D-Sector for Development Community

   Saturday, May 18, 2013
Agriculture - Duties and Rights - Education - Environment - Food - Global - Governance - Health - Indian Economy - Indian Society - Physical Development - Social Welfare - Water and Sanitation
News

Taking load off kids' shoulders
By d-sector Team  | 21 May 2009


Anti-racism meet turned anti-Israel
By d-sector Team  | 21 May 2009


FAO concerned about Food insecurity
By d-sector Team  | 21 May 2009


Google's Internet bus rolls into Karnataka
By d-sector Team  | 21 May 2009


Bamboo Cultivation on the Rise
By d-sector Team  | 21 May 2009


UN to fund $200 million for Rural Development
By d-sector Team  | 21 May 2009


Sensitising students to climate change
By d-sector Team  | 21 May 2009


Masters of their destiny
By Pankaj Jaiswal  | 04 May 2009

Villagers in drought-hit Bundelkhand villages built their own canal, saw wasteland turn into fertile farms.

Prize for 'Sun in the box' cooker
By Richard Black  | 04 May 2009

A cheap solar cooker has won first prize in a contest for green ideas.

The terrible truth about Plastic you never knew
By d-sector Team  | 01 May 2009


Controlling Malaria and Eradicating Kala Azar and Polio
By d-sector Team  | 01 May 2009

India's National Health Policy calls for reducing malaria deaths by 50 percent and eliminating Kala Azar by 2010. It also calls for the eradication of polio.

Indian Diaspora can help develop healthcare facilities in India
By Dr. Anbumani Ramadoss  | 01 May 2009


A food system that kills
By d-sector Team  | 30 Apr 2009

Swine flu is meat industry's latest plague

Uranium traces in Punjab children
By Savvy Soumya Misra  | 30 Apr 2009


India not relying on external support to act on climate change
By d-sector Team  | 30 Apr 2009


Buddhism, biomass and yoga
By d-sector Team  | 27 Apr 2009

Environment Brainstorming on tackling global warming

World Malaria Day
By d-sector Team  | 25 Apr 2009


Good News for India: Rains may exceed the norm
By Himangshu Watts  | New Delhi | 17 Apr 2009


Scientists Reveal Effects of Glyphosate
By Marcela Valente  | Buenos Aires | 15 Apr 2009


Germany to ban cultivation of GMO maize
By d-sector Team  | Berlin / Hamburg | 14 Apr 2009


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Coke Nation

The news that Indians consume far less aerated beverages each year than their neighbours in Pakistan and China could be interpreted differently. In comparison to per capita annual consumption of 39 and 21 bottles of aerated drinks in China and Pakistan respectively, average Indian drinks just about 14 bottles in a year. For Coca-Cola this means a serious job at hand for which the company has announced an advertisement budget of $5 billion. For the company, economic growth of a country and its peoples' thirst for aerated beverages is directly coorelated. 

Coca-Cola doesn't consider 'negative' publicity for cola behind poor consumption of the aerated beverage in India. As per its books, brand Coca-Cola has registered consecutive growth for past 27 quarters and has been a leader with a brand volume of 30 per cent. For Coca-Cola the target is to turn it into a 'Coke Nation', on the lines of Mexico where per capita annual consumption is 745 bottles..Whether Indian consumer exercises restraint in gulping the drink whose health consequences are all but known, the flipside to the story is that  the state governments are falling prey to Coca-Cola's investment plans?

Waste Appetite

The clock has turned full circle! After dumping industrial and toxic trash in the developing world all these years, Europe is now shopping for garbage to keep its cities, schools and homes heated. What better place than the developing world to shop for garbage! Reports indicate that northern Europe needs more than 700 million tons of trash to keep its waste-to-energy plants running. Most of its current demand is either domestically met or from garbage shipped from southern Europe.Yet, the demand is far more than what neighboring countries can spare after meeting their domestic needs. 

As more waste incinerators are being built in Sweden, Norway, Austria and Germany to meet the growing demand for heating public places, these countries are left with two options - either encourage households to produce more trash or else import garbage from across the world. For sure, it is easy to import than to produce! A company in England is already shipping some 1,000 tons of garbage to keep its systems running. Since incinerators have cornered environmental controversy in India and for rightful reasons, there exists an opportunity to explore feasibility of exporting as much as 109,589 tonnes of garbage that piles our streets on a daily basis. 

Lead View
To pee or not to pee
By Sudhirendar Sharma
21 Apr 2013

Sustained pollution of major rivers; continuous decline in groundwater reserves; priority allocation to non-consumptive sectors; and, growing disparity in water distribution only indicates that the worst is still to come!..
Book Shelf

Water Drops

Provocations for Development

River Dog

Psychology in the Bathroom
Commentators
Devinder Sharma
Carmen Miranda
Pandurang Hegde
Sudhirendar Sharma
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