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Results for Climate


 

Bogotá/Santa Marta – As of May 3, 2026, the international community has transitioned from debating climate targets to the "Needful Phase" of mandatory implementation. Following the conclusion of the Santa Marta Dialogue, global environmental policy is now being dictated by immediate technical requirements rather than long-term aspirations.

The Critical Requirement: Technical Decommissioning

The primary outcome of recent high-level talks is the shift toward sectoral roadmaps. Unlike previous voluntary agreements, the current focus is on the specific engineering and financial "needfuls" to retire carbon-intensive assets.

  • Grid Resilience Mandate: International energy bodies now recommend that nations prioritize the "needful" modernization of power grids to handle the 33.8% surge in global renewable capacity recorded this year.

  • The "Just Transition" Necessity: A core recommendation from the May 1st briefings emphasizes that fossil fuel phase-outs must be paired with immediate "re-skilling" funds for workers, ensuring that the economic transition does not leave local communities behind.

  • Scientific Precision: The newly established Global Scientific Transition Panel (GSTP) is now providing the peer-reviewed data necessary for governments to bypass "bridge fuels" and move directly to zero-emission infrastructure.


Actionable Environmental Milestones

I. Combatting the Finance Gap The most urgent "needful" identified by the UNEP this year is the realignment of global capital. Current reports highlight a staggering imbalance: while $220 billion flows into nature-based solutions, a massive $7.3 trillion continues to support nature-negative activities, including fossil fuel subsidies. Policy experts recommend a total redirection of these subsidies into green hydrogen development by 2028.

II. Real-Time Conservation Technology To meet the "30x30" biodiversity goal (protecting 30% of land and sea by 2030), the implementation of "Digital Canopy" technology has become essential.

  • Implementation: In the Brazilian Amazon, this AI-driven system has already facilitated a 22% reduction in forest loss by providing real-time data to enforcement teams.

  • Outcome: This demonstrates that the "needful" tool for conservation is no longer just policy, but high-frequency satellite monitoring and rapid-response logistics.


The 2026 Implementation Outlook

As the world prepares for the UNCCD COP 17 in Mongolia this August, the focus remains on the "water-food-energy" nexus. The current global strategy is no longer about setting goals for 2050, but about meeting the immediate infrastructure requirements of 2026.

Key Takeaway: The "needful" action for the remainder of this year is the conversion of national climate pledges into legally binding, year-on-year decommissioning schedules for coal and gas assets.

Munshi Firoz Al Mamun 5/03/2026 02:13:00 AM
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For the second time in as many days, Bangladesh was shaken by a moderate earthquake on Friday afternoon, leaving residents on edge following a series of seismic events across the region.

The latest tremor, measuring 5.4 on the Richter scale, struck at 1:52 PM local time on Friday, February 27. 

Unlike the previous quake, which originated outside the country, the epicenter of today’s event was located within Bangladesh, specifically in Ashashuni Upazila of Satkhira District.


A Week of Seismic Instability

The region has seen a spike in activity over the last 48 hours, with multiple tremors originating from different tectonic sources:

DateTime (Local)MagnitudeEpicenter
Feb 25 (Wed)10:51 PM5.1Myanmar (Sagaing Region)
Feb 26 (Thu)Early Morning3.7 / 4.6Sikkim, India / Border regions
Feb 27 (Fri)1:52 PM5.4Satkhira, Bangladesh

Impact and Resident Reaction

The Friday afternoon quake was felt strongly in Dhaka, Khulna, and Jessore, lasting for several seconds. In the capital, many people who had just finished Friday prayers rushed out of mosques and residential buildings into open spaces.

"We felt two distinct jolts," said a resident in Dhaka. "The first was a slight vibration, followed by a much stronger shake that moved furniture. Coming just a day after the Myanmar tremor, it's very concerning."

