Top Section
Explore Business Standard
Don’t miss the latest developments in business and finance.
The Delhi government, starting this year, will provide free training to people interested in forest and wildlife conservation, officials said on Thursday. A Forest and Wildlife department official said the goal of the programme is to share knowledge with the general public to boost conservation efforts in the national capital. The department has set up a four-member training cell while a website is being created. A third party from reputable institutions will be engaged to conduct the training. "To start with, we are inviting applications for those interested in understanding the Delhi Preservation of Trees Act and its application from everyone be it students, professionals," the official said. The programme will be very flexible, the official said, adding as an example that one can even ask for training on seeking permission for cutting and pruning trees. In due course, the training will cover all forest and biodiversity laws and conservation activities. "Involving the general .
Bhupesh Baghel, chief minister of another tribal-dominated state Chhattisgarh, has also written to the PM about the same
Union Minister of Environment, Forest and Climate Change Bhupender Yadav will represent India at the session
Global gross deforestation amounted to 6.8 million hectares in 2021 with 3.9 giga-tonnes of CO2 equivalent of associated GHG emissions
A sharp left-right dichotomy is a common way to think about the stakes in the runoff poll on Oct. 30. Still, as with the candidates' economic platforms, their forest policies have a lot more in common
The power ministry would also consider reducing coal supply to TPPs not complying with its policy on biomass co-firing, according to a Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change statement
Telangana Finance and Health Minister Harish Rao on Thursday inaugurated Grand Nursery Mela at People's Plaza on Necklace Road in Hyderabad
As one heads to Deoban, a thick deodar forest in Uttarakhand, the pandemic recedes with every inch covered
The Odisha government will take up forestry projects worth Rs 602 crore under the MGNREGA scheme in the current fiscal
Union Minister Prakash Javadekar said the current assessment shows a decrease of forest cover to the extent of 765 sq km in north east India region
Activists hope Aarey case changes norms at a time of global climate protests
A rare set of essays examines how conservation systems crafted in an era of state dominance can work better in a time of private enterprise, civic action and science
The committee is likely to submit a report in three or four months though neither a deadline nor specific terms of reference has been set for it