Meghalaya seeks high-capacity pumps to dewater flooded mine

The Meghalaya government has asked for high-capacity pumps fromCoal India Limitedto dewater the flooded coal mine at Umpleng area inEast Jaintia Hillsdistrict, where five miners have been trapped inside for five days.

The rescue and search operations which is being jointly conducted byNational Disaster Response Force(NDRF) along with theState Disaster Response Forceand the State Fire and Emergency has become all the more challenging with the rising water inside the 500-feet shaft of the mine amid incessant rainfall.

The last “foreigner,” Manindra Das, walked out of one of Assam’s six detention centres, leaving approximately 170 more to be released from the other five. Mahindra Das was labelled a “D-voter” in 2015 before being declared a “foreigner” in a one-sided decision by a Foreigners’ Tribunal in 2019.About D-voter, or doubtful voter: During the preparation of the National Register of Citizens in Assam, those whose citizenship was in doubt or under dispute were labelled as D- Voters.’ They are not defined in the Citizenship Act of 1955 or the Citizenship Rules of 2003.

About declared foreigner:
The declared foreigner or DF, is a person who has been marked by the Foreigners’ Tribunal (FT) for allegedly failing to prove their after being identified as an illegal immigrant by the State Police‘s Border wing.

About Foreigners tribunal:
The Foreigners (Tribunals) Order, 1964 established the Foreigners Tribunals.
The tribunals are quasi-judicial bodies that determine whether a person staying illegally is a “foreigner” or not.

The World Environment Day (WED) celebration is the United Nations flagship programme for promoting worldwide awareness and action for the environment. The Day is celebrated every year on June 5 and this year Pakistan will be the host country for the WED celebration. The theme for 2021 is Ecosystem Restoration and the focus is on resetting our relation with nature. It will also mark the formal launch of the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration 2021-2030.

Led by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and the Food and Agriculture-notes-for-state-psc-exams”>Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations together with the support of partners, it is dedicated to prevent, halt, and reverse the loss and degradation of Ecosystems worldwide, and combate , Climate-change”>Climate Change as well as weather-relate aberrations.

For too long, we have been exploiting and destroying our planets ecosystems. Every three seconds, the world loses enough forest to cover a football pitch. As much as 50 per cent of our coral reefs have already been lost and up to 90 per cent of coral reefs could be lost by 2050, even if global warming is limited to an increase of 1.5C. Ecosystem loss is depriving the world of carbon sinks, like forests and peat lands, at a time humanity can least afford it. Global greenhouse gas emissions have grown exponentially and the planet is on catastrophic climate change.

The emergence of Covid-19 has also shown just how disastrous the consequences of ecosystem loss can be. By shrinking the area of natural habitat for animals, we have created ideal conditions for pathogens including corona viruses to spread to human beings as their host.

Odisha is one of the most privileged States in the country with varied topography, Geography and ecosystems of hills, plain forest and farm-lands, terrestrial forests and coastal MANGROVES, sea coast of 420 km long, major and minor rivers, wetlands enriched with varied Biodiversity from wild to cultivated and domesticated.

The State is also rich with about one-fifth of the Minerals and metals of the country such as bauxite, iron, coal, chrome, manganese, limestone, rare earths, etc. The forest and farmland based economy is now in transition to minerals and metals based economy. Forests and farmlands are sacrificed for mines and minerals processing industries, urban expansion and Infrastructure development.The industrial belts have become the sites of heat islands and environmental pollution, the rivers flow polluted waters, the ground water table goes down and becomes saline, the farm lands lose productivity.

The State is prone to frequent natural disasters like Cyclones, floods and droughts. Lakhs of skilled and unskilled labourers and farm workers are migrating to other States in search of jobs. The Covid-19 pandemic has added fuel to the problem manifold.

Big cats, antelopes and deers, reptiles, birds, and myriad other wild animals moving in the wild freely in the past are now mostly restricted to nineteen protected sanctuaries and national parks. Losing their natural habitats and food Plants the elephants have become stray animals entering into human habitations.

Only with healthy ecosystems we can stop the collapse of biodiversity, counteract climate change, and enhance peoples livelihoods. Ecosystems are defined as the interaction between living organisms i.e plants, animals, people, Microorganisms and the non-living components such a Soil, water, air, climate, etc. In an eco-system all the organisms equally share the same environment and habitat which is common. This includes natural and man-made macro- and micro- ecosystems such as parks, recreation gardens, cities or farms.

Ecosystem restoration includes activities such as protection of degraded lands and wastelands, growing trees inland and on the coast, greening our cities, allowing our gardens again to grow wild.

