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భారత్​ చేరుకున్న ప్రధాని మోదీ

జాపాన్​ జీ-20 సదస్సులో పాల్గొన్న ప్రధాని నరేంద్ర మోదీ... తిరిగి స్వదేశం చేరుకున్నారు. మూడు రోజుల ఈ పర్యటనలో ఆయన వివిధ దేశాధినేతలతో పలు అంతర్జాతీయ అంశాలపై చర్చలు జరిపారు.

భారత్​ చేరుకున్న ప్రధాని మోదీ
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Published : Jun 29, 2019, 9:00 PM IST

Updated : Jun 29, 2019, 10:26 PM IST

భారత్​ చేరుకున్న ప్రధాని మోదీ

జపాన్​ వేదికగా జరిగిన జీ-20 సదస్సులో పాల్గొన్న ప్రధాని నరేంద్ర మోదీ ఇవాళ భారత్ చేరుకున్నారు. మూడు రోజుల ఈ పర్యటనలో భాగంగా వివిధ దేశాధినేతలతో పలు కీలక విషయాలపై చర్చలు జరిపారు.

జీ-20 సదస్సులో...

జీ-20 సదస్సులో ప్రధాని నరేంద్ర మోదీ... యోగా, ఆయుష్మాన్ భారత్​ గురించి సభ్యదేశాలకు వివరించారు. మహిళా సాధికారత, లింగ సమానత్వం ఆవశ్యకతను తెలియజేశారు.

వాతావరణ మార్పులు, స్వచ్ఛ ఇంధనం, పర్యావరణ పరిరక్షణ, వ్యవసాయం, పర్యాటకం, పేదలకు క్రమంగా సామాజిక, ఆర్థిక భద్రత కల్పించే అంశాలను సదస్సులో ప్రస్తావించారు మోదీ.

ఇదీ చూడండి: మహారాష్ట్రను వణికిస్తున్న భారీ వర్షాలు

భారత్​ చేరుకున్న ప్రధాని మోదీ

జపాన్​ వేదికగా జరిగిన జీ-20 సదస్సులో పాల్గొన్న ప్రధాని నరేంద్ర మోదీ ఇవాళ భారత్ చేరుకున్నారు. మూడు రోజుల ఈ పర్యటనలో భాగంగా వివిధ దేశాధినేతలతో పలు కీలక విషయాలపై చర్చలు జరిపారు.

జీ-20 సదస్సులో...

జీ-20 సదస్సులో ప్రధాని నరేంద్ర మోదీ... యోగా, ఆయుష్మాన్ భారత్​ గురించి సభ్యదేశాలకు వివరించారు. మహిళా సాధికారత, లింగ సమానత్వం ఆవశ్యకతను తెలియజేశారు.

వాతావరణ మార్పులు, స్వచ్ఛ ఇంధనం, పర్యావరణ పరిరక్షణ, వ్యవసాయం, పర్యాటకం, పేదలకు క్రమంగా సామాజిక, ఆర్థిక భద్రత కల్పించే అంశాలను సదస్సులో ప్రస్తావించారు మోదీ.

