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UP gets its first solar EV charging station, aims for 22,000 MW solar push by 2030
UP gets its first solar EV charging station, aims for 22,000 MW solar push by 2030

Time of India

time24-05-2025

  • Business
  • Time of India

UP gets its first solar EV charging station, aims for 22,000 MW solar push by 2030

The state's first solar-powered electric vehicle (EV) charging station was opened in Banthra under Sarojininagar constituency on Friday. The station was inaugurated by BJP's Sarojininagar MLA Rajeshwar Singh. Calling solar energy "a responsibility for Earth's future, not just an alternative," Singh stressed its role in tackling air pollution and climate change. He noted that over 8 million people die annually from air pollution, with more than 2.5 million deaths in India alone. Highlighting Earth Overshoot Day, Singh warned that in 1972, humanity exhausted its annual natural resource quota by Dec 23, but in 2024, it fell to Aug 1-indicating unsustainable consumption. He shared that UP currently has over 3.75 lakh registered EVs and offers attractive subsidies to promote green mobility. Each EV can save 1.5 million grams of CO₂ per year. With a 30% EV adoption target by 2030, India could save $60 billion in oil imports annually. Singh praised CM Yogi Adityanath's solar mission to expand UP's solar capacity from 288 MW in 2017 to 22,000 MW by 2030.

UP's 1st solar powered EC charging stn opens
UP's 1st solar powered EC charging stn opens

Time of India

time24-05-2025

  • Automotive
  • Time of India

UP's 1st solar powered EC charging stn opens

Lucknow: The state's first solar-powered electric vehicle (EV) charging station was opened in Banthra under Sarojininagar constituency on Friday. The station was inaugurated by BJP's Sarojininagar MLA Rajeshwar Singh. Calling solar energy "a responsibility for Earth's future, not just an alternative," Singh stressed its role in tackling air pollution and climate change. He noted that over 8 million people die annually from air pollution, with more than 2.5 million deaths in India alone. Highlighting Earth Overshoot Day, Singh warned that in 1972, humanity exhausted its annual natural resource quota by Dec 23, but in 2024, it fell to Aug 1—indicating unsustainable consumption. He shared that UP currently has over 3.75 lakh registered EVs and offers attractive subsidies to promote green mobility. Each EV can save 1.5 million grams of CO₂ per year. With a 30% EV adoption target by 2030, India could save $60 billion in oil imports annually. Singh praised CM Yogi Adityanath's solar mission to expand UP's solar capacity from 288 MW in 2017 to 22,000 MW by 2030. Get the latest lifestyle updates on Times of India, along with Brother's Day wishes , messages and quotes !

5 ways to live a sustainable life with circular thinking from Junk Kouture
5 ways to live a sustainable life with circular thinking from Junk Kouture

RTÉ News​

time19-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • RTÉ News​

5 ways to live a sustainable life with circular thinking from Junk Kouture

Junk Kouture is on a mission to empower young people to embrace circular thinking and sustainable living in their everyday lives. Tune in to the Junk Kouture Dublin City Final tonight at 7pm on RTÉ2 & RTÉ Player! As part of a growing global movement, Junk Kouture encourages youth to reimagine waste and take action within their schools and communities to support a more sustainable future. The competition shines a light not just on the environmental costs of fast fashion, but on the broader need for circular solutions, where resources are reused, repurposed, and revalued rather than discarded. Here, the Junk Kouture team shares five key facts about circular living, community impact, and the importance of sustainable choices, especially for young changemakers. 1. Humanity is consuming 1.7 times more resources than the Earth can regenerate each year This is known as Earth Overshoot Day, the date each year when our resource use exceeds what the planet can replenish. It's a sign that our "take-make-waste" system is unsustainable. Circular thinking helps push back that date by reducing waste, conserving materials, and shifting to regenerative practices. 2. Three out of five fashion garments end up in a landfill within a year of purchase Fast fashion is a major culprit, but the disposable culture extends far beyond wardrobes. From day-to-day supplies to packaging, we're taught to value convenience over longevity. Embracing circular thinking means repairing, reusing, and reimagining items to extend their life and young people are leading the charge in this shift. 3. Over 90% of materials used in manufacturing globally are wasted after a single use The current global economy is only 7.2% circular, according to the Circularity Gap Report 2023. That means the vast majority of resources extracted like metals, plastics, and textiles are never cycled back into use. The goal of a circular economy is to close that loop through design, innovation, and behaviour change. 4. Microplastics are not just in the ocean, they're in us Over one third of all ocean microplastics come from synthetic textiles, and those particles have made their way into the food chain, water systems, and even our bodies. Solutions come not just from switching fabrics, but from rethinking how we design, care for, and dispose of products. Circular thinking teaches us to consider the full lifecycle of everything we use. 5 Community-led circular solutions are gaining ground While only a small percentage of textiles are formally recycled, young people are leading innovative grassroots solutions like swap-shops, upcycling workshops, zero-waste school initiatives, and digital sharing platforms. These actions contribute to key UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) including SDG 11: Sustainable Cities and Communities, and SDG 13: Climate Action.

