News headlines for “Climate Change and Global Warming”, page 109

  1. Small Farmers Feeling Climate Change Heat Find Little Support From the State

    - Inter Press Service

    KARACHI, Pakistan, Aug 09 (IPS) - The over 20 million residents of Pakistan's port city of Karachi, in Sindh province in particular, have been experiencing brutal heat since May. But they are not the only ones bearing the brunt of high temperatures and humidity.

  2. Indigenous Peoples -- An Antidote in a World of Crisis

    - Inter Press Service

    UNITED NATIONS, Aug 09 (IPS) - This year's Equator Prize winners are the antidote we need in a world of crisis. Earlier this year, the World Economic Forum released its annual Risk Report. The key findings highlighted the inescapable trend over the past decade that we are facing a global polycrisis, in which problems of biodiversity loss, climate change, inequality, water scarcity and conflict are increasingly indivisible, simultaneous, and systemic.

  3. Pacific Community Photographic Winners Bring Impacts of Climate Change to Life

    - Inter Press Service

    PACIFIC ISLANDS, Aug 08 (IPS) - The Pacific Community's photographic competition winners reflect the devastating climate impacts on beautiful and sensitive environments, documenting the most pressing issues the communities who live on the islands face today.

  4. Explainer: Why Kenya is Considered a High Climate Risk for Development Banks

    - Inter Press Service

    NAIROBI, Aug 07 (IPS) - Climate change-related extreme weather jeopardizes Kenya's development agenda; even though it contributes very little to global warming, it is marked as a high-risk country by development banks.Kenya contributes less than 0.1 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions every year, yet development banks have flagged the East African nation as a high climate risk. This is due to extreme weather changes that are increasingly threatening the country's development agenda, widening socio-economic inequalities, and deepening rural poverty and hunger.

  5. Water Stories: The Well Seven Families and 400 Buffaloes Rely On

    - Inter Press Service

    KATHMANDU, Aug 07 (IPS) - In the rural village of Khardariya in the Dang district of Nepal, access to clean water is a major issue. Villagers depend on one poorly managed well for drinking water, cleaning, and feeding livestock.

  6. ECUADOR: ‘We demand that the violation of the rights of nature be recognised and reversed’

    - Inter Press Service

    Aug 07 (IPS) - CIVICUS speaks with Darío Iza Pilaquinga, president of the Kitu Kara People of the Kichwa nationality of Ecuador, about a historic court ruling that applied a constitutional provision recognising the rights of nature.

  7. Pivotal Shift at Seabed Authority: Nations Rally for Deep-Sea Mining Moratorium

    - Inter Press Service

    KINGSTON, Jamaica, Aug 07 (IPS) - The International Seabed Authority (ISA) Assembly meeting concluded last week with no mining authorized, an unprecedented number of States calling for a moratorium or precautionary pause and a new Secretary-General elected.

  8. Another month, another heat record broken: UN weather agency

    - UN News

    Last month saw another extreme weather milestone with the world’s hottest day on recent record registered on 22 July – yet another indication of the extent to which greenhouse gas emissions from human activities are changing our climate, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) reported on Wednesday.

  9. ECOWAS at 49: Successes in Regional Integration, Despite Emerging Challenges

    - Inter Press Service

    UNITED NATIONS, Aug 6 2024 (IPS) - The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) was founded in 1975 to promote economic integration in the region. Forty-nine years later, the regional bloc boasts significant successes in integration, peace and security and good governance, but also faces some challenges.

  10. The Demise of Democracy and Human Rights Violations in Bangladesh: International Financial Institutions’ Culpability

    - Inter Press Service

    SYDNEY, NEW YORK, WASHINGTON DC, Aug 06 (IPS) - The International Monetary Fund (IMF), World Bank and Asian Development Bank (ADB) are complicit in the gross human rights violations and death of democracy in Bangladesh. They continued to supply financial blood line to the regime, well-documented for its corruptions, human rights violations – such as forced disappearances and tortures in custody – and riggings of votes, including politicization of state institutions in its slide into autocracy. This is despite their professed commitment to transparency, accountability and good governance (IMF, World Bank, ADB).

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