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" .......................... Ayn Rand

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Tuesday, November 30, 2010

IN NEWS


India to have green domestic product by 2015: CII
India Infoline News Service / 16:44 , Nov 30, 2010
The understanding of sustainability has evolved from a philosophical expression into a business proposition in today’s context. India is working to redefine the way growth is measured; the ecological and environmental costs also need to be factored in. The year 2015 has been set as a target date by which the Indian GDP will be reported as Green Domestic Product instead of the conventional way, said .Jairam Ramesh, Minister of State [Independent charge] for Environment & Forests, speaking at the opening plenary of the 5th Sustainability Summit: Asia 2010 ………….............

`Set of decisions` on forestry, tech expected at Cancun
Source: SciDev.Net
Countries expect a 'set of decisions' on forestry, technology, adaptation and financing at the upcoming international climate meeting in Cancun next week, which will 'lay the roadmap' for a future legally binding agreement on climate change in 2011, India's environment minister Jairam Ramesh predicts. Ramesh and other senior officials at his ministry talked about a 'logjam' in the current stage of negotiations between developing and developed countries. Developing countries expect that at least the first tranche of US$10 billion out of the total US$30 billion fast-track financing fund for adaptation, agreed upon at the previous climate summit in Copenhagen in December 2009, would be available in Cancun.
So far, there is clarity only on US$7 billion. Of this US$4 billion would be for forestry projects, Ramesh said .......................................

Missing the women for the trees
Sreelatha Menon / New Delhi December 01, 2010, 20:09 IST
The primeval forests in Middle Earth are inhabited by tree-like creatures, the great Ents in Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings. Amid threats from the dark forces, Tree Beard, the eldest of the Ents, convenes an Entmoot, the equivalent of a forest council, to discuss their moves.
The moot is shown as a democratic and inclusive method of decision-making, but with a significant feature: it has no Entwomen in the council or in the entire forest. “Tolkien with a deft flick of story-telling tells us that the Entwives who kept order and peace and cultivated gardens have long disappeared. In other words, women and their work have been made invisible. Moreover, there is no hint that Entwives were ever invited to an Entmoot.'” ………………
GENDER AND GREEN GOVERNANCE
The Political Economy of Women’s Presence Within and Beyond Community Forestry
Bina Agarwal
Oxford University Press
488 pages; Rs 625

Outcry meets green approval of India's largest nuclear power plant
Monday, November 29, 2010 7:51 PM  (Source: Arab News, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia)trackingBy Shahid Raza Burney, Arab News, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
Nov. 30--MUMBAI -- India's nuclear power plant project in Jaitapur was given green clearance by the federal environment and forest ministry on Sunday with 35 riders inviting wrath and large protests from local fishermen, farmers and environmental experts who said fear that that the nuclear power project would not only destroy the rich marine biodiversity of the Konkan region but would also end the livelihood of the local population. The Jaitapur nuclear power plant, India's largest, had been cleared by Environment and Forest Minister Jairam Ramesh and is the second major project after the Navi Mumbai airport …………………

30/11/2010
Airport project approved after ''quarantining'' sensitive areas
New Delhi, Nov 30 (PTI) Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh today said the green nod to Navi Mumbai airport project was given after ensuring that the ecological sensitive areas are quarantined. "It was possible to find the middle path because the ecological devastation were contained by shifting non-aeronautical facilities such as hotels and shopping malls.
"We had to quarantine the ecological sensitive areas and find the middle path," Ramesh said at a question-answer session during the 5th Sustainability Summit. …………………..

India's battle to save the tiger
Park rangers have been given a license to kill. Are bullets the answer to poaching?
By Jason Overdorf - GlobalPost
Published: November 30, 2010 06:03 ET in Asia

Forest dept's resettlement plan to protect remainder tigers
Shashikant Trivedi / New Delhi/ Churna (bori Wildlife Sanctuary) November 30, 2010, 0:01 IST
Paucity of funds and non-availability of land are still major hurdles in the state government’s path towards making Bori wild life sanctuary, India’s first reserve forest, free of human interference although tribal families have unwillingly succumbed to the state forest department’s demand to evict the area sprawling more than 500 sq km. Satpura Tiger reserve located in south Hoshangabad district in Madhya Pradesh includes the Bori wildlife sanctuary located in its south-west region. ……………..............

30 Nov 2010 10:28:13 AM IST
Breaking naxal-tribal nexus
By Arti Bali,
 Constantly in the news due to their miserable economic conditions, tribals in India face even a still uncertain and dark future. They face migration even from their traditional inhospitable lands despite constitutional guarantees, efforts of various human-rights activists and constant watch of the environment ministry headed by the crusader Jairam Ramesh. Though constituting a sizable 8.2 percent  of population aggregating roughly 82 million, tribals in India fail to …………..................

Joint Forest Management: Policy, Practice and Prospects: India Country Study
IIED code:7535IIED Published:2000 - IIED, WWF – India   Area:India 
ISBN/ISSN:ISBN 978-1-904035-36-7, ISSN 1028 8228 
Details:160 pages (Book/Report)  Language:English 
India’s bold central policy change for joint forest management between government and communities has resulted in regeneration of considerable areas of forest, and has expanded the policy community through inclusion of more stakeholders. But these successes are matched by concerns that forestry departments are still calling the shots, whilst in some cases, serious local inequities are being exacerbated.
This report describes the evolution of powers over policy, the legacy of colonial forestry, the inertia of ‘fortress forestry’ institutions, the favoured forest industries and the protectionist agenda, which seeks to lock away forests from people’s use. These powers need to be tackled openly and concertedly for the ideal of joint forest management and the potential of farm forestry to be fully realised. The report shows how this can be done through policy processes, instruments, programmes and information which foster productive and equitable forest management.

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