Science

Down To Earth
TB's Hidden Links
About 40-70 per cent of tuberculosis patients suffer from mental health disorders. As India has more than one-fourth of global TB cases and deaths, treatment protocols must take into account the new associations
4 min |
June 1, 2017

Down To Earth
We Have Enough For All
Explore the variety available around you, tap into other people's culinary heritage and do not waste, say four recent books on food traditions.
6 min |
June 1, 2017

Down To Earth
A Self-created Quagmire
How the authorities messed up implementing the breakthrough system.
6 min |
June 1, 2017

Down To Earth
Chop The Dreck Rules
For farm forestry to grow, regulatory changes are the need of the hour, as this will not only benefit farmers but also help India meet its targets in the Paris climate pact
4 min |
June 1, 2017

Down To Earth
Waste Wizards
Entrepreneurs experiment with poop and pomace to make paper, and provide an opportunity for reducing burden on forests, landfills
4 min |
September 1, 2016

Down To Earth
Sounds of Silence
A trip to Silent Valley is a lesson in the history of environmental movements and biodiversity.
10 min |
January 01, 2017

Down To Earth
Scattered Dots
Sarnath Banerjee takes on too many nuances of a water crisis that are difficult to integrate in his graphic novel.
3 min |
October 1, 2016

Down To Earth
Mountains of Sanjeevani
The Uttarakhand government's initiative to spend R25 crore on an elusive mythical herb should trigger a wider quest to identify,document and analyse life-saving Himalayan herbs.
4 min |
October 1, 2016

Down To Earth
Tame the Mosquito
India does not have to bear the onslaught of vector-borne diseases year after year. It is possible to control mosquitoes that spread these diseases. Here's how.
7 min |
October 1, 2016

Down To Earth
Town Today, Gone Tomorrow
Morwa town, built to serve mining companies, faces the ugly truth of its own displacement.
4 min |
October 1, 2016

Down To Earth
God is in The Detail
Can the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India ensure safe and quality food at places of worship without hurting religious sentiments?
4 min |
February 16, 2017

Down To Earth
Punjab's Contrarian Approach
Safe waste disposal is a big challenge for the national sanitation overdrive. Punjab has been experimenting with centralised systems to tackle this. Has it worked?
6 min |
November 01, 2017

Down To Earth
A Legacy That Still Resonates
Indira Gandhi was a conservationist who saw the protection of India's rich natural heritage fundamental to its economic growth
5 min |
November 01, 2017

Down To Earth
The Green Crusader
The 1970s under Indira Gandhi were the best thing to have happened to India's environment
4 min |
November 01, 2017
Down To Earth
Powerful Weed
Karisalankanni is a medicinal weed found across the world
2 min |
November 01, 2017

Down To Earth
Clinical Trials- Trial by Hire
Laissez-faire in clinical research has unleashed a ruthless profit-making machine blind to notions of justice or equity. It is time to rein in Big Pharma
5 min |
October 1, 2017

Down To Earth
One More To Go
There are no revenue records for a wetland in Srinagar. Is that why it is being encroached and constructed upon by the government?
4 min |
October 1, 2017

Down To Earth
Malaysian CL Exposes India
India gave Gilead a patent for sofosbuvir whereas Malaysia has issued a compulsory licence for the hepatitis C drug
3 min |
October 1, 2017

Down To Earth
Solar Power Tariff Will Soon Fall To ₹1.50 Per Unit
Bringing affordable solar power on the doorsteps of common citizens and enabling Universal Energy Access seem to be the guiding force behind the unassuming, soft-spoken UPENDRA TRIPATHY, the Interim Director of the International Solar Mission. He speaks to MOUSHUMI BASU on the future of solar power in India and the world
4 min |
October 1, 2017

Down To Earth
Cities Of Joy
Last year, the South African city of Cape Town was in the news for running out of water. It managed to avert Day Zero, but the threat has not disappeared. With changing climate, more cities across the world will face similar crises. But there are a few metropolises that have overcome water shortage despite heavy odds. Though these cities still need to keep adapting and innovating, they have done well so far. Here's how they did it
3 min |
March 16, 2019

Down To Earth
Mortgaging Our Ecological
A climate change narrative lost in rhetoric and catchy metaphors.
4 min |
May 16, 2019

Down To Earth
To No One's Gain
Government takes back land it gave to people as their right. Now, people of three districts face eviction and have nowhere to go.
4 min |
May 16, 2019
Down To Earth
Clearing The Air
Science may have become our only crutch against bad air, but it is time we invented a new politics of space that privileges the walker and the cyclist
5 min |
December 01, 2017
Down To Earth
When N Means Noxious
India is under the grip of nitrogen pollution, finds the country's first assessment on the impacts of the nutrient
7 min |
December 01, 2017

Down To Earth
Inconvenient Truth, Retold
Every issue is contested because it is the contest of ideas and of realities. These exclusive excerpts from Sunita Narain's new book, Conflicts of Interest remind us of the politics behind climate change that threatens our common future
10+ min |
December 01, 2017

Down To Earth
Remodeling The Climate Negotiations
After 25 years of its existence, UNFCCC has not been able to address the complex realities of climate change. It's time that we remodeled the UN climate convention for deep emission cuts and for saving the lives and livelihoods of vulnerable populations
5 min |
December 01, 2017

Down To Earth
Germany Goes The India Way
Germany has issued a compulsory licence to a US firm to make a patented HIV drug and it's a big deal
3 min |
December 01, 2017

Down To Earth
Evolutionary Battle
A new book unravels the unusual ecological relationship between the monarch butterfly and the milkweed
4 min |
December 01, 2017

Down To Earth
'Natural Disasters Are Shaped By Social And Economic Inequality'
In the early hours of October 31, 1876, a devastating cyclone emanating from the Bay of Bengal drowned at least 0.21 million people and another 0.1 million died in the cholera epidemic and famine that followed. Such events are often described as "natural disasters". But historian BEN KINGSBURY turns that interpretation on its head in his book, An Imperial Disaster: The Bengal Cyclone of 1876, showing it was not simply a "natural" event, but one shaped by all-too-human patterns of exploitation and inequality—by divisions within Bengali society, and the enormous disparities of political and economic power that characterised British rule on the subcontinent. RICHARD MAHAPATRA spoke to Kingsbury on the untold narratives of "natural disasters". Excerpts
3 min |
April 01, 2019

Down To Earth
A Mountain Lost
The Aravalli mountain range extends for more than 692 km from Champaner in Gujarat to Delhi and beyond. Its role in defining the shape of the Indian subcontinent and its climate, and the fact that it triggered the explosion of multicellular life, are under-appreciated. The rugged mountains guide the monsoon clouds and protect the fertile alluvial river valleys from the assault of cold westerly winds from Central Asia. However, over the past four decades, the world's oldest mountain range has been destroyed by mining, deforestation and over-exploitation of its fragile and ancient water channels
10+ min |