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Jakarta Post
Environment

Sumatra floods were 'extinction level' for rare orangutans

Only scientifically classified as a species in 2017, tapanulis are incredibly rare, with fewer than 800 left in the wild, confined to a small range in part of Sumatra.

1 week ago
Environment

Wildlife trade body rejects new eel protections

The vote came at a meeting of signatories to the Convention of International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), a 50-year agreement protecting the world's most endangered animals and plants, and regulating trade in 36,000 species. ...

3 weeks ago
Environment

What did countries agree to at COP30?

In a win for developing countries at COP30, the final agreement "calls for efforts to at least triple adaptation finance by 2035."  ...

3 weeks ago

The Latest

Academia

Indonesia-China cooperation key to economic development

In the last two decades, China has been the most important partner for Indonesia, particularly in economic development, investment and trade.       

2 years ago
Regulations premium

Return of sea sand exports sparks controversy in Indonesia

The government lifted a ban this month on the export of dredged sand that was in place for more than 20 years, in a move it claims will bring in badly needed revenue but that activists say will further degrade the country’s vital marine ecosystems.

2 years ago
Editorial

Plastic is great but too cheap

Microplastics were found in human blood and lungs last year, with the vast majority of participants in a study testing positive for plastic.            

2 years ago
Academia premium

Gender inequality and climate change, a crisis within a crisis

One in six women of reproductive age now have unsafe levels of mercury in their blood.       

2 years ago
Middle East and Africa

As world's poor face 'compounding crises', what could curb risks?

In nations from Somalia to Pakistan, the world's poorest and most fragile communities are facing the harshest impacts of climate change - a reality that is driving worsening poverty, potential for conflict and resentment against major polluters.

2 years ago
Middle East and Africa

S.Africa circles back to shale gas as power crisis drags

South Africa will auction at least 10 new onshore blocks for shale gas exploration in the environmentally sensitive Karoo region, a government official told Reuters, as the country eyes alternative energy sources to ease its worst-ever power crisis.

2 years ago
Americas

Deep in the Amazon, scientists race against time to identify unknown pathogens

The next deadly virus that spreads around the world could easily come from a bat that roosts in or around the caves being explored by Thiago Bernardi Vieira.

2 years ago
Asia & Pacific

Aid groups seek green light from Myanmar junta to access cyclone-hit state

Relief organizations were awaiting clearance from Myanmar's military rulers on Wednesday to access areas of Rakhine State devastated by a deadly cyclone three days ago, and deliver food and medicine to communities in urgent need.

2 years ago
Environment premium

Next five years set to be hottest period ever: UN

It is near-certain that 2023-2027 will be the warmest five-year period ever recorded, the United Nations warned.

2 years ago
Environment

Meteorologists targeted in climate misinfo surge

Users on Twitter and other social media falsely accused Spain's weather agency of engineering a drought, Australia's of doctoring its thermometers and France's of exaggerating global warming through misplaced weather stations.

2 years ago
Middle East and Africa

Sustainable food - not more of it - needed as global hunger soars

As global hunger swiftly rises - by more than a third last year - curbing it will require not growing more food but rethinking broader systems of trade and aid, farming's heavy reliance on fossil fuels, food waste and meat eating, experts said.

2 years ago
Asia & Pacific

Climate-stressed Indian farmers seek to escape debt and suicide

Farmer Ganpatram Bheda, 66, fears he will lose his two acres of land in northwest India after scarce rainfall and extreme cold in recent years hit crop yields, trapping him in a web of loans with little help from the state to overcome his financial woes.

2 years ago
Academia

Let’s invest in indigenous peoples and local communities

In Indonesia and around the world, indigenous peoples and local communities (IP and LC) are on the front lines of the fight to save our planet.

2 years ago
Academia premium

ASEAN Summit and the future of sustainable development in Labuan Bajo

In the community’s view, the government’s decision to bring in private companies to the Komodo National Park is just another strategy to relocate them outside the park.

2 years ago
Regulations premium

Govt allows foreign entities to buy carbon credits from Indonesia

Foreign buyers can purchase carbon credits in Indonesia carbon markets, but they must transact and be registered in Indonesia. 

2 years ago
Archipelago

Oil spills hit Batam coast

The coastal area of Kampung Melayu Nongsa in Batam, Riau Islands, has been contaminated by oil spills that authorities have said were from a tanker that caught fire in Malaysian waters on Monday.

2 years ago
Europe

EU mulls partial exit from energy treaty over climate concerns

The European Union is considering a proposal to quit an international energy treaty that has become mired in climate change concerns, but leave an option for individual countries to stay in an updated version of the accord, a document showed.

2 years ago
Editorial

The deforestation-free label

Categorically opposing the European Union law will make the government lose sight of the opportunities the law will create for Indonesia to improve its forest management and sustainability.              

2 years ago
Science & Tech

Conservation groups sue US regulator over SpaceX launches

US conservation groups announced they are suing the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) for not doing enough to protect the environment from SpaceX's Starship program.

2 years ago
Environment

Chewed for millennia, coca leaf gets flavorsome makeover in Bolivia

Bitter and tough, the coca leaf chewed throughout the South American Andes for thousands of years as a natural pick-me-up has been getting an appetizing makeover in Bolivia.

2 years ago
Environment premium

Colombia grapples with Escobar's hippopotamus legacy

In their homeland in Africa, they are responsible for more human deaths than almost any other animal, but in Colombia, hippopotami have become loved members of the local community.

2 years ago
Editorial

Ranking isn’t everything

The country achieved the fourth-highest gross domestic product (GDP) growth among the Group of 20 economies last year at 5.3 percent, and in April the International Monetary Fund revised its forecast for the current year.            

2 years ago
Asia & Pacific

WHO says contaminated cough syrup made in India found in Western Pacific

Contaminated cough syrup made by an Indian company has been found in the Marshall Islands and Micronesia, the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Tuesday, after a spate of child deaths linked to other syrups in some countries last year.

2 years ago
Asia & Pacific

Thai authorities issue extreme heat warnings for dozens of provinces

Thai authorities on Saturday warned residents across large swathes of country, including the capital Bangkok, to avoid going outdoors due to extreme heat.

2 years ago
Health premium

Every breath a struggle, as air pollution harms health in Thailand

An elderly patient lies struggling for breath in a Bangkok hospital as Thailand battles a "drastic increase" in respiratory problems caused by a spike in air pollution.

2 years ago
Americas

In meeting with big economies, Biden announces more funds to fight climate change

President Joe Biden announced plans to increase US funding to help developing countries fight climate change and curb deforestation in Brazil's Amazon rainforest during a meeting on Thursday with leaders from the world's largest economies.

2 years ago
Academia premium

Helping Papua escape from its resource curse

In addition to marginalization and other limitations affecting indigenous Papuans, a “weak entrepreneurial spirit” has contributed to the dominant roles of migrants in economic sectors in the region.      

2 years ago
Environment premium

Can music festivals actually go green?

Coachella brings adrenaline-fueled sets to hundreds of thousands of festival-goers who gather in the California desert -- and it also leaves behind a lot of trash.

2 years ago
Middle East and Africa

Brazil, UAE seal climate, biofuels deals as leaders meet

The countries said in a joint statement the leaders had discussed a range of subjects including trade, technology, defense, aviation and food security.

2 years ago
Europe

As the climate suffers, enforcement needed for corporate green pledges

Pledges to slash climate-changing emissions to nearly zero now cover more than 90% of the world's economy. But emissions themselves are still rising, despite scientists warning they must plunge by nearly half this decade to keep people safe.

2 years ago
Page: 11

Today's ePost

Fri, December 19, 2025

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