ఇదీ చూడండి: మహారాష్ట్రను వణికిస్తున్న భారీ వర్షాలు

AUSTRALIA TREE THREAT
SOURCE: AuBC
RESTRICTIONS: AP Clients Only/No access Australia
LENGTH: 3.04
SHOTLIST:
AuBC **No access Australia**
Capertee Valley, New South Wales, Australia – 26 May 2019
1. Various of recently planted trees
2.SOUNDBITE (English) Deb Stevenson, Botanist Ecologist:
++PART OVERLAID BY PREVIOUS SHOT++
"The trees are too close together, they haven't planted much understory and basically it's going to end up looking like a plantation, a forest plantation."
3. Wide of bushland
4. Pan left of old cattle yard in disrepair
5. Various of land and newly planted trees
6. SOUNDBITE (English) Deb Stevenson, Botanist Ecologist:
++PART OVERLAID BY PREVIOUS SHOT++
"It looks to me like a revegetation project that they might do on a very degraded mine site or even on degraded pastoral properties. That's not what this is."
7. Various of scientists looking at land
8. Wide of land
9. Various of Regent Honeyeater bird
10. SOUNDBITE (English) Debbie Andrew, Fauna Ecologist:
++PART OVERLAID BY PREVIOUS SHOT++
"The densities of trees being put into the ground, 800 trees per hectare, is far in excess of what the CSIRO (the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation) recommends of 30 mature trees per hectare."
11. Various of land and new trees
12. Various of signs
13. Close of small bird flying over rocky area
14. Wide of ducks in grass
15. Wide of kangaroos in grass
16. SOUNDBITE (English) Brett Stevenson, Geomorphologist:
"You get paid for the amount of carbon sequestration. The more sequestration you can get, the more return you get."
17. SOUNDBITE (English) Debbie Andrew, Fauna Ecologist:
"The main goal of the project is to actually plant as many trees as you can fit into the ground. It doesn't appear to be a project about habitat restoration."
18. Various of area where trees have been planted
19. Wide of birds sitting on leafless branches
20. Wide of kangaroo in field
21. SOUNDBITE (English) Brett Stevenson, Geomorphologist:
++PART OVERLAID BY PREVIOUS SHOT++
"I don't want to see this happen in other precious ecological areas."
22. SOUNDBITE (English) Debbie Andrew, Fauna Ecologist:
"We need to review this project."
23. Various of surrounding flora and fauna
LEADIN:
A new tree planting scheme in Australia that was meant to provide a vital habitat for endangered birds could end up doing more harm than good.
Scientists claim the trees have been planted too close together at Capertee National Park. The sheer density of the revegetation could end up threatening wildlife.
  
STORYLINE:
The terraces in this national park have been made by heavy machinery.
Ordered rows of trees growing close together, planted by the New South Wales National Parks and Wildlife Service.
But it seems there's a problem.
"The trees are too close together, they haven't planted much understory and basically it's going to end up looking like a plantation, a forest plantation," says botanist ecologist Deb Stevenson.
The Capertee National Park was created from an old cattle farm in 2010 and now draws bird lovers.
But due to overgrazing, habitat restoration was deemed necessary.
"It looks to me like a revegetation project that they might do on a very degraded mine site or even on degraded pastoral properties. That's not what this is," says Stevenson.
Scientists believe the plants will destroy the open woodland environment, putting at risk the local fauna, including the endangered Regent Honeyeater.
"The densities of trees being put into the ground, 800 trees per hectare, is far in excess of what the CSIRO (the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation) recommends of 30 mature trees per hectare," says fauna ecologist Debbie Andrew.
The tree planting was funded by a 1.5 million-dollar (AUD) grant and done by a publicly listed company, called CO2 Australia.
The scheme also receives Commonwealth Revenue for selling off its carbon credits, and it's not the only one.
A 2018 policy document, presented to the National Parks and Wildlife Advisory Council, shows that eleven other trial projects were already underway in other national parks with another five proposed.
It also suggests schemes across 30 sites could be worth almost 60 million dollars (AUD), with tree planting across all national parks a potential funding opportunity worth 2 billion (AUD), all from a Commonwealth Emissions Reduction Fund.
"You get paid for the amount of carbon sequestration. The more sequestration you can get, the more return you get," says geomorphologist Brett Stevenson.
"The main goal of the project is to actually plant as many trees as you can fit into the ground. It doesn't appear to be a project about habitat restoration," says Andrew.
In a statement, the Environment Department says it's tree planting projects were "highly successful, boosting revenue for public land management and biodiversity conservation."
It said the need for threatened species like the Regent Honeyeater had been "carefully considered."
"I don't want to see this happen in other precious ecological areas," says Brett Stevenson.
"We need to review this project," says Andrew.
CO2 Australia says concerns about overplanting are addressed in the projects' design, which allows for the natural die off of some trees.
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Last Updated : Jun 29, 2019, 10:26 PM IST
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