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Search Result for “Drought”

Showing 51 - 60 of 5,369

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WORLD

Are trees talking underground?

Sunday Spotlight, Published on 27/11/2022

» Justine Karst, a mycologist at the University of Alberta, feared things had gone too far when her son got home from eighth grade and told her he had learned that trees could talk to each other through underground networks.

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OPINION

Berry-picking woes

Oped, Postbag, Published on 22/10/2022

» Re: "Slim pickings for Thais on foreign soil", (BP, Oct 17).

OPINION

Making sure net-zero pledges really count

Oped, Published on 28/09/2022

» Walking down a Toronto street recently I saw an ad touting a fossil-fuel company's net-zero credentials. But to see such belief-straining claims, I would not even need to leave my house.

OPINION

Don't be a bystander to mass famine

Oped, Peter Singer, Published on 16/08/2022

» In March 1964, The New York Times reported that 38 witnesses saw or heard a brutal, drawn-out, and ultimately fatal attack on a woman called Kitty Genovese, but none did anything to help her or even summoned the police. The report was later shown to be erroneous, but the "bystander effect" is real. As many psychology experiments have shown, an individual is less likely to come to the aid of another if they can see that other people who could help are not doing so.

OPINION

The varieties of climate-driven medical risk

Oped, Published on 04/08/2022

» When natural disasters force people to pack a bag and flee to safety, important items are often forgotten. Following California's 2007 wildfire season, estimates were that for every household at least one person left behind prescription medication during evacuation. Likewise, when Hurricane Harvey threatened to flood my own mother's Texas home in 2017, she forgot to grab her medication in her rush to escape the storm's path -- even though she was normally meticulous when packing for a trip.

ADVANCED NEWS

Disease threat to rice crop

Jon Fernquest, Published on 30/11/2010

» As if drought, flooding and insect infestations were not enough, Thailand's rice crop is now threatened by the risk of a fungus spreading and wiping out crops.

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WORLD

Cactus feels the heat of climate change

Sunday Spotlight, Published on 08/05/2022

» The hardy cactus -- fond of heat and aridity, adapted to rough soils -- might not seem like the picture of a climate change victim.

OPINION

What shall we do with climate refugees?

News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 29/08/2022

» You wait ages for the bus, and then three come along at once. Books are a bit like that, too, although in this case it's only a pair of them, both tackling the question of what to do about all the "climate refugees". (The United Nations' International Organization for Migration estimates that 1.5 billion people may be forced to move in the next thirty years alone.)

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BUSINESS

Bayer Thai: 60 years of delivering innovation, sustainability

Business, Janine Phakdeetham, Published on 01/04/2022

» For six decades Bayer Thai Co Ltd has applied its core competencies in the life science fields of healthcare and nutrition to help shape a better quality of life for all Thais.

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OPINION

Govt ill-prepared to tackle climate woes

Oped, Wasant Techawongtham, Published on 30/10/2021

» One and a half hour's drive from Bangkok is Bang Ban district of Ayutthaya. Here, most of the rice fields and entire villages have been under water for the past couple of months.