Punjab sets up Pakistan Pavilion at COP30 in Brazil to highlight climate initiatives

Punjab sets up Pakistan Pavilion at COP30 in Brazil to highlight climate initiatives
Picture of Pakistan's Punjab pavilion at the COP30 conference in Belém, Brazil, shared by Punjab's minister of planning and development on November 10, 2025. (@Marriyum_A/X)
Short Url
Updated 34 min 33 sec ago

Punjab sets up Pakistan Pavilion at COP30 in Brazil to highlight climate initiatives

Punjab sets up Pakistan Pavilion at COP30 in Brazil to highlight climate initiatives
  • Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz arrived in Belém, Brazil, last week to attend global conference on climate
  • Nawaz will brief COP30 participants about Punjab’s flagship climate projects, meet world leaders at global summit

ISLAMABAD: The Punjab government has set up a ‘Pakistan Pavilion’ at the UN Conference of Parties (COP) 30 summit in Brazil to highlight climate initiatives undertaken by the provincial government, state media reported on Tuesday.

Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz arrived in Belém, Brazil, last week to attend the COP30 summit. Negotiators, scientists, and civil society have gathered in the Brazilian city from Nov. 6-21 to discuss priority actions to tackle climate change. The COP30 will focus on the efforts needed to limit the global temperature increase to 1.5°C, the presentation of new national action plans (NDCs) and the progress on finance pledges made at COP29.

Nawaz heads the government in Punjab, a province reeling from the devastating effects of climate change such as floods and toxic smog. Over 130 were killed and 4.5 million people were affected after torrential rains and floodwaters released by India caused deluges in Pakistan’s breadbasket province. Meanwhile Lahore, the provincial capital of Punjab, regularly ranks among the world’s most polluted cities during winter season every year, according to Swiss monitoring agency IQAir.

“Punjab government has set up ‘Pakistan Pavilion’ titled ‘From the Indus to the Amazon’ at COP30 Conference in Brazil where countries from around the world have also set up their pavilions,” state broadcaster Radio Pakistan reported.

The state media said big screens have been installed in the pavilion, where steps taken by Punjab to protect the climate during the last one-and-a-half years have been highlighted.

“Documentaries of the steps taken by Punjab government in this regard are also being screened at the pavilion,” the state media reported.

The provincial government said last week Nawaz will brief COP30 participants about Punjab’s flagship projects and meet world leaders at the summit. She will also brief attendees about the “Suthra Punjab” (Clean Punjab) initiative, which Punjab says is Pakistan’s largest province-wide sanitation and waste management program.

Pakistan is considered one of the worst affected countries due to climate change, despite contributing less than one percent to global greenhouse gas emissions. The country has suffered irregular weather patterns over the years which includes heatwaves, droughts, and torrential rains.

Catastrophic floods in 2022 killed nearly 1,700 people, submerging a third of the country at one point and inflicting over $30 billion in damages as per government estimates.


Delhi police says car blast being probed under anti-terrorism law

Delhi police says car blast being probed under anti-terrorism law
Updated 7 sec ago

Delhi police says car blast being probed under anti-terrorism law

Delhi police says car blast being probed under anti-terrorism law
  • Explosion near historic Red Fort in Indian capital killed at least eight people, injured 20 on Monday evening
  • India has in past blamed Pakistan for “terrorist” attacks on its soil, leading to tensions between the rivals

NEW DELHI, India : Indian police are probing a deadly car blast in the capital Delhi under a law used to fight “terrorism,” an officer said on Tuesday, as forensic experts sought evidence to establish the cause of the first such blast in the city in more than a decade.

The law, called the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, is India’s main anti-terrorism law. It is used to investigate and prosecute acts related to “terrorism” and activities that threaten the sovereignty and integrity of the country.

The explosion near the historic Red Fort on Monday evening killed at least eight people and injured 20, a rare occurrence in recent years in the heavily guarded city of more than 30 million people. Several states and key facilities across the country were placed on high alert.

SEARCH FOR EVIDENCE

Deputy Commissioner of Police Raja Banthia said that Delhi police had registered a case under the anti-terrorism law as well as the explosives act and other criminal laws.

“Investigation is at a preliminary stage and any comment on it will be too premature,” Banthia told reporters.

Near the site of the blast in the city’s old quarters, a busy market and tourist area, most shops that shut soon after the explosion were yet to open in the early hours of Tuesday.

Forensic experts were seen scouring the site of the blast, which has been sealed since Monday night and traffic restrictions imposed in the area.

Police said a slow-moving car which stopped at a traffic signal exploded just before 7 p.m. (1330 GMT). Nearby vehicles were also badly damaged.

The explosion left behind mangled bodies and the wreckage of several cars on a congested street near a metro station in the old quarter of Delhi.

There was no immediate information on the occupants of the car, who were presumed to have been killed. Police said they were tracing the owner of the car.

Federal Home Minister Amit Shah said on Monday “all angles” were being investigated and security agencies would come to a conclusion soon.

Relatives of the victims gathered outside the nearby Lok Nayak hospital to identify the bodies of their loved ones.

“We at least know that my cousin is here, whether he is injured or not or the extent of his injury, we don’t know anything,” said a distressed relative who did not want to be named.

MODI GOES TO BHUTAN

The Red Fort, known locally as Lal Qila, is a sprawling, 17th-century Mughal-era edifice melding Persian and Indian architectural styles, and is visited by tourists throughout the year.

The prime minister also addresses the nation from the fort’s ramparts every year on August 15, India’s independence day.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi flew out to Bhutan on Tuesday morning on a scheduled visit to the Himalayan neighbor.

In April, Modi cut short a visit to and returned home after 26 men were killed in an attack on Hindu tourists in the Jammu and Kashmir territory.

New Delhi blamed that attack on what it called “terrorists” backed by Pakistan, a charge denied by Islamabad. The crisis led to the worst military conflict between the nuclear-armed rivals in decades before they agreed to a ceasefire after four days.