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National youth leadership moot begins

National youth leadership moot begins July 10, 2021 ABBOTTABAD: Provincial Minister for Labour and Culture Shaukat Yousafzai said on Friday that the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government was taking tangible steps to develop tourist spots and boost tourism in the province. “Prime Minister Imran Khan is determined to invest in tourism sector to attract more tourists to the scenic places in the country,” he said while speaking at the three-day National Youth Leadership Conference 2021 here. The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Culture and Tourism Authority and National Youth Assembly has jointly organised the conference. A large number of youths from across the country are participating in the conference. The youths will be trained and informed about the steps to promote tourism, Billion Tree Tsunami, interest-free loan for businesses, industry and others.

Climate change is making it worse - Newspaper

PAKISTAN earlier this year hosted the World Environment Day in partnership with the United Nations Environment Programme as part of efforts to raise awareness and tackle the problem of climate change. This year the theme was Ecosystem Restoration, and it marked the launch of the UN Decade of Restoration. During the event, Pakistan urged the developed nations to come forward and help the most vulnerable nations by establishing a Green Fund. Currently, climate change is a major existential threat to humanity, accelerated by massive carbon emissions, fossil fuels, deforestation and greenhouse gases, leading to global warming, which, in turn, causes melting glaciers, rising sea levels, changing rain patterns, droughts, flooding and frequent heatwaves. All this threatens food security.

Greatest threat

Greatest threat July 9, 2021 Climate change is the greatest threat to our planet. Unregulated human activities have had devastating effects on the planet. Today, we have reached the point where the amount of greenhouse gasses in the air is more than what it ever was in three million years. These greenhouse gasses increase the temperature of our environment, resulting in rapid glacier melting all over the world. Pakistan is also witnessing climate change-induced destruction and devastation. Even though it contributes less than one percent of the world’s greenhouse gases, it is most likely to be affected by global warming. Southern Pakistan, especially Sindh, has been facing heatwaves for many years. Floods have not only displaced about 20 million people and their properties but also affected the Indus River basin by heavy monsoon rains. Coastal areas of Karachi, Badin and Thatta have also been threatened because of rising sea levels. The major sources of greenhouse gas emissions

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