Skip to main content

Maldives fails to convince peers to go “carbon neutral” (Reuters)

A group of developing countries agreed Tuesday to “green” their economies but stopped short of promising to become “carbon neutral” as a way to spur big polluters into action at climate talks next month.
The president of the Maldives had hoped a summit he was hosting would result in a promise by all present to commit themselves to become carbon neutral within a decade.
Instead, the summit’s final declaration said: “We will commence greening our economies as our contribution toward achieving carbon neutrality.”

“In short, we have been able to agree that development and green technology or less-carbon development is possible,” President Mohamed Nasheed said.
The summit was attended by Bangladesh, Nepal, Vietnam, Kiribati, Barbados, Bhutan, Ghana, Rwanda, Kenya and Tanzania — countries which are among the lowest emitters of greenhouse gas but are vulnerable to the worst impacts of climate change including desertification, drought, floods and storm surges.
Click here to read more from Reuters.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Dhivehi Bas

ދިވެހިބަސް ދިވެހިންގެ ބަހަކީ ދިވެހި ގައުމިްޔަތުގެ އެއްބަޔެވެ. އެއާ މެދު ދިވެހިން ފަޚްރުވެރިވުން ހައްގު އެއްބައިވެސް މެއެވެ. އެހެންކަމުން ދިވެހިބަސް އުފެދިފައިވަނީ ކިހިނެއްކަމާއި އެބަހުގައި އެކުލެވިގެންވާ ބައިތައް އޮޅުންފިލުވުމަކީ ނުހަނު މަތީ  ދަރަޖައަކަށް ދިވެހިން ބޭނުންވެފައިވާ ކަމެކެވެ. އެހެންކަމުން ތިރީގައި އެވަނީ ދިވެހިބަހާބެހޭގޮތުން ދިވެހި ބަހާއި ތާރީޚަށް ޚިދުމަތްކުރާ ގައުމީ މަރުކަޒުން ނެރެފައިވާ ލީފްލެޓެކެވެ. 

Mohamed Ameen's services to the nation

When Mohamed Ameen returned to Male' after studying abroad there was a committee drafting a constitution and king Shamsudeen appointed him, by royal letter, to that group. He was its youngest and most intelligent member. After numerous difficulties, the constitution was completed and it was formally approved on Thursday 23 Shauban 1351 (22 December 1932). Acting under the constitution, the king gave the Minister for Trade portfolio to Mohamed Ameen, and he performed well in accordance with the practices of the time. Shortly after the adoption of the constitution, a serious dispute began between the Borah traders and the government. The Borahs ceased trading, locked up their shops and occupied their mosque and their three shop-houses. The government declared martial law. The person in charge was chief minister Mohamed Fareed Didi, who was also minister of the askariya (militia). On the second day of martial law, a small protest was organised. Fifty people from Galolhu ward gathered...

ރާއްޖޭގެ ފުރަތަމަ ވަޒަންވެރިން

ލިޔުނީ: ނަސީމާ މުހައްމަދު ދިވެހިރާއްޖޭގައި ފުރަތަމަ ވަޒަންވެރިވީ މީހުން އައީ ދުނިޔޭގެ ކޮން ހިސާބަކުންކަން ޔަޤީންކަމާއެކު ހޯދުމަކީ އަޅުގަނޑުމެންނަށް މައުލޫމާތު ލިބިފައި ހުރި މިންވަރަށް ބަލާއިރު އަދި ދަތިކަމެކެވެ. ފެންނަންހުރި އާސާރީ ހެކިތަކުން މިކަން ކަށަވަރުކުރެވޭކަށް ނެތެވެ. ރާއްޖެއަށް ފުރަތަމަ އައި މީހުން އުފެއްދި ތަކެއްޗަކީ، ދުނިޔޭގެ އެހެން ހިސާބުގެ އެވޭލާގައި އުޅެފައިވާ މީހުން، ޒަމާނަށް ދޫކޮށްފައިވާ ތަކެތި ފަދައިން، ގިނަ ދުވަހު ދެމިހުންނަ ތަކެއްޗެއް ނޫނެވެ. ފެންނަން ހުރި އާސާރުތަކަކީ މާފަހުގެ ތަކެތި ކަމަށް ދެންނެވިދާނެއެވެ. އެވޭލާގެ ދިވެހީންނާމެދު ދެކެވޭ ގިނަ ވާހަކަތައް ބިނާކުރެވިފައި ވަނީ، އަޅުގަނޑުމެންގެ ބަހާއި، އަކުރާއި، ބިމުން ނެގިފައިވާ އާސާރުތަކައި، އެކި ޒަމާނުގައި ލިޔެވިފައިވާ ލިޔުންތަކުގެ މައްޗަށެވެ. އަޅުގަނޑުމެންނަށް ޔަޤީންވެފައި ވަނީ، މިރާއްޖޭގެ ރަށްރަށުގައި މީހުން އުޅޭތާ، މަދުވެގެން 2،500 އަހަރު ވެދާނެ ކަމަށެވެ.