Articles

  • 2 months ago | newslaundry.com | Manu Moudgil |India Spend

    Studies show that extreme weather events, which are becoming more frequent due to changing climate, increase durations of power outage. A power line with lightning flashing behind it. Raghunadh was 15 when Cyclone Hudhud struck the coastline near his home at Bheemunipatnam, around 30 km from Visakhapatnam in coastal Andhra Pradesh on October 12, 2014.

  • Feb 10, 2025 | indiaspend.com | Manu Moudgil Loading.. |Manu Moudgil

    Chandigarh: Raghunadh was 15 when Cyclone Hudhud struck the coastline near his home at Bheemunipatnam, around 30 km from Visakhapatnam in coastal Andhra Pradesh on October 12, 2014. Gusting at 260 km per hour--the same as the speed at which an aeroplane takes off--the storm swept away the trees, hutments, food shacks and electricity poles. “Roads got blocked because of fallen trees, so people walked for kilometres to reach the highway where food was distributed for the poor,” he told IndiaSpend.

  • Jun 1, 2024 | shorturl.at | Manu Moudgil |Adam Groffman |Fran Golden

    In the walled city of Old Delhi, the erstwhile capital of the Mughal empire, old mansions, mosques, and tombs abut modern-day bridal shops and KFCs. The effect is dizzying. But Old Delhi also offers an alternative history of the city—one that Iqbal Ali, a trans nonbinary Muslim, is trying to bring to light: Since 2022, Ali has been offering queer heritage walks infused with stories of love, poetry, and street food.

  • Jun 1, 2024 | afar.com | Manu Moudgil

    In the walled city of Old Delhi, the erstwhile capital of the Mughal empire, old mansions, mosques, and tombs abut modern-day bridal shops and KFCs. The effect is dizzying. But Old Delhi also offers an alternative history of the city—one that Iqbal Ali, a trans nonbinary Muslim, is trying to bring to light: Since 2022, Ali has been offering queer heritage walks infused with stories of love, poetry, and street food.

  • Apr 24, 2024 | india.mongabay.com | Manu Moudgil

    A new study that analysed consumption data in India found stark differences in the water, particulate matter and carbon footprints between the poorest and richest households. Water footprint rises by six times, particulate matter doubles, carbon footprint sees an eight-fold rise for the latter. The study underscores the significant influence of consumption patterns on environmental footprints.

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