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Search Result for “30 billion”

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LIFE

Our delicate environment

Life, Anchalee Kongrut, Published on 19/12/2016

» From the controversial planned promenade on the Chao Phraya River to the tiger temple scandal, key ecological issues from 2016 will continue to capture society's attention well into the coming year

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LIFE

Against the flow

Life, Anchalee Kongrut, Published on 17/02/2016

» Songkhram River is a little-known tributary of the Mekong River. Yet staying under the radar has turned out to be a blessing in disguise, for the placid 420km river has been left untouched from development projects such as dams and major construction. Compared to other waterways in the northeastern region such as the Chi and Mun rivers, which are straddled by dams, the Songkhram -- known as a source of delicious freshwater fish -- is the only tributary of the Mekong which runs free and unobstructed.

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LIFE

Drought, fishing scandals and winding roads

Life, Anchalee Kongrut, Published on 23/12/2015

» In the past year, environmental disasters once again proved how much of an impact they have on everyone's lives: the air we breathe (the haze in the South, blown over from Indonesia); the water we use (the contentious Chao Phraya roads); the lights we see (the coal-fired power plants); the ground beneath our feet (the gold mining scandals); the food we eat (the fishery disputes). In all of this, local communities and the rural poor feel the heat and the fire more than Bangkok's urbanites and they're the people who keep showing public resistance against environmental problems and the depletion of natural resources, despite the grip of military rule.  

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LIFE

Through the haze

Life, Anchalee Kongrut, Published on 30/09/2015

» For almost two months, Southeast Asian countries including Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and some parts of southernmost Thailand are affected by haze -- the result of forest clearance for palm oil plantations in Indonesia, the world's top palm oil producer. Since palm oil production has become a major business in this region in the past two decades -- in Malaysia and Thailand as well -- haze has become a growing problem.

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LIFE

Force of nature

Life, Anchalee Kongrut, Published on 16/09/2015

» When the 6.3-magnitude earthquake hit the Northern province of Chiang Rai on May 5 last year, artist Angkrit Ajchariyasophon stayed safe at home far away from the epicentre. A few days after the quake, the Chiang Rai native took pictures of the aftermath -- the broken statue of Lord Buddha, cracks in the walls, subsided land and buildings left in rubble.

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LIFE

Environment for disaster

Life, Anchalee Kongrut, Published on 15/12/2014

» The year 2014 hasn't been entirely memorable — in a good way, at least — when considering the progress of environmental campaigns.

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LIFE

Weathering the change

Life, Anchalee Kongrut, Published on 15/05/2013

» Small ants carry their eggs at a certain time of the year, usually in the middle of May. For traditional farmers, the migration heralds a change of season. Within three days, rain will start to pour and farmers will till their soil and sow seeds for rice or other crops.

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LIFE

Water world

Life, Anchalee Kongrut, Published on 12/04/2013

» The Northeast is parched and farmers are bearing the brunt of water scarcity at the height of summer.