Expert Insights

Geology experts, including former Dhaka University Professor Humayun Akhtar, noted that the earthquake was felt in two successive phases. While the southwestern region of Satkhira is traditionally viewed as a lower-risk zone compared to the north and east, the fact that 10 tremors have been recorded in or near Bangladesh this February alone has raised questions among the scientific community.

Some experts suggest these medium-intensity quakes represent a "release of energy" from the tectonic plates, but they caution that the frequency of such events warrants heightened preparedness.

Current Status

  • Casualties: No major injuries or deaths have been reported as of Friday evening.

  • Structural Damage: Local authorities in Satkhira are assessing rural structures, but no significant collapses have been confirmed.

  • Advisory: The Bangladesh Meteorological Department (BMD) advises citizens to remain calm but vigilant, ensuring that heavy furniture is secured and emergency exits are clear.




EARTHQUAKE SAFETY: STAY ALERT, STAY SAFE

Your quick guide for recurring tremors.

  • Prepare emergency kit with water, food, flashlight.
  • Secure heavy furniture and appliances.
  • Create family meeting point.
  • Practice Drop, Cover and Hold On.

Before an Earthquake

  • Fasten shelves and heavy objects to walls.
  • Keep emergency documents safe.
  • Identify safe spots under strong tables.
  • Teach family safety response steps.

During an Earthquake

  • Indoors: Drop, Cover and Hold On.
  • Outdoors: Move to open space.
  • In vehicle: Stop safely and stay inside.
  • Avoid elevators during shaking.
Munshi Firoz Al Mamun 2/27/2026 11:53:00 PM
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Feb 22, 2026: For much of the past three decades, climate policy was framed as a negotiation between environmental responsibility and economic growth. 

In 2026, that debate has effectively ended. Across Europe and North America, climate resilience is no longer treated as a sustainability initiative—it is increasingly viewed as a prerequisite for fiscal stability.

From the trading floors of London to the industrial logistics networks along the Rhine, financial institutions are recalibrating risk models to reflect a stark reality: environmental volatility is now a structural economic variable.

A Structural Shift in Risk Perception

The 2026 Global Risks Report published by the World Economic Forum confirms that environmental threats remain among the most severe long-term global risks. What has changed is perception. Climate shocks are no longer considered low-probability outliers; they are recurring events embedded into annual economic planning.

According to the World Meteorological Organization, the past decade has been the warmest on record. Ocean heat content has reached unprecedented levels, while early 2026 has already delivered record-breaking temperatures in parts of the Southern Hemisphere and severe winter energy stress across Europe linked to atmospheric instability.

The economic translation is immediate. Global disaster-related losses now consistently exceed $100 billion per year. In several recent years, total economic damages—insured and uninsured combined—have approached $500 billion to $700 billion. 

Europe alone has accumulated more than $500 billion in climate-related losses over recent decades, much of it borne by public finances due to underinsurance.

For finance ministries and central banks, this is no longer environmental data. It is balance sheet exposure.

The Growing Insurance Protection Gap

One of the clearest vulnerabilities lies in insurance markets. In Southern Europe, up to 60–70 percent of climate-related losses remain uninsured. In parts of Central Europe, flood insurance penetration remains below 50 percent. 

As extreme weather intensifies, insurers are raising premiums, narrowing coverage, or withdrawing from high-risk zones altogether.

When private insurance retreats, governments step in. Disaster compensation, reconstruction grants, and emergency stabilization packages increase sovereign borrowing needs. This creates a feedback loop: climate shock triggers fiscal expansion, raising debt ratios and potentially affecting sovereign credit ratings.

European regulators are increasingly incorporating climate stress tests into financial supervision frameworks. What began as a scenario-based exercise has evolved into a core pillar of financial stability oversight.

The Modeling Blind Spot Beyond 2°C

Research organizations including Carbon Tracker and the University of Exeter argue that conventional GDP-based economic forecasting systematically underestimates climate tail risks.

Beyond a 2°C warming threshold, economic damage functions become non-linear. Labor productivity declines accelerate in heat-exposed regions. 

