Followers

Wednesday, October 31, 2018

Humans wiped out 60% of wildlife since 1970


Rate Of Species Loss Up 100-1,000 Times From Few Centuries Ago

Unbridled consumption has decimated global wildlife, triggered a mass extinction and exhausted Earth’s capacity to accommodate humanity’s expanding appetites, the conservation group WWF warned on Tuesday. From 1970 to 2014, 60% of all animals with a backbone — fish, birds, amphibians, reptiles and mammals — were wiped out by human activity, according to WWF’s “Living Planet” report, based on an ongoing survey of more than 4,000 species spread over 16,700 populations across the globe. “The situation is really bad, and it keeps getting worse,” WWF International director general Marco Lambertini said. “The only good news is that we know exactly what is happening.” For freshwater fauna, the decline in population over the 44 years monitored was a staggering 80%. Regionally, Latin America was hit hardest, seeing a nearly 90% loss of wildlife over the same period. Depending on which of Earth’s lifeforms are included, the current rate of species loss is 100 to 1,000 times higher than only a few hundred years ago, when people began to alter Earth’s chemistry and crowd other creatures out of existence. Wild animals today only account for 4% of mammals on Earth, with humans (36%) and livestock (60%) making up the rest. Ten thousand years ago that ratio was reversed. Back-to-back marine heatwaves have already wiped out up to half of the globe’s shallow-water reefs, which support a quarter of all marine life. Even if humanity manages to cap global warming at 1.5 degrees Celsius — mission impossible — coral mortality will likely be 70 to 90%. The onslaught of hunting, shrinking habitat, pollution, illegal trade and climate change — all caused by humans — has been too much to overcome, he said. In looking for answers, conservationists are turning to climate change. “We need a new global deal for nature,” said Lambertini, noting two key ingredients in the 195-nation Paris climate treaty. “One was the realisation that climate change was dangerous for the economy and society, not just polar bears,” he said. Similarly, threatened ecosystem services long taken for granted are worth tens of trillions of dollars every year. “A healthy, sustainable future for all is only possible on a planet where nature thrives,” said Lambertini. AF

Source: Times of India, 31/10/2018

Rising pollution could hit monsoon rains: UN report


Rising air pollution in India is likely to impact rainfall patterns in the country and decrease monsoon in long term, which can cause extensive financial losses, warns a United Nations report released on Tuesday. “Air Pollution in Asia and the Pacific: Science-based Solutions” presents a scientific assessment of air pollution in Asia and the Pacific. Released in the World Health Organisation’s (WHO) first global conference on air pollution and health in Geneva, the report covers various pollution aspects which India is grappling with. The largest impact of air pollution on the Indian monsoon will be a decrease in the amount of rainfall, the report warns. “However, some parts can also witness high precipitation depending on the topography. Pollution will also impact the duration and distribution of rainfall,” said Nathan BorgfordParnell, science affairs adviser at Climate and Clean Air Coalition who coauthored the report. The report states that the presence of particulate matter 2.5 (PM 2.5), a deadly tiny pollutant, can affect precipitation patterns during monsoon in India. “A weaker trend in the Indian monsoon precipitation has been linked to changes in the emissions of particles and other pollutants from within and outside Asia,” the report says. The report also has a word of praise for several mitigation measures taken by the government. Recognising indoor air pollution as a major health crisis in India, the report reveals that it is contributing as much as 22-52% to the country’s ambient air pollution. Speaking exclusively to TOI, Andy Haines, member of the scientific advisory panel of the Climate and Clean Air Coalition, said from Geneva, “The muchneeded mitigation measure that India needs to ensure is provision of clean household energy. Burning of fossil fuels in households is a big health threat, especially for women and children.” UN claims that if the suggested measures are implemented, annual premature mortality associated with indoor air pollution can decline by 75%. This means that about 2 million premature deaths per year can be avoided in countries like India. The economic development data of 41 countries (in Asia and the Pacific) shows that unlike many other nations who managed to control air pollution with economic development, India’s air quality got worse with an increase in Gross Domestic Product (GDP). A graph shows as India transitioned from a lowincome to a middle-income country between 1995 and 2014, levels of PM 2.5 increased significantly. Haines added that growing air pollution was affecting the country’s health care, with an increase in ailments like heart attack, cancer and other respiratory diseases.

