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New Delhi: Govt on Monday imposed a 12% provisional safeguard

Monday’s session added about Rs 6.25 lakh crore to investors’

NEW DELHI: Amid intense lobbying to hold up quality control

NEW DELHI: Core sector grew marginally in March on the

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New Delhi: Govt on Monday imposed a 12% provisional safeguard duty for 200 days on five steel product categories to protect domestic players from surge in imports. The decision follows

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NEW DELHI: Amid intense lobbying to hold up quality control orders (QCOs), commerce and industry minister Piyush Goyal said the norms play a strategic role. “These QCOs will play a

NEW DELHI: Core sector grew marginally in March on the back of expansion in electricity, steel and cement output, while crude oil and natural gas contracted.Data released by the commerce

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Monday’s session added about Rs 6.25 lakh crore to investors’ wealth, with BSE’s marketcapitalisation now at Rs 425.9 lakh crore. This, in effect, lifted BSE’s market cap above the $5

NEW DELHI: Core sector grew marginally in March on the back of expansion in electricity, steel and cement output, while crude oil and natural gas contracted.Data released by the commerce

SAN FRANCISCO: Finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman said India is “actively engaging” with the new US administration and hopes to conclude the first tranche of the bilateral trade agreement “positively” by

Gold prices breached the Rs 97,000 per 10 grams level for the first time in futures trade on Monday, surging by Rs 2,111 to hit an all-time high of Rs

NEW DELHI: Google has reached a settlement with the Competition Commission of India (CCI) in a case involving alleged unfair business practices in the Android TV segment. As part of

India’s core infrastructure sectors posted a slower growth of 3.8 per cent in March 2025, compared to 6.3 per cent in the same month a year ago, according to official

Earth’s Strongest Ocean Current Is Slowing Down And It Could Have Devastating Consequences

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Scientists have issued a warning that the world’s strongest ocean current is slowing down due to climate change which could have serious implications such as sea level rise and ocean warming. The Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC), a clockwise current more than four times stronger than the Gulf Stream, plays a pivotal part in the overall climate health of the planet. It influences the uptake of heat and carbon dioxide in the ocean and prevents warmer waters from reaching Antarctica.

The study conducted by researchers at the University of Melbourne and published in Environmental Research Letters shows that current might slow down by around 20 per cent by 2050 in the “high carbon emissions scenario”. This decline is driven by melting ice shelves around Antarctica.

“If this current ‘engine’ breaks down, there could be severe consequences, including more climate variability, with greater extremes in certain regions, and accelerated global warming due to a reduction in the ocean’s capacity to act as a carbon sink,” said Associate Professor Bishakhdatta Gayen, lead researcher of the study in a statement.

Also Read | Arctic Could Witness First Ice-Free Day In 3 Years, Study Reveals

Invasion inĀ Antarctica

The study highlighted that ACC keeps invasive species such as southern bull kelp, shrimp and molluscs from other continents from reaching Antarctica. However, if ACC continues to slow down, there is a higher likelihood such species will make their way onto the fragile Antarctic continent, with a potentially severe impact on the food web. For example, the food choices of Antarctic penguins could be altered.

“The melting ice sheets dump vast quantities of fresh water into the salty ocean. This sudden change in ocean ‘salinity’ has a series of consequences – including the weakening of the sinking of surface ocean water to the deep (called the Antarctic Bottom Water), and, based on this study, a weakening of the strong ocean jet that surrounds Antarctica,” added Mr Gayen.

Notably, the researchers used Australia’s fastest supercomputer and climate simulator, GADI, located at Access National Research Infrastructure in Canberra to produce the damning findings.

“The 2015 Paris Agreement aimed to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels. Many scientists agree that we have already reached this 1.5 degree target, and it is likely to get hotter, with flow-on impacts on Antarctic ice melting,” climate scientist Dr Taimoor Sohail, associated with the study added.




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