Though the purpose of the Breathe Pakistan conference, held in Islamabad on Friday, was to highlight the effects of climate change on one country, Pakistan, it only served to show that climate change ...
Pakistan's public debt remained above the sustainable level in the last fiscal year, violating an Act of Parliament due to higher interest expenses, which also neutralised the benefits of exchange ...
Alabama’s congressional map is at stake in a federal trial beginning Monday to decide if the state will keep the new ...
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi will meet U.S. President Donald Trump at the White House on Thursday, marking their first ...
Trump's statement came after he signed an executive order to withdraw the United States from the Paris Climate Treaty -- just ...
Geert Wilders explains why Europe's anti-Israel sentiment may no longer be on the rise, and why the political wave led by ...
The Jameel Prize exhibition explores the interdependency of community, landscape and labour, where home is offered as healing ...
Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif emphasized the need for more predictable and grant-based funding for developing countries like ...
Pakistan is not the reason for the fires in Los Angeles or the drought and desertification spreading across the world. Yet, it is countries like Pakistan that are paying the price.” These words from ...
CLIMATE change is a pressing reality for Pakistan, directly impacting millions of lives. Ranked as the fifth most vulnerable country to climate change despite contributing just 0.88 per cent of ...
ISLAMABAD: Climate change has significantly disrupted education worldwide, with students in Pakistan losing 97 school days — 54 per cent of a typical academic year — between 2023 and 2024.
ISLAMABAD: Climate change poses an existential threat to Pakistan, requiring immediate and coordinated action from both the government and the corporate sector to build national resilience.