Agricultural yields drop more sharply once temperature and precipitation thresholds are crossed. Coastal infrastructure costs rise exponentially as sea-level increases compound storm surges.

Traditional macroeconomic models assume gradual change. Climate systems do not. This disconnect creates what analysts describe as a “$150 billion blind spot” in annualized global loss projections—costs that materialize faster than models anticipate.

Europe’s Carbon Signal and Market Stability

Europe has positioned itself at the forefront of operational climate policy. The EU Emissions Trading System remains the bloc’s central decarbonization mechanism, covering roughly 40 percent of EU emissions.

In 2026, carbon permits have traded above €100 per ton, sending a strong signal to heavy industry and utilities to accelerate decarbonization. 

However, the market’s growing financialization has introduced new complexity. Hedge funds and financial actors have expanded participation, increasing liquidity but also amplifying volatility.

Regulators face a delicate balance: preserving a credible carbon price signal while preventing speculative distortions that could destabilize energy-intensive sectors. The integrity of carbon pricing is now directly linked to industrial confidence and energy transition timelines.

The €1 Trillion Adaptation Economy

If risk is rising, so is investment. The global market for climate adaptation solutions—ranging from resilient infrastructure and flood defense systems to AI-driven weather forecasting and climate-smart agriculture—now exceeds $1 trillion.

The European Investment Bank has expanded financing for clean heating systems, electrified transport, and grid modernization projects designed to reduce both emissions and vulnerability. 

Adaptation spending across Europe is growing at double-digit rates annually, outpacing several traditional infrastructure sectors.

Investors increasingly view resilience not as defensive expenditure but as strategic capital allocation. Predictability in an era of volatility has become a premium asset.

Climate and Security Convergence

Climate stress is also reshaping geopolitical risk assessments. The UN Environment Programme estimates that approximately 40 percent of intrastate conflicts in recent decades have been exacerbated by natural resource pressures.

Water scarcity, crop failure, and land degradation amplify social tensions, particularly in politically fragile regions. 

Security analysts in Europe and North America increasingly describe climate risk as a “threat multiplier,” integrating environmental stress scenarios into defense planning and foreign policy forecasting.

The boundary between environmental policy and national security has blurred.

Redefining Economic Sovereignty

A new term is gaining traction in Western policy circles: climate sovereignty—the ability of a nation to protect its infrastructure, food systems, energy networks, and financial architecture from planetary instability.

This approach reframes climate strategy around asset protection and competitiveness. Ports are being stress-tested against flood recurrence intervals that once defined “century-scale” events. 

Energy grids are redesigned to withstand heat extremes. Exporters are recalibrating operations in response to the EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism, which ties market access to emissions performance.

When climate exposure influences the cost of capital, markets respond faster than political declarations.

The New Economic Baseline

Perhaps the most telling metric is the imbalance in capital flows. For every dollar invested in protecting or restoring nature, vastly larger sums continue to fund environmentally destructive activity. Fossil fuel subsidies globally remain substantial, even as climate-related fiscal liabilities mount.

The implication for Western economies is increasingly clear: environmental resilience is not competing with economic stability—it underpins it.

Bond market resilience, insurance viability, supply chain continuity, and industrial competitiveness now depend on managing climate exposure. The shift underway in 2026 is not rhetorical. It is structural.

The age of anticipation has given way to the age of embedded risk. For policymakers and investors alike, climate resilience has become the new baseline for fiscal credibility.

▶ Read more: https://thereporter24.com/news/2026-climate-reckoning-why-economic-survival-now-depends-on-resilience

https://thereporter24.com/news/trump-s-climate-rollback-sparks-legal-battle-and-political-showdown

Munshi Firoz Al Mamun 2/22/2026 02:17:00 PM
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February 16, 2026: The Trump administration’s decision to revoke the 2009 “endangerment finding” on greenhouse gases is not only a dramatic shift in US climate policy—it has set the stage for a series of high-stakes legal challenges and potential economic and environmental consequences that may reshape global climate action.

