TIME REMAINING TO ACHIEVE CLIMATE ABUNDANCE
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Times Evoke
- A piece of water, a handful of shade
- ‘From water to air, the global commons must be managed with rules — and climate justice’
- ‘India’s urban commons give joy — they must be freed from a colonial approach’
- ‘Cities contain magical nature — you can spot ant ‘highways’ built over internet cables’
- ‘Wondrous Himalayan birds face the threat of extinction now — but there are signs of hope’
- ‘As species face extinction, we humans must recognise we are not separate from nature’
- ‘Educators can help children balance the fine tension between climate despair and hope’
- ‘Scientists need the humanities and arts to make climate data come alive with soul’
- ‘Costa Rica’s rainforest canopies tower 150-feet tall these are the last biotic frontier’
- ‘Forming circles, neotropical weevils mirror evolution’
- ‘Birds symbolise beauty, joy and a sense of identity to people in Costa Rica’
- Making magic real
- 'Alfred Wallace founded biogeography — and gifted his notion of natural selection to Darwin’
- ‘Science is the intellectual basis of climate change treaties — equity is at their heart’
- Agreeing to agree
- ‘With REDD, the global economy can remunerate nations saving rainforests’
- ‘India’s Chipko movement changed the world’s vision’
- ‘Childhood skills shape our life’s success — low-cost policies can truly strengthen these’
- ‘Sloth bears, part of India’s natural wealth, face human-animal conflicts now’
- ‘Climate justice means rich nations helping migrants’
- A refuge in changing climes
- ‘Even facing unprecedented events, climate refugees figure out resilience’
- ‘Climate migration is rising — but ‘home’ remains very dear to the displaced’
- A clean economy is the 21st century’s real growth story — India is central to this’
- So far, so near
- ‘The Bering Strait shows how linked we all are via extraction and climate change’
- ‘Global warming will make us reimagine distances’
- ‘Art can help us see indigenous views of nature — and revisit child-like wonder’
- ‘We preserve threatened plant species in Brazil, from tiny palms to huge conifers’
- Let's talk about the weather
- ‘Newspapers can help all, from children to MPs, develop vital climate awareness’
- ‘Climate change is more than a science problem — it reflects our true values’
- ‘Climate literature takes us beyond science to feelings’
- Animals in the Anthropocene
- ‘The term ‘man-eater’ is colonial — the ecological crisis needs new thought’
- ‘Power over animals has a deep history — it is also about ascendency over humans’
- ‘Climate change and mining are impacting the flamingo’
- ‘Grid cells in our mind map the whole world — focus your attention to use the brain best’
- ‘Lichens are a pioneer species which enable all life — conserving them is vital’
- The seed of an idea: How millets can help mitigate climate impacts on food
- The hills are alive
- ‘Rock formations are the archives of Earth — they help us explore the origins of life’
- ‘Mountain formation shows us movements in deep Earth’
- ‘From rhododendrons to caterpillar fungus, life thrives in the Himalayas’
- ‘From drones to AI, technology is helping us save giant sea bass, sharks and whales’
- Our world of wonders
- ‘Earth has a unique chemical signature — we humans are now impacting this rarity’
- ‘Fungi form a kingdom of life — they show us how we all need others to live’
- ‘Microbes enable all life — and they adapt constantly’
- ‘I took Jupiter’s picture 30 years ago — James Webb captures its aurora now’