources. It’s our decision. Those responsible for it (climate change) cannot be telling us what we need to do,” he said.

    At COP27 in Egypt’s Sharm El Sheikh, rich nations made a push to include language such as “major emitters” and “top emitters” in the cover text of the UN climate summit in an attempt to “forget or overlook” historical contributions and responsibilities of developed countries to address climate change.

    They wanted top 20 emitters, including India and China, to make intense emission cuts (to limit warming to 1.5 degree Celsius).

    India had, however, thwarted the attempt to club it with historical emitters and proposed that the parties agree to phasing down all fossil fuels and not just coal.

    It had said the developed countries must take the lead in raising ambitions as the bulk of finance and technology is available with them.

    In February, the Centre had asked power utilities to not retire coal-fired power plants till 2030 due to a surge in electricity demand.

    Yadav said India does not just talk about climate change, it also takes action.

    “We are one of the countries which have updated their Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs). We achieved two of our climate goals — reducing emission intensity of GDP and renewable energy target — set in 2015 ahead of schedule,” he said.

    India updated its NDCs in August last year, promising to reduce emissions intensity of GDP by 45 percent by 2030, from the 2005 level, and achieve 50 percent cumulative electric power installed capacity from non-fossil fuel-based energy resources by 2030.

    The country diligently worked to achieve the target of 175 GW renewable capacity set during the Paris climate conference in 2015 and has now set a target to increase renewable capacity to 500 gigawatts by 2030.

    The minister said India has allocated Rs 35,000 crore in the Union budget for priority capital investment towards energy transition and achieving India’s goal of net zero emissions by 2070.

    He said India is home to 17 percent of the global population but accounts for only four percent of global carbon emissions. Developed nations with the same percentage of population account for nearly 60 percent of carbon emissions.

    The Earth’s global surface temperature has risen by around 1.15 degrees Celsius as compared to the pre-industrial (1850-1900) average and the CO2 spewed into the atmosphere since the start of the industrial revolution is closely tied to it.

    Major damage had already been done before the 1990s when economies like India started to develop, reports suggest.

    According to the “Global Carbon Budget Report – 2022”, more than half of the world’s CO2 emissions in 2021 were from three places — China (31 percent), the US (14 percent), and the European Union (eight percent).

    Ranking fourth, India accounted for seven percent of global CO2 emissions.

    However, at 2.4 tCO2e (tonne carbon dioxide equivalent), India’s per capita greenhouse gas emission is far below the global average of 6.3 tCO2e, according to a report released last year by the United Nations Environment Programme.

    Per capita emission in the US (14 tCO2e) is far above the global average, followed by Russia (13 tCO2e), China (9.7 tCO2e), Brazil and Indonesia (about 7.5 tCO2e each), and the European Union (7.2 tCO2e).

    Yadav said the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s “Synthesis Report” issued recently warned that no one will be able to stop the impact of climate change if action is not taken in the next few years.

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    #responsible #climate #change #India #stall #development #Minister

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • ‘Please don’t stall Delhi budget’, Kejriwal writes to PM

    ‘Please don’t stall Delhi budget’, Kejriwal writes to PM

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    New Delhi: Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal wrote to Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday requesting him to “not stop Delhi’s budget”, amid a row between the Centre and the AAP dispensation in the national capital over the issue.

    The presentation of the Delhi government’s Budget for 2023-24, which was scheduled for Tuesday, has been put on hold with the Kejriwal dispensation and the central government trading charges over allocations under various heads.

    “This is the first in the last 75 years that a state’s budget has been stalled. Why are you upset with Delhiites? Please don’t stall Delhi’s budget. With folded hands, Delhiites urge you to pass their budget,” the chief minister said in the letter.

    Speaking at a News18 programme on Monday, Kejriwal charged that the Centre was resorting to “gundagardi” and said it was the first time in the country’s history that the budget of a government was put on hold. A video clip of his speech was tweeted by the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP).

    Sources in the city government said the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) has stopped the budget and it will not be tabled in the Delhi Assembly on Tuesday.

    As the chief minister lashed out at the Centre, sources in the MHA said the ministry has sought clarification from the AAP government as its budget proposal had high allocation for advertisement and relatively low funding for infrastructure and other development initiatives.

    Taking to Twitter on Tuesday, the chief minister referred to the Economic Survey report on per capita income rising by 14.18 per cent in Delhi said the national capital was doing “exceedingly well” despite obstacles.

    “Delhi is doing exceedingly well, despite all obstacles being created on daily basis. Imagine if such obstacles were not created and all govts worked together for the welfare of people. Then Delhi would grow multiple times faster,” he tweeted.

    According to the Economic Survey tabled in the Delhi Assembly on Monday, per capita income in the national capital rose by 14.18 per cent to Rs 4,44,768 in 2022-23 at current prices compared to Rs 3,89,529 in 2021-22.