Source: Times of India, 31/10/2018

Tuesday, October 30, 2018

 Javadekar launches web portals for research-oriented schemes

Union HRD Minister Prakash Javadekar on Thursday launched web portals of two schemes — IMPRESS and SPARC — with an aim to build a research ecosystem in educational institutions.

"A country achieves prosperity on a sustainable basis only through innovation which can happen only by good research and which is currently a major focus area of the Government," Javadekar said while addressing a press conference.

The objective of Impactful Policy Research in Social Sciences (IMPRESS) is to identify and fund research proposals in social sciences with maximum impact on the governance and society. "It will provide an opportunity for social science researchers in any institution in the country which includes all universities (central and state) and also a few private institutions meeting the requirement," he said.

The scheme will be implemented at a total cost of Rs 414 crore till March, 2021. Under IMPRESS, 1,500 research projects will be awarded for two years to support social science research in the higher educational institutions.

The Indian Council of Social Science and Research (ICSSR) will be the project implementing agency. Meanwhile, the Scheme for Promotion of Academic and Research Collaboration (SPARC) aims at building the research ecosystem of India's higher educational institutions by facilitating academic and research collaborations between Indian and foreign institutions.

"It is a scheme for promotion of academic and research collaboration. Under the scheme we are giving Rs 418 crore for 600 joint research proposals. The idea is to stop brain drain and provide facility so that they can do research in India which is of international level," said Javadekar.

IIT-Khargapur is the national coordinating institute to implement the SPARC programme. The research work under both the schemes would start from January next year, the minister said.


Source | The Daily Pioneer | 26th October 2018

The long march: on migrants march to USA



CaravanaMigrante puts issues in the U.S. mid-term elections in sharp relief

The winding caravan of more than 7,000 migrants from Central America through Mexico has become such a political hot potato that it is likely to thrust the immigration issue to the forefront of the U.S. mid-term elections, barely two weeks away. Already, President Donald Trump, who has not been shy about translating his conservative views on immigration into harsh policy measures, has fuelled fears that the caravan may harbour terrorists from West Asia; he has also attacked Mexico for not stopping the “onslaught”. This, besides the usual sloganeering around “illegal immigration” that will purportedly steal American jobs and threaten the security of an otherwise peaceful American society. In truth, most members of this caravan, not by any means the first of its kind but certainly one of the largest in recent history, are either economic migrants seeking escape from grinding poverty in places like Honduras or fleeing persecution, trafficking or gang violence in the region. Unlike previous such caravans, whose members numbered in the hundreds and which dissipated along the way or upon reaching the border, this one has gathered momentum from sheer media attention and support from advocacy groups. It is not going away any time soon. This puts candidates from both the major parties in the U.S. in a tricky position. Democrats are wary of committing too much political currency to the caravan or undocumented migration as a phenomenon, given the prevailing mood in the country. And the Republican mainstream harbours concerns about the strident anti-immigrant rhetoric against the caravan, and what it stands for, emboldening far-right groups associated with racism and Islamophobia.
At the heart of the shrill debate on immigration is the weight of history. Americans can never get away from the fact that they are and will probably always be a nation of immigrants. As President, Barack Obama took a hard line on undocumented worker deportations, whose number soared through his two terms in office. But he sought to toe a moderate line when it came to delaying the deportation of childhood arrivals, and policed borders with a relatively light touch. Mr. Trump, contrarily, has made every effort to deliver on his radical campaign promise to ban Muslims from entering the U.S., although he faced numerous legal setbacks in that mission, and then made even immigration hawks squirm over his decision to separate undocumented child migrants from their families. Ultimately #CaravanaMigrante will seek to cross that line in the sand which Mr. Trump and his supporters hope will one day become a high wall. Liberal-progressive Americans who hope that these asylum-seekers will not be rudely rebuffed at that point will have to regroup and focus their energies on the November campaign and use any newfound power they win in Congress to chip away at the immigration agenda of the Trump machine.
Source: The Hindu, 25/10/2018



The right identity

Evolving feminist narratives in India must resolve the fault lines that have emerged.

