Can the Earth produce enough food to feed nine or ten billion people without irreparably damaging the environment? And how can that be accomplished in a world facing a growing scarcity of freshwater?
TVE Asia Pacific (TVEAP) has started releasing online a large collection of Sinhala and Tamil language versioned educational video films on environment, health and development topics.
Several documentary films produced by TVE Asia Pacific (TVEAP) have been selected to be showcased in the Green Unplugged Film Festival which opened online this month.
A media briefing organized by the New Delhi-based Centre for Science and Environment (CSE) and TVEAP brought Sri Lankan journalists together with senior officials, experts and activists working on air quality issues.
A new film series produced by TVE Asia Pacific (TVEAP) highlights one way forward: tap the ingenuity and expertise of small farmers in the developing countries.
Two environmental films produced by TVE Asia Pacific (TVEAP) have just won the "Earth Vision Award" at the 19th Earth Vision Global Environmental Film Festival in Tokyo, Japan.
TVE Asia Pacific (TVEAP) is once again partnering with the British Council to host the Wildscreen international film festival in Colombo, Sri Lanka, on 17 – 19 February 2011.
The year 2011 has been designated as the International Year of Chemistry (IYC) to “commemorate the achievements of chemistry, and its contributions to humankind”.
TV producers and broadcasters around the world have been invited to submit entries for a newly established World Television Award on science and environment.
The China Environmental Protection Foundation, in association with DDB China Group has won the Grand Prix at the 2010 Global Green Awards for Creativity in Sustainability.
Both researchers and journalists covering their work in the mass media face challenges in winning the public trust, said TVE Asia Pacific Director Nalaka Gunawardene at an international workshop in London this week.
Humanity’s response to the climate crisis has so far been organised on two major planks: mitigation and adaptation. Communication and education should be formally recognised as the third plank.