Author name: Muskan Mushtaq

Muskan Mushtaq is a passionate environmental researcher and a Zoology postgraduate from the Central University of Kashmir. She holds a strong passion for sustainability, wildlife and environmental conservation, and for combining scientific research with practical fieldwork. With this commitment, she aspires to build a purposeful career in field ecological and environmental sustainability. She is currently a TRIP Intern.

Dal Lake Faces Ecological Collapse Amid Sewage Inflow

Over time, the continuous inflow of sewage has resulted in visible and persistent degradation of the Dal Lake. The water has blackened; there is foul odour and excessive weed growth across different sections of the lake. For nearly fifteen years, Dal Lake has been silently absorbing the waste of a growing city—untreated sewage, household discharge, […]

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Dry Taps and Vanishing Snow: Inside Srinagar’s Water Crisis

Most households in Srinagar receive water only once every two to three days, often for limited hours, forcing families to store water or rely on costly private tankers. Srinagar is experiencing an acute and recurring drinking water shortage, marked by irregular supply, low pressure, and frequent dry taps across several residential areas. These water supply

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Wular Lake’s Lotus Blossoms Again: A Wetland Revival Story

Unchecked pollution, untreated waste inflows, shoreline encroachments, blocked hydrological channels, and massive silt deposition had gradually suffocated Wular’s natural vegetation zones. As lotus growth collapsed, an entire ecological system and vital income stream for lake-dependent communities disappeared with it. However, in 2025, this long silence was finally broken as lotus blossomed across sections of Wular.

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Jhelum River in Crisis: The Alarming Decline of Kashmir’s Lifeline

The Jhelum’s story is both a warning and a reminder that a river can carry a civilisation only as long as the civilisation cares for it. If pollution continues unchecked, the damage will not only erase aquatic life but also erase the memory of a city built around water. The Jhelum River, once the shimmering

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