A jiggery unit of Baghpat district, Uttar Pradesh. Sugarcane farmers and cutters in Uttar Pradesh have faced heavy losses since the beginning of this year. Non-payment of dues from the state’s sugar mills has forced them to sell their cane at extremely low prices to small-scale jiggery units that stay in business till Holi
A jiggery unit of Baghpat district, Uttar Pradesh. Sugarcane farmers and cutters in Uttar Pradesh have faced heavy losses since the beginning of this year. Non-payment of dues from the state’s sugar mills has forced them to sell their cane at extremely low prices to small-scale jiggery units that stay in business till Holi
A jiggery unit of Baghpat district, Uttar Pradesh. Sugarcane farmers and cutters in Uttar Pradesh have faced heavy losses since the beginning of this year. Non-payment of dues from the state’s sugar mills has forced them to sell their cane at extremely low prices to small-scale jiggery units that stay in business till Holi
A jiggery unit of Baghpat district, Uttar Pradesh. Sugarcane farmers and cutters in Uttar Pradesh have faced heavy losses since the beginning of this year. Non-payment of dues from the state’s sugar mills has forced them to sell their cane at extremely low prices to small-scale jiggery units that stay in business till Holi
A jiggery unit of Baghpat district, Uttar Pradesh. Sugarcane farmers and cutters in Uttar Pradesh have faced heavy losses since the beginning of this year. Non-payment of dues from the state’s sugar mills has forced them to sell their cane at extremely low prices to small-scale jiggery units that stay in business till Holi
A jiggery unit of Baghpat district, Uttar Pradesh. Sugarcane farmers and cutters in Uttar Pradesh have faced heavy losses since the beginning of this year. Non-payment of dues from the state’s sugar mills has forced them to sell their cane at extremely low prices to small-scale jiggery units that stay in business till Holi
A jiggery unit of Baghpat district, Uttar Pradesh. Sugarcane farmers and cutters in Uttar Pradesh have faced heavy losses since the beginning of this year. Non-payment of dues from the state’s sugar mills has forced them to sell their cane at extremely low prices to small-scale jiggery units that stay in business till Holi
A jiggery unit of Baghpat district, Uttar Pradesh. Sugarcane farmers and cutters in Uttar Pradesh have faced heavy losses since the beginning of this year. Non-payment of dues from the state’s sugar mills has forced them to sell their cane at extremely low prices to small-scale jiggery units that stay in business till Holi
A jiggery unit of Baghpat district, Uttar Pradesh. Sugarcane farmers and cutters in Uttar Pradesh have faced heavy losses since the beginning of this year. Non-payment of dues from the state’s sugar mills has forced them to sell their cane at extremely low prices to small-scale jiggery units that stay in business till Holi
A jiggery unit of Baghpat district, Uttar Pradesh. Sugarcane farmers and cutters in Uttar Pradesh have faced heavy losses since the beginning of this year. Non-payment of dues from the state’s sugar mills has forced them to sell their cane at extremely low prices to small-scale jiggery units that stay in business till Holi
A jiggery unit of Baghpat district, Uttar Pradesh. Sugarcane farmers and cutters in Uttar Pradesh have faced heavy losses since the beginning of this year. Non-payment of dues from the state’s sugar mills has forced them to sell their cane at extremely low prices to small-scale jiggery units that stay in business till Holi
A jiggery unit of Baghpat district, Uttar Pradesh. Sugarcane farmers and cutters in Uttar Pradesh have faced heavy losses since the beginning of this year. Non-payment of dues from the state’s sugar mills has forced them to sell their cane at extremely low prices to small-scale jiggery units that stay in business till Holi
A jiggery unit of Baghpat district, Uttar Pradesh. Sugarcane farmers and cutters in Uttar Pradesh have faced heavy losses since the beginning of this year. Non-payment of dues from the state’s sugar mills has forced them to sell their cane at extremely low prices to small-scale jiggery units that stay in business till Holi
A coal mine worker in Dhanbad, Jharkhand, a state that accounted for 17 per cent of India’s coal production in 2020-21. In May this year, the Union government has allowed existing mines to increase production capacity by 50 per cent within the same lease area without a revised environmental assessment or public consultation, to address the power crisis across the country due to a shortage of coal and fuel. The Centre has also instructed miners to accelerate output before the onset of the monsoon in late June.
A coal mine worker in Dhanbad, Jharkhand, a state that accounted for 17 per cent of India’s coal production in 2020-21. In May this year, the Union government has allowed existing mines to increase production capacity by 50 per cent within the same lease area without a revised environmental assessment or public consultation, to address the power crisis across the country due to a shortage of coal and fuel. The Centre has also instructed miners to accelerate output before the onset of the monsoon in late June.
A coal mine worker in Dhanbad, Jharkhand, a state that accounted for 17 per cent of India’s coal production in 2020-21. In May this year, the Union government has allowed existing mines to increase production capacity by 50 per cent within the same lease area without a revised environmental assessment or public consultation, to address the power crisis across the country due to a shortage of coal and fuel. The Centre has also instructed miners to accelerate output before the onset of the monsoon in late June.
A coal mine worker in Dhanbad, Jharkhand, a state that accounted for 17 per cent of India’s coal production in 2020-21. In May this year, the Union government has allowed existing mines to increase production capacity by 50 per cent within the same lease area without a revised environmental assessment or public consultation, to address the power crisis across the country due to a shortage of coal and fuel. The Centre has also instructed miners to accelerate output before the onset of the monsoon in late June.
A coal mine worker in Dhanbad, Jharkhand, a state that accounted for 17 per cent of India’s coal production in 2020-21. In May this year, the Union government has allowed existing mines to increase production capacity by 50 per cent within the same lease area without a revised environmental assessment or public consultation, to address the power crisis across the country due to a shortage of coal and fuel. The Centre has also instructed miners to accelerate output before the onset of the monsoon in late June.
A coal mine worker in Dhanbad, Jharkhand, a state that accounted for 17 per cent of India’s coal production in 2020-21. In May this year, the Union government has allowed existing mines to increase production capacity by 50 per cent within the same lease area without a revised environmental assessment or public consultation, to address the power crisis across the country due to a shortage of coal and fuel. The Centre has also instructed miners to accelerate output before the onset of the monsoon in late June.
A coal mine worker in Dhanbad, Jharkhand, a state that accounted for 17 per cent of India’s coal production in 2020-21. In May this year, the Union government has allowed existing mines to increase production capacity by 50 per cent within the same lease area without a revised environmental assessment or public consultation, to address the power crisis across the country due to a shortage of coal and fuel. The Centre has also instructed miners to accelerate output before the onset of the monsoon in late June.
A coal mine worker in Dhanbad, Jharkhand, a state that accounted for 17 per cent of India’s coal production in 2020-21. In May this year, the Union government has allowed existing mines to increase production capacity by 50 per cent within the same lease area without a revised environmental assessment or public consultation, to address the power crisis across the country due to a shortage of coal and fuel. The Centre has also instructed miners to accelerate output before the onset of the monsoon in late June.
A coal mine worker in Dhanbad, Jharkhand, a state that accounted for 17 per cent of India’s coal production in 2020-21. In May this year, the Union government has allowed existing mines to increase production capacity by 50 per cent within the same lease area without a revised environmental assessment or public consultation, to address the power crisis across the country due to a shortage of coal and fuel. The Centre has also instructed miners to accelerate output before the onset of the monsoon in late June.
A coal mine worker in Dhanbad, Jharkhand, a state that accounted for 17 per cent of India’s coal production in 2020-21. In May this year, the Union government has allowed existing mines to increase production capacity by 50 per cent within the same lease area without a revised environmental assessment or public consultation, to address the power crisis across the country due to a shortage of coal and fuel. The Centre has also instructed miners to accelerate output before the onset of the monsoon in late June.
With Delhi facing a heatwave since the onset of summer, water levels in the Yamuna are critically low, threatening supplies to parts of the national capital. Officials with the Delhi Jal Board said on April 30 that the water level in the Wazirabad pond, an important reservoir of the Yamuna, has dropped by 20cm, affecting its daily lifting of nearly 3,400 litres per second. To replenish the pond, the Board has approached Haryana to release 4,250litres of water per second through the river until the monsoon.
With Delhi facing a heatwave since the onset of summer, water levels in the Yamuna are critically low, threatening supplies to parts of the national capital. Officials with the Delhi Jal Board said on April 30 that the water level in the Wazirabad pond, an important reservoir of the Yamuna, has dropped by 20cm, affecting its daily lifting of nearly 3,400 litres per second. To replenish the pond, the Board has approached Haryana to release 4,250litres of water per second through the river until the monsoon.
With Delhi facing a heatwave since the onset of summer, water levels in the Yamuna are critically low, threatening supplies to parts of the national capital. Officials with the Delhi Jal Board said on April 30 that the water level in the Wazirabad pond, an important reservoir of the Yamuna, has dropped by 20cm, affecting its daily lifting of nearly 3,400 litres per second. To replenish the pond, the Board has approached Haryana to release 4,250litres of water per second through the river until the monsoon.
With Delhi facing a heatwave since the onset of summer, water levels in the Yamuna are critically low, threatening supplies to parts of the national capital. Officials with the Delhi Jal Board said on April 30 that the water level in the Wazirabad pond, an important reservoir of the Yamuna, has dropped by 20cm, affecting its daily lifting of nearly 3,400 litres per second. To replenish the pond, the Board has approached Haryana to release 4,250litres of water per second through the river until the monsoon.
With Delhi facing a heatwave since the onset of summer, water levels in the Yamuna are critically low, threatening supplies to parts of the national capital. Officials with the Delhi Jal Board said on April 30 that the water level in the Wazirabad pond, an important reservoir of the Yamuna, has dropped by 20cm, affecting its daily lifting of nearly 3,400 litres per second. To replenish the pond, the Board has approached Haryana to release 4,250litres of water per second through the river until the monsoon.
With Delhi facing a heatwave since the onset of summer, water levels in the Yamuna are critically low, threatening supplies to parts of the national capital. Officials with the Delhi Jal Board said on April 30 that the water level in the Wazirabad pond, an important reservoir of the Yamuna, has dropped by 20cm, affecting its daily lifting of nearly 3,400 litres per second. To replenish the pond, the Board has approached Haryana to release 4,250litres of water per second through the river until the monsoon.
With Delhi facing a heatwave since the onset of summer, water levels in the Yamuna are critically low, threatening supplies to parts of the national capital. Officials with the Delhi Jal Board said on April 30 that the water level in the Wazirabad pond, an important reservoir of the Yamuna, has dropped by 20cm, affecting its daily lifting of nearly 3,400 litres per second. To replenish the pond, the Board has approached Haryana to release 4,250litres of water per second through the river until the monsoon.