News stories by Aishwarya Bajpai, page 2

  1. Housing for Tomorrow: Sustainable Solutions from Habitat for Humanity

    - Inter Press Service

    BAKU, Nov 19 (IPS) - In the face of a growing climate crisis, the connection between housing and environmental sustainability is becoming increasingly urgent.

  2. Survival at Stake: Caribbean Calls For Just, Fair Financing For Small Island States at COP

    - Inter Press Service

    BAKU, Nov 18 (IPS) - Communities living in Small Island Developing States (SIDS) pay the price of climate change in lives, livelihoods, and stunted sustainable development.

  3. Rebuilding Trust, Dialogue, Collaboration Key to COP29's Success, Says Barbados Minister

    - Inter Press Service

    BAKU, Nov 18 (IPS) - "This Finance COP has to deliver. I think this is a crucial moment for the COP process," said Shantal Munro-Knight, Barbados Minister in the Prime Minister's Office.

  4. Robust Negotiations Needed to Push Rich Countries to Honor Financial Commitments

    - Inter Press Service

    BAKU, Nov 16 (IPS) - The irony is that at forums like COP29, dubbed the finance COP, rich countries often behave as though they can sidestep their financial obligations, Yamide Dagnet, Senior Vice President, International at the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), says.

  5. Walking with Wisdom: Whaia’s Mission to Bring Indigenous Knowledge to COP 29

    - Inter Press Service

    BAKU, Nov 15 (IPS) - Kaitiaki! Whaia says she is at COP29 to bring indigenous wisdom to influence policy and to provide guardianship (kaitiaki) of the climate negotiations.

  6. ‘Show Me the Money’—Grenada PM Calls for Climate Justice

    - Inter Press Service

    BAKU, Nov 14 (IPS) - "Though I come from a 'no worries' island, climate change is deeply worrisome for us," Grenada's Prime Minister Dickon Mitchell told IPS in an exclusive interview at COP29 currently underway in Baku, Azerbaijan.

  7. Farming in Crisis: Suicides and Climate Change Threaten India's Agrarian Future

    - Inter Press Service

    DELHI, Nov 11 (IPS) - "Farming is in my blood, and I can't imagine doing anything else," said Mahim Mazumder, a farmer from Assam. "Even though the past three to five years have seen drastic changes—with temperatures rising so much that even sitting under a tree no longer offers relief—I will keep farming, even if it only yields a small harvest. I've spent my entire life farming, and despite all the challenges, I'll continue."

  8. Voices from the Margins: Small-Scale Fishers Demand Rights, Recognition at COP16

    - Inter Press Service

    CALI, Columbia & DELHI, Nov 05 (IPS) - Small-scale fishers play a fundamental role in feeding people—they use sustainable methods of catching and processing fish products and are a significant force in the employment and livelihoods of millions of people internationally—yet, until now, they have been excluded from climate and biodiversity conferences.

  9. With Climate Change, Government Apathy, Who Should Kerala’s Fishworkers Turn To?

    - Inter Press Service

    KOCHI, India, Oct 10 (IPS) - Fishworkers are often invisible in discussions about climate change, yet they are at the heart of food security, feeding millions while struggling to feed their own families. Their fight for survival is not just about tradition or livelihood—it's about justice. Shouldn't their futures be at the forefront of climate justice debates?Every morning before dawn, fishworkers along the shores of Kochi, Kerala, head out to sea, casting their nets in the shadow of the iconic Cheenavala—the Chinese fishing nets that have become a symbol of their community. I witnessed this time-honored tradition, once a reliable means of survival, now a daily gamble, a fight against unpredictable seas and shrinking fish populations. 

  10. Struggling at Sea: The Plight of Indian Fishworkers Amid Climate Change and Government Policies

    - Inter Press Service

    NEW DELHI, Aug 28 (IPS) - Warming seas from climate change means that Indian fisherworkers often travel illegally into international territorial waters in search of a good catch and find themselves jailed and their boats confiscated, driving their families into poverty.Climate change forces millions of India's fishworkers to venture beyond the country's exclusive economic zone into the perilous high seas.

Powered by

  • Inter Press Service International News Agency
  • UN News