logo
MHADA to plant 1 lakh saplings across Maharashtra during Van Mahotsav Week

MHADA to plant 1 lakh saplings across Maharashtra during Van Mahotsav Week

Indian Express2 days ago

The Maharashtra Housing and Area Development Authority (MHADA) has declared a statewide tree plantation drive during Van Mahotsav Week from July 1 to July 7 with an aim to plant one lakh saplings in the state.
As part of the drive, around 50,000 saplings are to be planted in the undevelopable plots of the Mumbai Metropolitan Region (MMR), including the Mumbai and Konkan Housing Boards, through the Miyawaki method — a Japanese forestry technology to grow indigenous forests rapidly and enhance biodiversity in small areas, said Sanjeev Jaiswal, vice-president and Chief Executive Officer of MHADA, who will spearhead and supervise the drive.
The saplings will be purely native and eco-friendly species, and they will be geo-tagged for monitoring and transparency, said MHADA authorities.
'Those plots that are not usable for any construction should be made green lungs for the city,' said Jaiswal, who presided over a preparatory meeting on Monday. He directed the officials of MHADA to conduct the campaign with the active involvement of all regional boards and housing colonies under the MHADA ambit.
Mumbai Housing Board has been given the task of planting 50,000 saplings, whereas Konkan Housing Board has a target of 25,000 saplings. Each of MHADA's regional boards, including Pune, Nashik, Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar, Nagpur, and Amravati, have been instructed to plant 25,000 saplings.
Jaiswal suggested that the upkeep and maintenance of the saplings, in the long run, should be taken over by the housing societies concerned. 'It must not be a one-time effort but a long-term commitment,' he stated, pointing to the significance of having sustainable greenery.
MHADA will release a circular in the future, making compensatory plantation compulsory for all tree-cutting works related to its projects. This will initially be adopted in Mumbai and will be later extended to other parts of Maharashtra.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Kalyan-Dombivli Municipal Corporation (KDMC) begins mass tree plantation on Environment Day; targets 1 lakh trees
Kalyan-Dombivli Municipal Corporation (KDMC) begins mass tree plantation on Environment Day; targets 1 lakh trees

Time of India

time5 hours ago

  • Time of India

Kalyan-Dombivli Municipal Corporation (KDMC) begins mass tree plantation on Environment Day; targets 1 lakh trees

Kalyan-Dombivli Municipal Corporation (KDMC) launched a large-scale tree plantation drive on World Environment Day, starting with 3,000 trees at the Ecological Park in Umbarde KALYAN: On the occasion of World Environment Day , the Kalyan-Dombivli Municipal Corporation (KDMC) commenced a large-scale tree plantation drive in Kalyan on Thursday. KDMC began the campaign by planting 3,000 trees at the Ecological Park in Umbarde. This initiative was led by KDMC Commissioner Abhinav Goel. KDMC has pledged to plant over one lakh trees in Kalyan-Dombivli in the coming days. In addition to the 3,000 trees at the Ecological Park, the plantation of 8,000 trees near the NRC Company at Ambivli was also initiated by KDMC with assistance from NGOs on Thursday. At the time, Commissioner Goel said, "Citizens should also take the initiative and cooperate to save the environment, reduce pollution, conserve water, and segregate waste." KDMC also launched the Miyawaki method of tree planting at the solid waste project in Umbarde. Commissioner Goel stated that similar Miyawaki forests will be created at six other locations within the municipal limits. KDMC Deputy Municipal Commissioner Sanjay Jadhav said, "The Miyawaki forest will be created at Barave, Khadegolivali, Tisgaon, and Dombivli." Commissioner Goel mentioned that around 50 social welfare organisations from across the city have been enrolled in the drive, including various local groups. Additionally, KDMC plans to involve school and college students once schools reopen, to further the goal of developing the city into a green city. Get the latest lifestyle updates on Times of India, along with Eid wishes , messages , and quotes !

Sanya Malhotra's Health Secret? A Cup Of Matcha Tea Daily
Sanya Malhotra's Health Secret? A Cup Of Matcha Tea Daily

NDTV

time5 hours ago

  • NDTV

Sanya Malhotra's Health Secret? A Cup Of Matcha Tea Daily

Sanya Malhotra, the acclaimed Bollywood actress, is known for being conscious about her health and well-being. Among her many healthy eating habits, her love for matcha tea holds a special place. In a recent Instagram post, Sanya shared that she is "obsessed with matcha" and she is not alone. A popular Japanese tea, Matcha is known for its health benefits and taste. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Sanya Malhotra (@sanyamalhotra_) This is not the first time the Mrs actor shared her love for matcha tea. Malhotra shared her expertise on matcha drinks with her followers. Earlier, the actress showed her fans how to prepare a cup of matcha tea at home. Benefits Of Matcha Tea Rich in antioxidants and known to boost metabolism and give you mental clarity, matcha tea can be a great addition to any healthy routine. From weight loss to decreasing the risk of heart disease, matcha tea can help you in more ways than one. She often prepared it using traditional tools, such as a bamboo whisk and bowl, showcasing her passion for authentic, mindful living. She even introduced actor Varun Dhawan to matcha on set, highlighting the many benefits of this healthful habit. How To Make Matcha Tea In a previous video, Sanya had also shared a way to prepare Matcha tea at home. She begins by adding a teaspoon of matcha powder to a bowl and mixing it with some water. Then, she uses a bamboo whisk, or chasen, to dissolve the powder in water to form a smooth and velvety drink. Transfer it into a glass tumbler and add some ice cubes to enjoy this delicious drink. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Sanya Malhotra (@sanyamalhotra_) Sanya Malhotra's "obsession" with Matcha tea will make you want to try it too!

