News

Ancient coral fossils from the remote Seychelles islands have unveiled a dramatic warning for our future—sea levels can rise ...
Northern Minerals, a supplier of rare earths to a refinery being built by Iluka Resources in Western Australia, became a ...
State-run Mazagon Dock Shipbuilders Limited (MDL) has decided to acquire a controlling stake in Sri Lanka's Colombo Dockyard ...
286. Once seen as a relic of colonialism, the Chagos Archipelago with Diego Garcia has evolved into a flashpoint in global strategic competition. Decades of dispute over the Chagos Archipelago in the ...
Sri Lanka is once again facing a significant marine environmental crisis, as tiny plastic pellets, commonly known as nurdles, ...
Australia has sued a China-linked UAE firm over alleged foreign investment breaches involving rare earths miner Northern ...
After the Bay of Pigs invasion, some American journalists were distrustful of nations that had links with the Soviet Union or China. Ceylon and Nepal qualified.
China dominates the global rare earths industry—and it’s not even close. A fight is already underway to lay claim to this sunken island’s natural riches.
Newly uncovered evidence from fossil corals found on an island chain in the Indian Ocean suggests that sea levels could rise even more steeply in our warming world than previously thought.
On occasion, it is of vital importance to consider how little we know about the spinning rock we all live on. Take coral ...