Several sectors, including climate solutions firms, have embraced artificial intelligence (AI) as a tool to efficiently understand large amounts of climate-related data over the last year.
Climate-friendly acts can only be encouraged in communities where everyone has the financial, physical, and time resources to make the necessary changes.
In 2023, the world faced an onslaught of unprecedented climate extremes, bringing the urgency of global climate action to the forefront. The year was marked by record-breaking heat waves, severe floods, worsening wildfires, and rising sea levels, all of which had a global impact, including in India.
Climate change is real, and we will see it after 2023, which will be the warmest year on record. Global warming is endangering the entire biodiversity, and it is a call for human survival on Earth.
The United Nations (UN) agencies have issued an urgent Call to Action, pointing out the critical need to address the grave health risks faced by pregnant women, newborns, and children in the aftermath of climate disasters.
Floods, landslides, and cloudbursts caused severe damage to the scenic regions of Himachal Pradesh from March to August 2023. Disturbing imagery captured the destruction of structures and the erosion of roadways and highways.
In 2023, the world is dealing with the hard reality of the warmest year on record, with widespread heatwaves in North America, China, and Europe.
The Indian Institute of Technology, Mandi, led by Professor Venkata Krishnan, has accomplished a ground-breaking feat in the dynamic field of climate-conscious research.
India expects to spend an extra Rs 57 lakh crore over the next seven years on climate adaptation, on top of the around Rs 13.35 lakh crore (or 5.5% of its GDP) budgeted in the fiscal year 2021-22.
A global study released at the United Nations Climate Change Conference revealed concerning forecasts about the impact of climate change on hospitals in India.