The stunning decline of the preference for having boys
The stunning decline of the preference for having boys

Mint

time10 hours ago

  • Mint

The stunning decline of the preference for having boys

Without fanfare, something remarkable has happened. The noxious practice of aborting girls simply for being girls has become dramatically less common. It first became widespread in the late 1980s, as cheap ultrasound machines made it easy to determine the sex of a fetus. Parents who were desperate for a boy but did not want a large family—or, in China, were not allowed one—started routinely terminating females. Globally, among babies born in 2000, a staggering 1.6m girls were missing from the number you would expect, given the natural sex ratio at birth. This year that number is likely to be 200,000—and it is still falling. The fading of boy preference in regions where it was strongest has been astonishingly rapid. The natural ratio is about 105 boy babies for every 100 girls; because boys are slightly more likely to die young, this leads to rough parity at reproductive age. The sex ratio at birth, once wildly skewed across Asia, has become more even. In China it fell from a peak of 117.8 boys per 100 girls in 2006 to 109.8 last year, and in India from 109.6 in 2010 to 106.8. In South Korea it is now completely back to normal, having been a shocking 115.7 in 1990. In 2010 an Economist cover called the mass abortion of girls 'gendercide". The global decline of this scourge is a blessing. First, it implies an ebbing of the traditions that underpinned it: the stark belief that men matter more and the expectation in some cultures that a daughter will grow up to serve her husband's family, so parents need a son to look after them in old age. Such sexist ideas have not vanished, but evidence that they are fading is welcome. Second, it heralds an easing of the harms caused by surplus men. Sex-selective abortion doomed millions of males to lifelong bachelorhood. Many of these 'bare branches", as they are known in China, resented it intensely. And their fury was socially destabilising, since young, frustrated bachelors are more prone to violence. One study of six Asian countries found that warped sex ratios led to an increase of rape in all of them. Others linked the imbalance to a rise in violent crime in China, along with authoritarian policing to quell it, and to a heightened risk of civil strife or even war in other countries. The fading of boy preference will make much of the world safer. In some regions, meanwhile, a new preference is emerging: for girls. It is far milder. Parents are not aborting boys for being boys. No big country yet has a noticeable surplus of girls. Rather, girl preference can be seen in other measures, such as polls and fertility patterns. Among Japanese couples who want only one child, girls are strongly preferred. Across the world, parents typically want a mix. But in America and Scandinavia couples are likelier to have more children if their early ones are male, suggesting that more keep trying for a girl than do so for a boy. When seeking to adopt, couples pay extra for a girl. When undergoing in vitro fertilisation (IVF) and other sex-selection methods in countries where it is legal to choose the sex of the embryo, women increasingly opt for daughters. People prefer girls for all sorts of reasons. Some think they will be easier to bring up, or cherish what they see as feminine traits. In some countries they may assume that looking after elderly parents is a daughter's job. However, the new girl preference also reflects increasing worries about boys' prospects. Boys have always been more likely to get into trouble: globally, 93% of jailbirds are male. In much of the world they have also fallen behind girls academically. In rich countries 54% of young women have a tertiary degree, compared with 41% of young men. Men are still over-represented at the top, in boardrooms, but also at the bottom, angrily shutting themselves in their bedrooms. Governments are rightly concerned about boys' problems. Because boys mature later than girls, there is a case for holding them back a year at school. More male teachers, especially at primary school, where there are hardly any, might give them role models. Better vocational training might nudge them into jobs that men have long avoided, such as nursing. Tailoring policies to help struggling boys need not mean disadvantaging girls, any more than prescribing glasses for someone with bad eyesight hurts those with 20/20 vision. In the future, technology will offer parents more options. Some will be relatively uncontroversial: when it is possible to tweak genes to avoid horrific hereditary diseases, those who can will not hesitate to do so. But what if new technologies for sex selection become widespread? Couples undergoing fertility treatment can already choose sperm with X chromosomes or determine an embryo's sex via genetic testing. Such techniques are expensive and rare, but will surely get cheaper. Also, and more important, more parents who conceive children the old-fashioned way are likely to use cheap, blood-based screening in the first weeks of pregnancy to find out about genetic traits. These tests can already reveal the sex of the embryo. Some people trying for a girl may then use pill-based abortifacients to avoid having a boy. As a liberal newspaper, The Economist would prefer not to tell people what kind of family they should have. Nonetheless, it is worth pondering what the consequences might be if a new imbalance were to arise: a future generation with substantially more women than men. The power of numbers It would not be as bad as too many men. A surplus of single women is unlikely to become physically abusive. Indeed, you might speculate that a mostly female world would be more peaceful and better run. But if women were ever to make up a large majority, some men might exploit their stronger bargaining position in the mating market by becoming more promiscuous or reluctant to commit themselves to a relationship. For many heterosexual women, this would make dating harder. Some wanting to couple up would be unable to do so. Celebrate the cooling of the war on baby girls, therefore, and urge on the day when it ends entirely. But do not assume that what comes next will be simple or trouble-free.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store