Immediate Legal Countermoves

Environmental advocacy groups are already preparing lawsuits to contest the rollback. The Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) , Environmental Defense Fund, along with several state attorneys general, is expected to file claims arguing that the repeal violates the Clean Air Act. These cases may hinge on whether the EPA acted with sufficient scientific justification and whether it has the authority to reverse a ruling that has stood for over 16 years.

“History tells us that overturning landmark environmental protections invites legal pushback,” said Robert Percival, a University of Maryland environmental law professor. “We anticipate months, if not years, of litigation that could end up in the Supreme Court.”

Public Nuisance Litigation on the Horizon

Experts also predict a resurgence of public nuisance lawsuits, a legal tool previously used by states and communities to hold polluters accountable. Without the endangerment finding as a regulatory shield, oil, gas, and automobile companies could face renewed claims from cities and states seeking damages for climate-related harms, including sea-level rise, wildfires, and extreme weather events.

International Repercussions

Globally, the decision may accelerate the US’s slide in clean energy innovation. Europe and China, which have steadily advanced electric vehicle production and renewable energy adoption, could widen the technological gap. Analysts warn that American automakers could face shrinking export markets as countries enforce stricter emissions standards, leaving US companies behind in the global green economy.

Congressional and Political Fallout

Some Democratic lawmakers have already vowed to launch congressional investigations into the Trump EPA’s decision-making process. Questions will likely focus on the scientific basis of the reversal, the composition of the Department of Energy panel cited in the ruling, and potential conflicts of interest involving industry lobbyists.

The Economic-Environmental Trade-Off

While the administration projects $1.3 trillion in savings from deregulation, independent analyses suggest that increased fuel consumption, vehicle maintenance, and health costs may offset or exceed these benefits. The Environmental Defense Fund estimates up to $4.7 trillion in climate-related costs by 2055, including health impacts and environmental damages.

Looking Ahead: A Legal and Environmental Chess Game

This policy shift is far from final. Legal experts suggest that if courts block the repeal, the 2009 endangerment finding could be reinstated, potentially creating a policy whiplash effect that disrupts industry planning and federal regulatory approaches.

Meanwhile, cities, states, and environmental groups are already mobilizing for long-term strategies to counteract the rollback through courts, local regulations, and international collaboration.

“The Trump administration may have scored a short-term political win, but the legal and environmental backlash is only beginning,” said John Kerry, former US Secretary of State. “This is a pivotal moment that could define how the US—and the world—approaches climate action for decades.”

Munshi Firoz Al Mamun 2/16/2026 12:26:00 PM
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February 13, 2026: In a move characterized by the White House as the "largest deregulation in American history," the Trump administration officially revoked the 2009 "endangerment finding" on February 12, 2026. 

This landmark ruling by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) had previously classified greenhouse gases (GHGs) as a significant threat to public health and welfare, providing the primary legal foundation for federal emissions regulations for nearly two decades.

The decision, announced jointly by President Donald Trump and EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin, effectively dismantles the regulatory framework used to limit carbon dioxide and methane emissions from vehicles, power plants, and industrial facilities.


A Push for Economic Deregulation

The administration framed the reversal as a fulfillment of a key campaign promise to lower costs for American consumers and revitalize the domestic manufacturing sector.

  • Vehicle Cost Savings: White House officials estimate that removing these regulations will save American taxpayers over $1.3 trillion in the long term. Specifically, they project a reduction of roughly $2,400 in the purchase price of new vehicles.

  • Industry Relief: President Trump criticized the 2009 finding as a "disastrous Obama-era policy" that imposed "trillions of dollars in hidden costs" and limited consumer choice.

  • Energy Dominance: Administrator Zeldin stated that the move returns the EPA to the "letter of the law," arguing that the Clean Air Act was never intended to give the agency sweeping authority over global climate policy.