Tamil Nadu CM Stalin revamps State Development Policy Council

Chief ministerM K Stalinon Sunday revamped theState Development Policy Council(SDPC) with Prof J Jayaranjan as the new vice chairman.

Besides a permanent member, the revamped council, headed by the chief minister, will have eight part-time members, including industrialist Mallika Srinivasan and DMK MLA from Manargudi T R B Rajaa.

Astate planning commissionwas originally established by former chief ministerM Karunanidhion May 25, 1971 as an advisory body to recommend developmental schemes for the state. It was renamed as State Development Policy Council (SDPC) by the earlier AIADMK government on April 23, 2020, but retained former state finance minister C Ponnaiyan as its vice chairman, a post he was handling for the state .

The ‘Bell of Faith’ scheme will now be implemented for elderly people who live alone in villages. Previously, this scheme had been successfully implemented in a number of urban Kerala households.It is a safety initiative conceived as part of Kerala’s Community Policing Scheme.

In an emergency, it will assist elderly citizens in attracting the attention of their neighbours by using a loud, remote-controlled alarm.

It has been in effect in Kerala since 2018.

Andhra Pradesh CM determined to develop agriculture infrastructure

Chief ministerYS Jagan Mohan Reddy directed officials to prepare an action plan for setting up of a fish landing centre at Kothapatnam in Prakasam district and for development of afishing harbourin Kakinada. He also asked officials to focus on developing the fishing harbour inVisakhapatnam.

The chief minister said that he wants officials to complete four fishing harbours Uppada (East Godavari), Nizampatnam (Guntur), Machilipatnam (Krishna) and Juvvala Dinne (Nellore) in the first phase by December 2022. The second phase will see fishing harbours come up in Budagatlapalem (Srikakulam), Pudimadaka (Visakhapatnam), Biyyaputhippa (West Godavari) and at the Prakasam district port.

Biomass project to turn agri waste into green fuel

Air and land pollution caused by open burning of crop residue is currently a major pain point in parts of Goa and the has decided to curb this practice by collecting and converting tree andbio-wasteintogreen fuelknown asbiomass briquettes.

The briquettes are compressed and are a proven way of generating energy from waste. They contain various organic materials such as rice husk, solid waste, agricultural waste, etc. all commonly referred to as Biomass.

The proposed biomass-based RENEWABLE ENERGY project is first-of-its-kind in Goa which will help reduce open dumping and burning of Agriculture-notes-for-state-psc-exams”>Agriculture waste and will help bring down the carbon footprint by replacing fossil fuels with biomass briquettes.

Verna Industrial Estate itself requires about 100 tons per day for the boilers operating on biomass briquettes after the ban on furnace oil. Biomass in Goa currently remains unutilized and briquettes are sourced from other states.

The Indian Reserve Bank has cancelled the licence of Pune-based Shivajirao Bhosale Sahakari Bank.

The financial institution ceases to lift on Banking business, impacting the shut of enterprise on May 31. The bank does now not have ample capital and earning prospects. As such, it does now not comply with the provision of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949.

With its present financial position, the RBI found that the bank would be unable to pay its current depositors in full. The financial institution was positioned underneath RBI Directions from commercial enterprise on May 4, 2019.

With the cancellation of licence & commencement of liquidation proceedings, the procedure of paying the financial institution’s depositors as per the Deposit Insurance & Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC). Act, 1961, will be set in motion. As per the information submitted by way of the bank, more than 98 per cent of the depositors will obtain total quantities of their deposits from DICGC.

Haryana has collected a total revenue of Rs 861.09 crore from deed registration during the months of April and May.

Haryana Financial Commissioner and Additional Chief Secretary, Revenue and Disaster Management Department said, During the first two months of the current financial year i.e. from April 1 to May 31, 2021, the State has collected total revenue of Rs 861.09 crore from deed registration, out of which total 74,299 deed registrations have been collected.

A total stamp duty of Rs 803.12 crore and registration fee of Rs 57.97 crore were collected.

Exhorting the people to make Punjab clean, green and pollution free under the revamped Mission Tandarust Punjab, Chief Minister Capt Amarinder Singh emphasized the need to develop synergy amongst all the line departments to achieve the desired goals for a safer and cleaner environment.

He virtually launched the Statewide revamped ‘Mission Tandarust Punjab’ to kickstart slew of development projects worth Rs.115 crore to further capitalise on the success of the first phase of the Mission so as to make second phase more focussed by introducing 10 Sub-Missions spearheaded by separate Departments of the State. These sub-missions include Safe Food, Clean Water, Green Punjab, Road Safety, Nutrition, Waste Management, Khedo Punjab, Healthy , Clean Air and Preventive Health.