Moneycontrol
HomeNewsEnvironmentScience & Environment round-up: Total Solar Eclipse on April 8, a failed carbon-offset programme, tips to recharge Bengaluru groundwater

Science & Environment round-up: Total Solar Eclipse on April 8, a failed carbon-offset programme, tips to recharge Bengaluru groundwater

Bangalore's water crisis should send alarm bells ringing; more Indian cities could be headed towards water shortages with heat wave predicted in many cities across India. Plus, more environmental news and science updates.

April 09, 2024 / 14:44 IST
Story continues below Advertisement

Indian-origin scientist Aroh Barjatya has been leading a programme to send rockets into space during solar eclipses.

1. Why and how scientists study surya grahan: Solar eclipses, especially total solar eclipses, offer scientists unique opportunities to study the sun's corona and solar winds. Scientists are also looking into how light changes during the eclipse affect Earth's upper atmosphere. To this end, Indian-origin scientist Aroh Barjatya has been leading a programme to send rockets into space during solar eclipses. His team will send three rockets into the ionosphere come April 8 - when parts of Mexico, US and Canada will see a total solar eclipse. Those who are interested to see telescope images of the eclipse in real time, can do so on NASA TV from 10.30 pm IST.

2. According to a survey of 1,600 first-time voters, aged 18-22, from Maharashtra, Delhi, Tamil Nadu, and West Bengal, a commitment to addressing climate change was one of the top 3 factors influencing their choice of whom to vote for. The survey was conducted by Asar Social Impact Advisors, Climate Educators Network, and CMSR Consultants. The survey showed that while health was the biggest area of concern for these youths, climate change and economic wellbeing were equally important to them.

Story continues below Advertisement

3. An Australian forest-regeneration programme, the world's fifth-largest nature-based carbon-offsets programme, has been deemed a global failure. The project was supposed to rejuvenate forests in roughly 42 million hectares of arid or semi-desert regions. However, a survey of 182 of these projects across arid regions - published in peer-reviewed journal Communications Earth & Environment - found that nearly 80 percent of these projects showed negligible growth or even regression in forest cover. As of June 2023, over 37 million carbon credits, valued at $750 million to $1 billion, had been issued for these projects.

4. Bangalore's water crisis has developed over many years. Six key factors that have contributed to it are 1) rapid urbanisation and unplanned urban growth 2) prolonged droughts and concretisation 3) dependence on groundwater, 4) depletion of native rivers, 5) inequitable water distribution, 6) pollution and encroachment of water bodies like Bellandur Lake which has become heavily polluted due to industrial effluents and untreated sewage flowing into it.