India will achieve net zero carbon emissions by 2070, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said at the COP26 summit in the Scottish city of Glasgow on Monday, spelling out the target for the first time.
Thrill-seekers can get back to nature on an off-road journey in the Scottish Highlands.
Wildnis team members setting up camp amid a field of mountain grass. (Photo courtesy of Wildnis)
Adventurous types looking for a stylish new way to experience Scotland’s great outdoors should pencil in a journey with Wildnis, which is launching the first of its luxury camp-based expeditions in the Scottish Highlands this month. Founded by former British military officers, the company employs a small fleet of upgraded Land Rover Defenders to transport guests (and the tents they’ll sleep in) to remote off-road locales in the Trossachs and Glen Coe region, where activities will range from scrambling along ridgelines and abseiling down sheer cliffs, to pack-rafting across a secluded loch and sea kayaking off wild beaches. Each evening is spent at a mobile base camp where the day’s exertions are rewarded with drams of single malt and gourmet feasts prepared over an open fire by a Michelin-train