Aotearoa NZ Reaches ‘Earth Overshoot Day' On 30 April: Time To Act For A More Sustainable Future
Aotearoa NZ Reaches ‘Earth Overshoot Day' On 30 April: Time To Act For A More Sustainable Future

Scoop

time29-04-2025

  • Health
  • Scoop

Aotearoa NZ Reaches ‘Earth Overshoot Day' On 30 April: Time To Act For A More Sustainable Future

New Zealand is set to mark its Earth Overshoot Day today (30 April 2025), three months earlier than the global average of 30 July. The latest Briefing from the Public Health Communication Centre explains how we can achieve a more ecologically sustainable society that also supports improved public health. Earth Overshoot Day signals the moment when our demand for ecological resources exceeds what Earth can regenerate in a year, highlighting the urgent need for a shift towards more sustainable practices. If everyone lived like New Zealanders, we would need almost three Earths. In contrast, countries like Uruguay are showing that a different path is possible. Their overshoot day is not projected until 17 December, demonstrating that it is possible for even high-income countries to live within their ecological footprint. "Earth Overshoot Day is a powerful wake-up call," says University of Otago Public Health Professor Michael Baker. "Although it simplifies complex environmental systems, it helps communicate just how urgently we need to change course, for the sake of our environment, our economy and our health." The Briefing points to countries like Uruguay, which show that strong environmental policies, widespread renewable energy adoption, sustainable agriculture, and compact, low-carbon cities can make a real difference. Prof Baker says there are several ways NZ can reduce its ecological footprint. Boost renewable energy investments and transition to cleaner energy across transport, industry, and homes. Accelerate sustainable transport by investing in public transport, cycling infrastructure, and more compact urban design. Promote sustainable agriculture with regenerative practices, native reforestation, and local food systems to reduce waste and improve resilience. Encourage sustainable consumption, including a shift to healthier plant-based diets, reduced consumption and sustainable lifestyles by citizens and whanau/families. Embed sustainability in policymaking, ensuring that environmental conservation and resource management are core to decision-making. While Earth Overshoot Day provides a clear signal of unsustainability, it does not capture all aspects of environmental health, such as biodiversity loss or pollution beyond CO2 emissions. Experts emphasise the importance of using a range of tools, including the Sustainable Development Goals and Earth system boundaries, to guide effective policy. "This is not just an environmental issue, it's a public health and economic opportunity," says Professor Ralph Chapman, an environmental economist with Victoria University. "By acting now to reduce our ecological footprint, we can improve wellbeing, build resilience, and help ensure a better future for all New Zealanders."

Aotearoa Falls Behind Global Average – Switch To Paleo Could Help
Aotearoa Falls Behind Global Average – Switch To Paleo Could Help

Scoop

time29-04-2025

  • General
  • Scoop

Aotearoa Falls Behind Global Average – Switch To Paleo Could Help

Press Release – Vegan Society We should all be very concerned about this day, as it marks our sustainability, and Aotearoa is falling behind the rest of the world. Ministers may claim that we are the best, but the reality is we are amongst the worst, media spokesperson Claire Insley warned. Cows in mud (Photo/Supplied) Earth Overshoot Day falls on 24th July this year, a stark reminder of how far humanity is from operating within planetary boundaries. However, for Aotearoa New Zealand, the picture is even bleaker: the national Overshoot Day arrives on 30th April. Shifting towards a plant-based diet and moving away from animal agriculture would move the date back into May, maybe even June? Earth Overshoot Day marks the date when humanity's demand for ecological resources and services each year exceeds what Earth can regenerate in that year. It is calculated by dividing the planet's biocapacity by our Ecological Footprint and multiplying the result by 365. Since its inception in 1971, Earth Overshoot Day has crept steadily earlier on the calendar—highlighting humanity's deepening ecological debt. 'We should all be very concerned about this day, as it marks our sustainability, and Aotearoa is falling behind the rest of the world. Ministers may claim that we are the best, but the reality is we are amongst the worst.' Media spokesperson Claire Insley warned, 'There are many simple solutions to mitigate climate change and to live within our global budget, the most powerful of which is to switch to a plant-based diet. Our ancestors predominantly ate plants and so we need to return to the true paleo diet, to allow our children a future' Only six years ago, Earth Overshoot Day was 29th July, meaning it has advanced by five days over six years. But New Zealand's own Overshoot Day was 6th May in 2019: we have slipped six days further into overshoot, surpassing even Qatar, whose Overshoot Day has slipped by only 5 days and is 6th February, and China, on 23rd May. How can we be worse than China—a country with 1.4 billion people and a major industrial base that manufactures much of the world's goods? This data reflects not only our high per-capita consumption, but also the reality that we are failing to meet our climate targets. Despite our clean, green image, Aotearoa is disproportionately contributing to ecological degradation and climate instability, compared to the global average. This trajectory is unsustainable. Our continued ecological overspending contributes to biodiversity loss, deforestation, and climate change—all of which put our food systems, infrastructure, and future at risk. What Can Be Done? One of the most powerful and often overlooked solutions is a shift towards plant-based diets. Currently, 85% of global farmland is dedicated to animal agriculture, yet it contributes only 17% of global calories. A global shift to plant-based food systems could drastically reduce the pressure on our ecosystems, freeing up land for rewilding, reducing greenhouse gas emissions, and conserving water resources. The Poore Report (2018) from Oxford University shows that a plant-based diet could cut individual food-related carbon footprints by up to 73%. If Aotearoa moved towards more sustainable food systems, it could significantly reduce our own ecological overshoot, contributing to a more sustainable and equitable future. According to the Global Footprint Network, pushing the global Overshoot Day back by just five days per year would allow humanity to live within the planet's means by 2050. Their Power of Possibility platform outlines real-world actions that can shift the date: · Halving food waste globally could move Earth Overshoot Day by 13 days. · Transitioning to renewable energy could shift it by 26 days. · Reducing carbon emissions by 50% could move it by over 90 days. These are not just numbers—they are choices. Choices we can make through policy, innovation, and lifestyle shifts that prioritize ecological health and intergenerational justice. Let's #MoveTheDate – starting here in Aotearoa. Content Sourced from Original url

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