A spectre is haunting Indian men, but also the feminist movement. For the latter, it is the spectre of an identity movement. As a moment of catharsis, following a long overdue battle for many women who probably belong to the “nevertheless, she persisted (think Mitch McConnell on Elizabeth Warren)” generation, has come #MeToo. Many of us who nominally belong to the millennial community have watched as our younger sisters have gone about dismantling the apparatus that allows masculine aggression and violence to persist. Empowered to finally inhabit a world that listens in solidarity, many older women have come out to expose their aggressors for the first time or repeat an allegation they had made earlier in a tone-deaf world.
So, what will we be left with, to ask a Gramscian question, when the old world is dead and the new has not been born yet? The feminist movement finds itself in the midst of a generational conflict of early feminist pioneers, veterans of many battles and millennials without patience. The latter “will not be silenced” by those who speak of due process and caution, we are told. As Major Saranoff in George Bernard Shaw’s Arms and the Man rued, the generals would not have it that we win a war on a flawed strategy when we could be losing it on account of best practices. Saranoff had led a cavalry directly towards a battalion armed with cannons, but had triumphed because the other side did not have the right ammunition at the right time.
The older generation of feminists have been, of late, attacked multiple times for how they have conducted the feminist movement so far. World over, feminists have been equated to a sex-negative, reactionary group which is also, it is alleged, intolerant of diversity — sexual, racial and ethnic. In the United States, feminists have allegedly treated LGBTQ movements shabbily and, in India, all feminists are labelled savarna, elitist women (even by savarna, elitist people). In both cases, feminists are viewed as a faceless mass of undifferentiated women. They are not individuals who agree on some issues and diverge on others.
LGBTQ groups were perhaps one of the latest entrants to identity movements at the turn of the century. Today, the term identity politics might have negative connotations but these were powerful movements that promoted cohesion to protect group interests, often with aggressive political posturing. Adages such as TERF (Trans Exclusionary Radical Feminist), seek to delink group rights from the larger feminist movement, and have, probably, helped the cause in some ways. Ironically, I have heard patriarchal white men use TERF more often to discredit individual feminists than any other group.
Identity movements that depend on labelling and discrediting have today reached groups who are not only privileged but also outraged at the gains made by marginalised communities. White nationalists and Hindu nationalists, especially men but also women, combine the aggressive political posturing, moves for cohesion and for insulating groups with the power of the state and the social structures they control.
The #MeToo explosion is born out of this moment. Of the need to push back against an insulating identity movement that seeks to include women without representing women’s interests, or even holding its men accountable for the violence unleashed against those they seek to speak for. Racial, ethnic, caste and LGBTQ movements have done this before — distanced themselves from both the dominant community and feminist women from dominant groups. The #MeToo movement in India is similarly consolidating itself as an identity movement. The Raya Sarkar list was posited, quite misleadingly, as an attack against savarna men and against “savarna feminist apologists”. The #MeToo of 2018 is unapologetically against men, male entitlement and male inability to accord respect to women. Any criticism of #MeToo will be countered with the same posturing and aggression needed to promote group interests of a set of people who subscribe to one tenuous identity — of being women.
The feminist movement in India, after years of vibrant diffusion, is consolidating into an identity movement whether we like it or not, and the fault lines are already visible. Tavleen Singh has questioned the exclusion of marginalised women from the #MeToo space (‘Can MeToo get beyond me’, IE, October 21) while Seema Mustafa has dismissed both Ghazala Wahab’s testimony, in which she was mentioned, and the #MeToo movement itself as a self-indulgent exercise. Embedded in Mustafa’s piece (‘The revolution before #MeToo’, IE October 25) is a derision for millennials with a short “attention span” and for women’s vulnerability (which locates responsibility of escaping harassment on women themselves). This piece also reveals that the author has perhaps missed the entire feminist conversation on the “crisis of representation”. The conceit of speaking for others (those without privilege) and the impatient dismissal of women who take charge of their own narrative is also a function of power, lacking in empathy.
An important question that Mustafa also touches on needs to be pushed forward: Is there no redemption (if explicitly sought) possible for men accused of less severe indiscretions? Also, have we lost our ability to at least listen to someone like Varun Grover who presented his case with precision and pathos (when the response of the person who posted his accusation has been vacuous)? Or, finally, what does one make of the pressure we put on women, especially feminists, to immediately condemn their family members and husbands/partners? Empathy, for me, has always been the cornerstone of feminism and I do not want to see it die with the old world.
Source: Indian Express, 30/10/2018