    The per capita income of Delhi has been around 2.6 times higher as compared to the national average, both at current and constant prices. It was Rs 3,31,112 in 2020-21.

    The tax collection of the Delhi government registered a “tremendous” growth rate of 36 per cent during 2021-22 (provisional) as compared to the negative growth of 19.53 per cent in 2020-21 due to COVID-19 pandemic, the survey tabled by state Finance Minister Kailash Gahlot said.

    “Delhi’s growth speaks,” Kejriwal said in another tweet.

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    #dont #stall #Delhi #budget #Kejriwal #writes

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • In a first, ‘Trans Tea Stall’ at Guwahati railway station

    In a first, ‘Trans Tea Stall’ at Guwahati railway station

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    Guwahati: In a first-of-a-kind initiative, a special tea stall has been set up at the Guwahati train station by the Northeast Frontier Railways (NFR) to boost the transgender community, officials said on Saturday.

    NFR General Manager Anshul Gupta inaugurated the ‘Trans Tea Stall’ at platform number 1 on Friday in the presence of Swati Bidhan Baruah, Associate Vice Chairman of the Transgender Welfare Board of Assam.

    During the inaugural ceremony, Gupta said that the NFR has taken the initiative for the empowerment of transgenders.

    This initiative is the first-of-a-kind in NFR as well as in the Indian Railways, he added.

    “This is also the first such initiative in any Central government organisation and NFR will take more such initiatives in future,” Gupta commented.

    NFR plans to operate more such Trans Tea Stalls at other railway stations in the region, an official statement mentioned.

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    #Trans #Tea #Stall #Guwahati #railway #station

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Christian stall at Delhi World book fair vandalised by right-wing goons

    Christian stall at Delhi World book fair vandalised by right-wing goons

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    Chaos erupted when a group of right-wing workers vandalised a stall containing Christian spiritual books at the New Delhi World Book Fair held in Pragati Maidan on March 1.

    A video has emerged on social media Twitter where around 30 men wearing saffron scarves and tilak on their forehead can be seen tearing posters of the New Testament Psalms and Proverbs.

    Alleging that Christians target poor Hindu families for religious conversions, they tore copies of The Holy Bible and shouted, “Free Bible bandh karo, dharam parivartan bandh karo” (Stop distributing free copies of the Bible, stop religious conversion) ‘Jai Shree Ram’ and ‘Bharat Mata Ki Jai’.

    The book fair had several stalls of different genres including different spiritual and religious books. The vandalised counter had put a tag for free Holy Bible, which triggered a few Hindutva men.

    According to Indian Express, one of the volunteers said other stalls also distributed free texts from other religions.

    “The men accused us of converting people by forcing them to take the books. We told them that we were only distributing free books to passersby. But they didn’t listen,” the volunteer was quoted by the Indian Express.

    Mahindri Panchandham, a self-proclaimed member of Unite Hindu, led the vandalism. In the video, when some people from the crowd try to remind him that the Indian Constitution describes the country as a democratic nation where one is free to follow under their free will, Panchandham shot back saying, “Democracy gives the right to preach religion but not to lure poor Hindus and convert them.”

    As people try to calm an agitated Panchandham down and reason with him, he refuses to listen and starts raising slogans in a louder tone.

    Meanwhile, the Delhi Police informed that no complaint was registered by the members of the book fair.

    “We check the area and found that no books were torn. The group had only protested and was soon removed. There was no disruption or violence. The Gideons don’t wish to file a complaint and said the matter was sorted,” said a police officer.

    Vishwa Hindu Parishad spokesperson Vinod Bansal said that Christian groups and missionaries are infamous for targeting poor Hindu families and tricking them into converting to Christianity. “These groups and missionaries convert people by forcing them to take books. We don’t support this and asked them not to do the same. There was no violence or anything,” he said.



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    #Christian #stall #Delhi #World #book #fair #vandalised #rightwing #goons

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Hyderabad: Telangana forest dept wins first prize for stall at Numaish

    Hyderabad: Telangana forest dept wins first prize for stall at Numaish

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    Hyderabad: Telangana Forest Department won the first prize for project implementation and exhibition section at the Hyderabad Industrial Exhibition (Numaish). Home Minister Mahmood Ali presented the first prize to the forest officials at the closing ceremony of the 2023 Numaish exhibition. 

    They were awarded the first prize for innovative schemes implemented by the forest department through Haritha Haram in Telangana for the past eight years and their presentation at the stall.

    Display of the department’s scheme implementation and decoration of the stalls to reflect the same was done and a mini zoo was also a part of the stall. The stall decorated with forest and wild animals theme was an attraction for the exhibition visitors.

    Chief Conservation Officer of Forests R.M. Dobriyal and Officer on Special Duty Priyanka Varghese felicitated the prize-winning officers and staff who managed the stall.

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    #Hyderabad #Telangana #forest #dept #wins #prize #stall #Numaish

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )