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Super El Niño: How a Powerful Pacific Ocean Event Can Reshape the World and Transform India’s Climate, Economy, Health, and Ecology

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H uman beings often experience weather as something intensely local. Rain falls over one village while the next remains dry. A heat wave grips one state while another enjoys mild temperatures. A farmer worries about delayed monsoon showers, a city fears dwindling reservoirs, and a fisherman notices unfamiliar changes in the sea. These experiences may seem separate, yet many are connected to forces operating across the entire planet. Among the most powerful of these forces is El Niño , a recurring climate phenomenon rooted in the tropical Pacific Ocean. When El Niño becomes exceptionally strong, it is commonly described as a Super El Niño . Though it begins thousands of kilometres away from India, it can influence rainfall, heat, drought, storms, food prices, ecosystems, public health, and economic stability across continents. A Super El Niño is not merely a warmer patch of ocean water. It is a large-scale reorganisation of the coupled ocean–atmosphere system that alters winds, cloud ...

Delhi–Dehradun Expressway: A Transformational Corridor of Mobility, Logistics, Fuel Efficiency and Environmental Change

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The Delhi–Dehradun Expressway represents one of the most significant recent transport infrastructure developments in northern India. More than a road project, it is a strategic economic corridor designed to redefine how people, goods and services move between the National Capital Region and Uttarakhand. By sharply reducing travel time between Delhi and Dehradun, the expressway is expected to influence tourism, freight logistics, pilgrimage travel, regional investment, emergency response systems and environmental conditions across the wider corridor. For decades, the journey between Delhi and Dehradun was often marked by congestion, slow urban stretches, bottlenecks through towns, unpredictable delays during holidays, and long travel hours. The new access-controlled expressway changes that equation by offering faster, safer and more reliable movement. At the same time, it also raises deeper questions regarding carbon emissions, land-use change, ecological fragmentation and long-term tra...

Subsurface Urban Heat Islands: Hidden Warming Beneath Cities

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Cities are commonly recognized as warmer than their surrounding rural landscapes. This phenomenon, known as the Urban Heat Island (UHI) effect, has traditionally been studied through elevated air temperatures, overheated roads, and heat-retaining buildings. Yet this familiar picture captures only the visible portion of a much larger thermal system. Beneath streets, towers, transport corridors, utility networks, and groundwater aquifers, another form of urban warming is developing, slower, less visible, but potentially more persistent. This phenomenon is known as the Subsurface Urban Heat Island (SSUHI) . Subsurface urban warming refers to the increase in temperature of soils, sediments, bedrock, groundwater, basements, tunnels, and buried infrastructure beneath urbanized areas relative to surrounding non-urban land. Unlike atmospheric warming, which changes rapidly with weather and season, subsurface warming evolves gradually because soil and rock store heat efficiently. Once heat en...