Environmental and Public Health Warnings

The reversal has sparked immediate and fierce backlash from environmental advocates, scientists, and former officials. Critics argue that the scientific consensus on the dangers of climate change has only strengthened since 2009.


"Removing the endangerment finding makes Americans less safe, less healthy, and less able to fight climate change," stated former President Barack Obama on X (formerly Twitter).

Experts from the Environmental Defense Fund (EDF) and the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) warned of a "domino effect" that could lead to:

  • Increased air pollution and respiratory illnesses, such as asthma.

  • A surge in planet-warming emissions, with some estimates suggesting an additional 18 billion tons of pollution by 2055.

  • Higher long-term costs for families due to extreme weather damage and rising insurance premiums.


Economic Impact and Deregulation Goals

The administration framed the reversal as a fulfillment of a key promise to lower costs for American consumers and revitalize the domestic manufacturing sector. Speaking from the Oval Office, President Trump criticized the 2009 rule as a "disastrous" policy that hampered the US auto industry.

The White House provided the following projections regarding the impact of this deregulation:

Key MetricProjected Impact
New Vehicle CostsEstimated savings of $2,400 per vehicle
Regulatory ScopeAffects 6 major gases, including CO2 and Methane
Industry FocusAutomotive, Power Plants, and Oil & Gas sectors
Legal StrategyAimed at making rollbacks permanent via Supreme Court

Legal and Regulatory Roadblocks

The 2009 finding was the "legal backbone" for nearly all federal climate rules. By rescinding it, the administration aims to make it significantly harder for future presidents to re-implement emissions standards without new legislation from Congress.


However, the path forward is likely to be defined by litigation. Several states, led by California, along with environmental organizations, have already signaled their intent to challenge the ruling in court. Legal experts anticipate the battle could reach the Supreme Court, where a decision would determine if the EPA has a "nondiscretionary duty" to regulate greenhouse gases under the Clean Air Act.



Global and Industrial Impact

The move also raises questions about the global competitiveness of the U.S. auto industry. While the administration emphasizes short-term savings, some market analysts warn that relaxing standards could leave American manufacturers behind in a global market increasingly focused on electric vehicles (EVs) and green technology.

Furthermore, by withdrawing from international climate discussions earlier this year, the United States continues to pivot toward a fossil-fuel-centric economic model, a shift that observers say will fuel political and scientific debate for years to come.

Munshi Firoz Al Mamun 2/13/2026 03:16:00 PM
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Feb 6, 2026: The United Kingdom is preparing to significantly reduce the amount of financial support it provides to poorer countries facing the impacts of climate change, despite earlier international commitments to scale up such assistance.

According to information obtained by the Guardian, the government plans to lower its climate finance budget for developing nations over the next five years.

Under the proposed plan, UK climate funding is expected to fall from £11.6 billion allocated over the previous five-year period to £9 billion in the upcoming cycle. When adjusted for inflation, the reduction would amount to a loss of nearly 40% in real spending power compared with the level agreed in 2021.

The decision, driven largely by the Treasury, comes at a time when senior UK security officials have warned that environmental collapse in regions such as the Amazon rainforest or the Congo Basin could pose serious risks to global stability.

Intelligence assessments have linked ecosystem breakdown to rising food prices, increased displacement, and the potential for conflict, all of which could affect the UK’s national interests.

The planned reduction follows a major international pledge made last year, when wealthy nations agreed to work towards providing $300 billion annually in climate finance to developing countries by 2035.

Although individual country contributions were not fixed, analysts warn that a decrease by the UK could make the collective target more difficult to achieve.

Climate policy advocates have expressed concern that reduced funding could have severe consequences for vulnerable countries already experiencing extreme weather, food insecurity, and environmental degradation. They argue that climate finance plays a crucial role in helping poorer nations adapt to climate impacts and reduce long-term risks.

