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  • Ferozepur village lights the way for power conservation

    Zira (Ferozepur), February 17 In what could show light at the end of the tunnel to power-starved Punjab State Electricity Board (PSEB), which spends more than about Rs 2 crore daily to bridge the demand and supply gap of electricity in the state, a village in Ferozepur district is fast on its way to become the first village of the state, and perhaps of the country, to earn the distinction of a power theft-free village. Notably, besides the unavoidable transmission and distribution losses, power thefts give a tough time to PSEB in terms of losses.

  • Thermal plant progress reviewed

    HARYANA Chief Minister Bhupinder Singh Hooda reviewed the progress of the construction work of the 2x600 MW Rajiv Gandhi Thermal Power Plant being set up at Khedar in Hisar. A spokesman of the power department said that the ongoing civil and mechanical works of the mega project were on in full swing. As much as 98 per cent of the piling works had been completed and the work of boiler erection had commenced on December 4 last year. The base raft foundations of the Cooling Towers and Chimney had also been cast. The two units would start generating power by November 2009 and February 2010. On completion of the project, as many as 288 lakh units of electricity per day would be available for the people of Haryana. The spokesman said that the progress of 2x300 MW Deenbandhu Chhotu Ram Thermal Power Project, Yamuna Nagar was also reviewed. It was informed that after synchronization in November 2007, Unit-1 had generated 728 lakh units which had been pumped into the grid. This unit would start com- h; mercial operation in March,2008. The Unit will be synchronized on oil in March, 5l 2008, he informed. Haryana Power Minister Randeep Singh Surjewala was also present on the occasion.

  • Not too poor to watch BBC

    A V Rajwade / New Delhi February 18, 2008 Advertising for the NREGA on the BBC shows just how mindlessly the programme is being implemented.

  • Jute policy high on intent, low on implementation

    The magnitude of the national jute policy introduced three years ago is beyond debate as it has recommended steps to strengthen the farm sector, modernise mills and give a new direction to domestic and global marketing. But unfortunately, as have been the case with earlier government-sponsored packages for the jute industry, the new policy has so far remained only a declaration of good intent.

  • Human hand decisive for oceans

    In one of the most comprehensive looks yet at the oceans, researchers say that humans have "strongly' fouled 41 per cent of the high seas with everything from storm water runoff to shipping waste and that only small polar regions are still untouched. "Almost half of the oceans are in a fairly degraded state, based on what we found,' said Benjamin Halpern, the report's lead author and a marine biologist at the California-based National Centre for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis. "There isn't a spot on the planet that hasn't been touched by humans.' The report, being published Friday in the journal Science and presented at a scientific conference this week in Boston, is designed to summarise how humans are affecting the 70 per cent of the planet covered by the seas. "You just can't manage fisheries alone or try to just manage nutrient runoff or invasive species by themselves. You have to think of them in a more comprehensive context,' said Donald F. Boesch, a professor of marine science and president of the University of Maryland Centre for Environmental Science. The international team of 19 researchers looked at effects from 17 human activities, including commercial fishing, runoff from development, invasive species, industrial pollution, oil rigs and climate change. Their sources included satellite imagery, UN reports on fisheries harvests, estimates of commercial shipping wastes and runoff from pesticide use. "The oceans are in trouble, in a lot of areas and in a lot of ways,' said Andrew Rosenberg, a professor of natural resources at the University of New Hampshire who reviewed the study. Only 3.7 per cent of the oceans have seen little or no effect from human activity and they lie near the North and South poles, the researchers say. The most polluted areas are along the Atlantic's eastern seaboard, as well as in the North Sea, Caribbean, Red Sea, Bering Sea, the Persian Gulf and the China seas. "Hopefully, this is a wakeup call showing what our impacts are on the oceans and what can be done to minimise them,' Halpern said. There have been previous alarms. A $5-million report by the Pew Ocean Commission in 2003 called for restoring coastline ecosystems, improving the way fisheries are managed and cracking down on sources of pollution. But experts say Halpern's report goes further. "This changes how we view the oceans by showing how widely scattered our impacts are,' said Boris Worm, a marine biologist at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Canada. Worm was co-author of a report in 2003 that predicted a collapse of the world's fisheries by mid-century if human effects continue at their current pace. The most severely troubled waters lie within dozens of miles of most coastlines. It is there that effects from land and ocean-based activities show up, such as the depletion of fish stocks from commercial fishing and sediment runoff from coastal development. Industrial fishing fleets equipped with sonar and global positioning systems have fished the seas to the point that about 90 per cent of the worldwide stocks of tuna, cod and other large fish have disappeared, experts say. To help address the problem, people should be careful to eat fish harvested with sustainable, environmentally conscious methods and try to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by driving smaller cars, Halpern said. They also should avoid fertilisers and pesticides, he said. "There are things people can do.'

