A recent assessment estimates that Jakarta’s land is sinking at an average rate of 3.5cm per year. Read more at ...
Jakarta is sinking by centimeters each year while floods, pollution, and rapid urbanization push the city toward a breaking point. This video explores how history, climate change, and government ...
Cities across the world are slowly sinking due to groundwater overuse and rapid urban growth, with Indian cities like Chennai ...
JAKARTA, Jan 13 (Reuters) - Indonesia's Prabowo Subianto reiterated his commitment to a $32 billion project to build the ...
The United Nations announces the world has entered the “water bankruptcy era,” where global water sources have deteriorated ...
JAKARTA — Indonesia’s Prabowo Subianto reiterated his commitment to a $32-billion project to build the country’s new capital ...
Destinations once considered timeless are now facing a rapid countdown. From the sinking streets of Venice to the melting ...
The assessment spanning 40 delta regions worldwide has identified the three in eastern India among 19 where land subsidence — ...
The government said Prabowo’s visit showed his ‘commitment to ensuring the development in the area proceeds according to plan ...
Scientists say 'water bankruptcy' captures a reality where natural systems can no longer recover, and where old approaches to water use no longer work.
Rising sea levels are no longer a distant warning but a visible reality reshaping coastlines around the world. In many beach ...
The concept of building a new capital, 1,300km (800 miles) away from Jakarta, was first proposed in 2019 as the city became ...