The new funding round, known as International Climate Finance 4 (ICF4), is currently being finalised within the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office. The money will come from the overseas aid budget, which has itself been reduced in recent years. The UK’s aid spending now stands at 0.3% of gross national income, down from the long-standing 0.7% target that was in place before 2021.

According to officials familiar with the plans, the £9 billion pledge would translate into approximately £2 billion per year for the next three years, followed by lower annual amounts towards the end of the period.

The Treasury has been reluctant to commit to longer-term spending beyond the current three-year government budget framework, despite calls from MPs and policy experts for a five-year commitment to ensure predictability.

Concerns have also been raised about how climate finance is being classified. Sources say civil servants are under pressure to relabel existing development projects—such as those focused on health or education—as climate-related spending.

Critics argue that this practice risks diluting the purpose of climate finance and undermining transparency.

Funding for nature conservation programmes may also be affected, with debates ongoing over whether a ringfenced portion of the climate budget dedicated to protecting ecosystems will be maintained.

While flagship initiatives like the Blue Planet Fund are expected to continue, they may face reduced allocations.

Experts on development and climate policy warn that cutting climate finance could weaken the UK’s global standing and damage trust with developing nations.

They also note that failing to invest in climate resilience abroad could have long-term economic and security consequences at home, including higher food prices and increased geopolitical instability.

In response to the reports, a government spokesperson said the UK remains committed to international climate finance and is on track to deliver its existing £11.6 billion pledge by the end of the current financial year.

The spokesperson added that the government is reviewing its approach to ensure funding delivers measurable impact and value for taxpayers while supporting vulnerable communities.
Munshi Firoz Al Mamun 2/06/2026 04:51:00 PM
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Munshi Firoz Al Mamun

Dhaka, Feb 2, 2026:A magnitude 3.2 earthquake struck 10.5 kilometres east of Mirzapur in the Dhaka Division on Sunday at 6:30 pm (GMT+6), shaking parts of the capital and nearby districts. While the tremor caused no immediate damage, it has intensified concerns over Dhaka’s preparedness as repeated seismic activity continues to unsettle residents.

The latest quake adds to a series of tremors recorded in recent weeks, reinforcing warnings from experts that Bangladesh’s rapidly growing cities—especially Dhaka—are increasingly vulnerable due to unplanned urbanisation, unsafe buildings and weak enforcement of construction standards.

Repeated Quakes Renew Public Anxiety

Seismologists note that several earthquakes originating in central Bangladesh, including areas around Narsingdi and Mirzapur, suggest renewed geological movement that could affect Dhaka, Gazipur and surrounding urban centres.

Although these tremors have been moderate in strength, their frequency has raised alarms among urban planners and disaster-management professionals.

Dhaka’s extreme population density, ageing infrastructure and congested road network leave little margin for error if a stronger earthquake strikes.

Structural Weaknesses Deepen the Threat

Urban experts point out that Bangladesh’s major cities have expanded at a pace far exceeding regulatory capacity. In many neighbourhoods, buildings have been constructed without proper engineering design or approval, while narrow streets limit access for emergency vehicles.

Old Dhaka remains one of the most at-risk areas. A study by researchers from the Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology (BUET) found dense clusters of non-engineered buildings, minimal open spaces and severely restricted evacuation routes, making large-scale rescue operations extremely difficult during a major quake.

The researchers used GIS mapping, field surveys and spatial analysis to design potential evacuation and rescue plans but cautioned that such models would remain ineffective without urgent reforms in urban planning and disaster preparedness.

Official Assessments Fall Short

Following recent tremors, Rajuk Chairman Riazul Islam said around 300 buildings in Dhaka have been officially identified as vulnerable. Independent experts, however, estimate the real number to be far higher.

Dhaka is home to more than 2.1 million buildings, and specialists warn that over 800,000 structures could face serious risk of collapse during a strong earthquake. So far, only about 3,200 buildings in Dhaka and Gazipur combined have undergone formal safety assessments.