Mantra, Mind, Meditation


In all our existential expressional phenomena, it is the mind that steers the psyche, “manah pragraha me va cha”. It is the mind that acts with the present, frames the future and even rewinds the past; with the application of intelligence, intuition and conscience. But the mind, by nature, is always diversified and it runs after hallucinations of the mundane world. In meditation, mantra helps the scattered mind to achieve a state of one-pointedness, absorbing the idea of cosmic super-consciousness that carries within, the mantra itself. Every word in this universe bears an acoustic sound; every utterance possesses a rhythmic vibration and carries a significant meaning. Mantra, too, is a precise and condensed form of all these three aspects and is an essential part of meditation. Meditation is a physio-psychic and psycho-spiritual process of withdrawing the mind from the external world and concentrating in an internal energy centre, or chakra, within our corporal frame. The next step is to sit still like a rock and attune the mind with mantric spirit. In mantra meditation, breathing, which is intimately linked with the mind, becomes slow and deep and, ultimately, the mind becomes introverted, calm and peaceful. By repeated mantric strokes on mental plane, the meditator gradually tries to transform his own rhythmic flow into the cosmic vibrational flow. Ultimately, the mind expands and merges into the eternal cosmic glacier. Mantras are special and potent as the right mantra can lead you to the path of salvation

Source: Economic Times, 30/10/2018

India tops in under-5 deaths due to toxic air, 60,000 killed in 2016: WHO


‘Air Pollution Killed Over 1L Children In ’16’

India’s toxic air has been linked to the premature deaths of close to 1,10,000 children in 2016, with the country witnessing highest number of deaths of children under five years of age attributed to their exposure to ambient air pollution of particulate matter (PM) 2.5, said a World Health Organisation (WHO) report released on the eve of the first-ever conference on air pollution and health. As many as 60,987 children of under five years of age in India died because of their exposure to PM 2.5, followed by Nigeria with 47,674 deaths, Pakistan with 21,136 deaths and Democratic Republic of Congo with 12,890 deaths. In India, the death rate for this age bracket is 50.8 per 1,00,000 children with more girls under the age of five dying than boys due to pollution. About 32,889 girls died, compared to 28,097 boys in 2016, according to the report. Between five and 14 years, India saw the deaths of 4,360 children attributed to ambient air pollution in 2016. Across both these age groups, over 1 lakh children died in India due to both ambient and household pollution of particulate matter 2.5 in 2016. Particulate matter 2.5 orPM 2.5 are fine dust particles in air which are considered highly harmful for health. The report, titled ‘Air Pollution and Child Health – Prescribing clean air’, seeks to caution against the rising levels of pollution causing growing burden of diseases as well as deaths. Over 2 million deaths occur prematurely in India due to pollution, accounting for 25% of the global deaths due to air pollution. Globally, every day around 93% of children under the age of 15 years (1.8 billion children) breathe air that is so polluted it puts their health and development at serious risk. WHO estimates that in 2016, 6,00,000 children died from acute lower respiratory infections caused by polluted air. While in low and middle income countries, 98% of children under five are said to be exposed to PM 2.5, in high income countries, this number is almost half at 52%. The report also highlights adverse impact of pollution on pregnant women and children. Pregnant women, exposed to polluted air, are more likely to give birth prematurely, and have small, low birth-weight children, the report says. “Air pollution is stunting our children’s brains, affecting their health in more ways than we suspected,” said Dr Maria Neira, director, department of public health, environmental and social determinants of health at WHO

Source: Times of India, 30/10/2018