  • Crop loss at Rs 1.5 lakh cr each yr

    Pests, weeds, diseases take a toll on produce, says agriculture minister. The country is losing agricultural production worth Rs 1.48 lakh crore annually due to damage from pests, weeds and plant diseases, according to the Crop Care Foundation of India (CCFI). This reckoning is based on Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar's statement in the Rajya Shabha indicating that around 10-30 per cent of the farm produce was lost every year due to pests, weeds and diseases.

  • Coal India plans to invest Rs 18,000 cr in 118 projects

    Coal India (CIL) has ambitious plans of investing Rs 18,000 crore in 118 projects during 2008-09. This would enable the company to augment its production by comprehensive margins. CIL projects a production of around 520 million tonne during the 11th Plan. Its current production is about 363 million tonnes which is expected to go up by over 384 million tonnes in 2008-09.

  • Sharp in solar cell joint venture

    Japan's Sharp Corporation and Tokyo Electron will establish a joint venture to develop production equipment for solar cells, the Nikkei business daily reports. The venture will develop equipment for thin-film solar cells, which need less silicon than conventional solar cells, at Tokyo Electron's production site in Yamanashi Prefecture west of Tokyo. Sharp is investing heavily in the solar cell market and is building a 100 billion yen factory for thin-film solar cells in Osaka Prefecture. Tokyo Electron is the world's second-largest chip equipment maker. The venture will be capitalised at about 100 million yen. Tokyo Electron will take a 60% stake while Sharp takes the remaining 40%. REUTERS

  • Stub it out

    The health and economic implications of tobacco merit review

  • Draft climate change report this month

    The first contours of what would lead to India's national policy on climate change are likely to be out soon as the much-awaited draft report by the prime minister's council is being finalised by the month-end. According to former environment secretary Pradipto Ghosh, who heads the sub-committee finalising the draft report for the prime minister's high-level council on climate change, "we are busy incorporating important suggestions offered by the members in the last meeting'.

  • REC eyes stake in private distributors

    Rural Electrification Corporation (REC) has evinced interest in picking up state private sector power distribution companies' stake. At a press conference in Kolkata, H D Khunteta, director (finance), REC, said the company had started financing private sector power utilities and was open to acquiring stake in them. "If the right opportunity comes, REC will pick up equity stake in private companies,' he said.

  • Tatas plan to tap carbon credit mart

    For better or worse, free-market environmentalism is gaining credence in the country. And the latest singing hosannas to the idea is one of India's largest conglomerates, the Tata group. It is putting into place a plan to measure its carbon footprint, reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and figure out how much can the group possibly earn from carbon credits. Spearheading this initiative at the group is Tata Sons' director JJ Irani. Under him, a 10-member committee comprising top executives from various Tata group companies has been set up. Says Irani,

  • Pollution alarm: Dirty air may lower children's IQ

    New York: Kids who live in neighborhoods with heavy traffic pollution have lower IQs and score worse on other tests of intelligence and memory than children who breathe cleaner air, a new study shows. The effect of pollution on intelligence was similar to that seen in children whose mothers smoked 10 cigarettes a day while pregnant, or in kids who have been exposed to lead, Dr Shakira Franco Suglia of the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston, the study's lead author, said.

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