Urban planners argue that responsibility lies both with regulatory authorities and property owners. While building codes exist, enforcement remains inconsistent, allowing unsafe construction to continue.

Calls for Urgent Preventive Measures

Housing and environmental experts are calling for immediate action, including retrofitting high-risk buildings, updating construction regulations and empowering authorities to halt illegal developments. They stress that prevention would cost far less than responding to a major disaster.

Residents say fear is growing with every new tremor. Taposh Debnath, a resident of Vatara, urged authorities to prioritise structural safety. “Approving buildings under outdated rules is dangerous,” he said.

Former multinational executive Jane Alam echoed similar concerns, noting that Dhaka’s urban design compares poorly with international standards. “In many cases, rural areas now seem safer simply because they are less congested,” she said.

A Disaster That Can Still Be Prevented

With a population approaching 20 million, Dhaka ranks among the most earthquake-prone capitals in the region. Experts warn that neighbourhoods built on unstable soil, filled with non-engineered structures and lacking emergency access routes face the greatest danger.

The 3.2 magnitude quake near Mirzapur, along with earlier tremors—including a 5.7 magnitude earthquake on 21 November—has underscored the urgency for coordinated action.

Unless Bangladesh moves quickly to strengthen buildings, redesign high-risk urban zones and enforce safety standards, experts warn that the next major earthquake could turn long-standing planning failures into a large-scale humanitarian crisis.
Munshi Firoz Al Mamun 2/02/2026 12:35:00 PM
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International Desk

An intense winter weather system affecting wide areas of the United States has resulted in at least 20 reported deaths and triggered widespread power outages, transportation disruptions, and school closures, officials said.

Authorities confirmed fatalities in multiple states, including New York, Tennessee, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Kansas and Pennsylvania. In Texas, a teenage girl was killed during a sledding accident as icy conditions created dangerous outdoor environments.

New York state has reported eight storm-related deaths since late last week, while officials in other states said several fatalities remain under review as investigators determine whether extreme cold or related incidents were the primary cause.

The storm has severely impacted air travel, with more than 10,000 flights cancelled or delayed across the country. Utility companies reported that hundreds of thousands of customers lost electricity as snow, ice, and strong winds damaged power lines and substations.

Local and state governments urged residents to limit travel as road conditions deteriorated. Schools shifted to remote learning in several regions, while emergency services responded to weather-related incidents.

Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear said conditions in his state were gradually improving but warned that the danger had not fully passed. “We’re seeing improvement, but the risk remains,” he said.

According to the National Weather Service, a prolonged cold wave is expected to affect much of the eastern United States this week. Forecasters warned that unusually low temperatures could set new records across many areas.

Although snowfall is forecast to taper off in most locations, freezing conditions are expected to persist. Meteorologists said remaining snow activity will likely move into eastern Canada by Tuesday.

In New York City, winter cleanup efforts continued as pedestrians navigated icy sidewalks and snow-covered streets. Officials asked residents to avoid unnecessary driving while crews worked to restore normal conditions.

City authorities announced that public schools would return to classroom learning on Tuesday following a day of online classes. Weather officials cautioned that accumulated snow is unlikely to melt quickly due to sustained freezing temperatures.
Munshi Firoz Al Mamun 1/27/2026 04:58:00 AM
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Khulna, Jan 25, 2026: A three-day 3rd Coastal Water Convention–2026 began in Khulna on Sunday, aiming to identify sustainable solutions to the growing water crisis in the country’s south-western coastal region.

The convention is being organised by AOSED, a Khulna-based non-government organisation, in collaboration with around 60 organisations, including public universities, professionals, socio-economic groups, journalists, and NGOs.

Prof Dr Ainun Nishat, adviser to the Centre for Climate Change and Environment Research and a noted water expert, attended the inaugural session as the chief guest and formally opened the convention at around 12:30 pm at the CSS Ava Centre under Khulna Sadar thana.

