Water-related diseases claim 800,000 people’s lives every year
About 800,000 people die yearly from diseases directly linked to unsafe water, inadequate sanitation, poor hygiene practices, and water-related hazards have increased at.
Bharti Rana Jayshankar – Founder
She brings in more than 30 years of experience in content building, architecture, writing, editing and storytelling. Ms Jayshankar has worked in the Economic Times daily, IBT Times, Investopedia and more than a dozen content firms as a content strategist and planner.
Jay Shankar – Co-founder
He has almost three decades of experience in journalism. He has worked with national dailies such as ET, Indian Express, The Pioneer, The Hindu, Agence France Presse and Bloomberg.
About 800,000 people die yearly from diseases directly linked to unsafe water, inadequate sanitation, poor hygiene practices, and water-related hazards have increased at.
Global politicians and decision-makers lack a long-term vision on climate action, financing debt of lower-income nations, cultural rights and rising nuclear threats, the.
The European Commission has approved the sale of another insect, the larvae form of lesser mealworm, as a food.
The number of sequences to detect the presence of the Covid-19 viral genome, being shared with WHO, has dropped by more than 90%,.
Vapour compressions, which use gases with high global warming potential for heating and cooling, can be replaced with a salt’s flow of electrically.
The world must brace for a possible El Nino next year, a climate pattern expected to drive up temperatures and trigger upheavals across.
The IOC is reconsidering the bidding process for Winter Olympics due to concerns and plans on fixing certain cities that will hold the.
The UN has announced a satellite-based system to detect methane emissions for governments and businesses to respond swiftly.
A 1.5 degree centigrade of global warming above pre-industrial levels will make 70-90% of tropical coral reefs disappear, and at 2% degree of.
Climate change will lead to more disease outbreaks in the future fear scientists