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SHACHI CHATURVEDI On January 31, in the community hall of South Goa’s famous Shantadurga temple a public hearing is convened to discuss the renewal of mining lease to

almost 57 per cent of geographical area in India suffers soil degradation. The reason attributed for this is often chemical intensive agricultural practices. But a recently published research

People in Kapurdi hamlet, some 30 km from Rajasthan's Barmer town, are unusually suspicious of strangers. They stop and question every outsider driving through the area. What is making them so wary

About 8,000 ha in the restricted area along the India-Pakistan border has been sold to unknown buyers from across the country in the past five years. The bought land in Barmer and Jaisalmer districts belongs to the residents of the area and the Border Security Force. The deals were struck through agents in Jaisalmer and the buyers are listed from Delhi and Tamil Nadu, among other places. But their addresses and names are incomplete.

Transport economist Stuart Cole shares his views on India's options for effective transport management with Down To Earth.

Uttar Pradesh's Bundelkhand region has been devastated by drought and other adverse weather conditions over the past four years. Madhaiya Anghela village in Madhogarh sub-division of Jalaun district

Every chair of the community hall of the Shree Shantadurga temple in South Goa

The energy crunch that the country will soon be beset with, as global fossil fuel reserves fail to adequately satisfy the growing energy needs of emerging economies, is an issue that has yet to receive the urgency it warrants. While the persistent rise in oil prices has drawn attention to the problem, the government's long-term plan to address it remains either sketchy or under wraps. Few realise that India's commercial energy consumption is now growing at almost double the world's average rate, and indeed, almost as fast as China's. The consumption base is low, admittedly. Despite being home to a fifth of all humanity, India's current share of world energy usage is only 3.9%, as compared to China's 15.6%. That OECD countries consume half the world's commercial energy supplies is a reflection of how developed those economies are. For India to gain share, as its emergence demands, "clean energies' like nuclear and hydro electricity have been widely recommended. But even here, India's global share is only 0.6% and 3.7%, respectively, compared to 84.5% and 43.5% enjoyed by OECD countries. India's hydrocarbon reserves do not inspire much confidence either. By current estimates, India's oil and gas will last only about 19 and 34 years, respectively, half the world average for these reserves. Only in coal can the country claim to have a reasonable edge, with its current reserves expected to last up to 207 years, about a third longer than the world average. But, in an interlinked world, global warming complicates the coal scenario. Indian policymakers would be well advised to chalk out a long-term plan that discreetly optimises all the options within the set of existing and emerging energy-use constraints. Overt trends and underlying pressures would have to be taken into realistic account. While global oil prices, which shot above $100 per barrel early last week, are a hot subject of discussion worldwide, natural gas and coal have also touched critical highs. Natural gas in the EU, which slid steadily for a decade-and-a-half to a low of $1.80 per million btu in the late 1990s, now rules at around $9, with spot rises spiking higher. International coal prices have nearly doubled in the last three-four years. Market forces, even if allowed to operate unhindered, would still spell high prices, given demand trends. India does have assets. Good management could see the country through.

Chinese domestic coking coal prices are expected to rise $14 per tonne next month, which could trigger problems for the Indian steel industry whose demand for coke is expected to touch 85.34 million metric tons by 2011-12. "Chinese domestic coking coal prices are expected to rise by 100 yuan ($14) per tonne for March delivery, pushed up by strong demand for coke,' the Metal Bulletin reported. Coal producers in China are talking about raising prices next month in the face of strong demand as steel mills gradually ramp up production after the snowstorms, it quoted Chinese trading sources as saying. Currently, coking coal is transacting at 1,300-1,400 yuan per tonne in Shanxi province, China's largest coal and coke producer. This is double the price paid in the middle of last year. Indian Steel Alliance sources said that rise in Chinese coking coal prices could generate problems for the Indian steel industry as domestic firms are considerably dependent on the neighbouring country for coke. Recent force majeure announcements by BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto at several hard coking coal mines in Queensland, Australia, have also seriously affected many Asian steel mills and caused a global shortage of coking coal supply.

Dressed in traditional attire and accompanied by musicians beating drums, a large number of senior Delhi Congress leaders met party president Sonia Gandhi at her 10 Janpath residence here on Wednesday to thank her for enhancing the compensation payable to farmers on acquisition of their land from Rs.25 lakh per acre to Rs.75 lakh per acre. Led by Outer Delhi MP Sajjan Kumar, the delegation also lauded the permission granted to farmers -- through the new Master Plan for Delhi-2021

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