The opening session was presided over by Dr Md Khairul Islam, Regional Director of WaterAid for the South Asian region. Md Shamim Arefeen, member secretary of the convention organising committee and executive director of AOSED, conducted the programme.

Among others, Prof Dr Kazi Maruful Islam of Dhaka University, Prof Anwarul Quadir, executive director of Sundarban Academy, Abul Kalam Azad of ActionAid, ATM Zakir Hossain, executive director of Jagrata Juba Sangho (JJS), Soma Dutta of Manusher Janno Foundation, and Deb Prosad Sarker, executive director of LoCOS, addressed the gathering.

The three-day convention features workshops, seminars, panel discussions, documentary screenings, cultural programmes, and a concluding session.

Speakers highlighted key challenges affecting coastal water security, including obstruction of natural tidal flows, river erosion, siltation, rising salinity, pollution, mismanagement, climate change–driven vulnerability, loss of community rights over water resources, and the decline of indigenous and sustainable water management practices.

They noted that unchecked human intervention, often ignoring ecological balance and local interests, has disrupted natural water systems, reducing freshwater flow from upstream sources. As a result, access to safe drinking water has become increasingly critical in the south-western coastal belt.

The speakers stressed that addressing these challenges requires realistic, science-based policies and inclusive stakeholder engagement.

They expressed optimism that the convention would help build a strong and sustainable water advocacy platform and lead to a “Khulna Declaration”, offering meaningful guidance for tackling climate and water-related challenges.
Munshi Firoz Al Mamun 1/25/2026 08:18:00 PM
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International Desk

Jan 13, 2026: A sharp cold spell at the start of 2025 combined with rapidly rising electricity demand from data centres and cryptocurrency operations has led to an increase in greenhouse gas emissions in the United States, ending a two-year downward trend, according to a recent analysis.

The study found that overall emissions rose by about 2.4 percent during the year, marking the first increase in three years. The rise exceeded the pace of economic growth, despite continued expansion in renewable energy generation.

One major factor was higher fuel consumption for home heating. In colder regions of the country, households largely depend on natural gas and other fossil fuels to stay warm. Prolonged low temperatures early in the year resulted in a significant increase in fuel use compared to the previous year.

Electricity demand also climbed sharply as data centres, artificial intelligence infrastructure, and cryptocurrency mining facilities expanded, particularly in parts of Texas and the Ohio Valley. This surge in power consumption put additional pressure on the national grid.

As natural gas prices increased, electricity producers turned more frequently to coal as an alternative. Coal use for power generation rose by roughly 13 percent, reversing a long-term decline. Analysts say this shift was driven by cost considerations rather than a strategic return to coal.

While solar energy production recorded strong growth, rising at its fastest pace in several years, it was not sufficient to offset higher emissions from heating and power generation. The increase in coal use stood in contrast to trends in some other major economies, where coal consumption continued to fall due to expanded renewable capacity.

Experts note that although coal power in the US has dropped significantly since its peak more than a decade ago, last year’s increase was notable. Power companies also slowed the retirement of coal-fired plants as they sought to ensure reliable electricity supplies amid growing demand.

The transport sector remains the largest contributor to US emissions, covering road, rail, and air travel. Traffic volumes continued to rise for a fifth consecutive year. However, emissions from transportation remained largely unchanged, helped by a growing number of hybrid and electric vehicles. Hybrid vehicle adoption, in particular, showed strong momentum.

The analysis suggests that recent policy shifts under President Donald Trump had limited immediate impact on emission levels during 2025. However, some climate advocates argue that expanded support for fossil fuel production, natural gas exports, and energy-intensive industries could contribute to higher emissions in the coming years.

With demand from digital infrastructure expected to keep growing, analysts warn that without major upgrades to renewable capacity and grid efficiency, pressure on fossil fuel use may persist, complicating efforts to reduce emissions over the long term.
Munshi Firoz Al Mamun 1/13/2026 09:33:00 PM
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