Posts Tagged ‘India’

02
Jul

ARTI, India, Biogas from food waste

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http://www.ashdenawards.org/winners/arti06 ARTI won an Ashden Award for Sustainable Energy in 2006. To find out more visit the link above and check out the Ashden Awards Blog http://ashdenawards.blogspot.com

The Appropriate Rural Technology Institute (ARTI) in Pune has developed a biogas plant which uses food waste rather than manure as feedstock and supplies biogas for cooking. The plant is sufficiently compact to be used by urban households, and over 700 are currently in use.

Pune is a relatively affluent city in south India, and many people use liquid petroleum gas (LPG) or kerosene for cooking. Waste food is often discarded at the side of the road, as in many cities, attracting stray dogs, flies and rats and creating a public health hazard. The ARTI compact biogas plant is made from two standard high-density polyethylene (HDPE) water tanks: the larger tank acts as the digester and the smaller one is inverted and placed into it to serve as a gas-holder. The plant safely digests kitchen waste, food waste or waste flour from mills, thus reducing the problem of waste disposal. A 1,000 litre plant produces sufficient biogas to at least halve the use of LPG or kerosene for cooking in a household, as well as a small amount of liquid effluent which can be used as fertiliser. ARTI has developed the technology, field tested it, and managed the supply of about 700 biogas plants in Maharashtra. Around 100 plants are now being installed every month.

The first-prize Ashden Award to ARTI recognises the enormous potential for using this compact biogas digester in towns and cities, both to supply cooking gas and to ist in the disposal of organic waste.

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01
Jul

South India Tour

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The volunteers of Sri Vivekananda Sevashrama and thir family members under took a tour of South India, with rich heritage of temples.

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22
May

India - Bombay - Dhobi Ghat Laundering - Travel - Jim Rogers World Adventure

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Leading economic expert Jim Rogers traveled to 150 countries over 150,000 miles in three years - follow his adventures here on FentonReport.

In this video Jim and Paige see Dhobi Ghat, a laundering business in Bombay, India.

Copyright Jim Rogers - provided as a special contribution to The Fenton Report. http://www.fentonreport.com

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13
May

Fishermen in Southern India use online weather forecast

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Every day, fishermen in Southern India visit a knowledge Center where they access online weather forecast, wave height and location of fish, thanks to the Swaminathan’s Research Foundation regional resource center

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15
Nov

Contemporary India

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Health and education

Meanwhile failures (some created by the misinformed planting of genetically modified crops) and hardship in agricultural regions, which still support around 72 percent of the population whilst accounting for only 21 percent of GDP, have led to an unprecedented number of suicides by farmers. On other indicators of public well-being, India is also faring badly. Public spending is declining, particularly on health, as tax cuts are given to the better off. According to the UN, less than 50 percent of the population have access to essential drugs and there is a chronic shortage of health facilities (in rural India there are only 44 hospital beds per 100,000 people; in the UK there are around 470).

The list of statistics goes on to point out that in a country with one of the lowest levels of health spending as a percentage of GDP, only 30 percent of people have access to adequate sanitation and some 66 percent of children under the age of three suffer from malnutrition. It is not only on health that India faces difficulties; education also has a lot of catching up to do. One in three of the world’s illiterate people lives in India. This is a staggering number and a trend that looks set to continue. Only around 50 percent of girls are enrolled in primary education, and for this there is a 10 percent drop-out rate.

Child labor also continues. Based on government figures (which nearly all NGOs and independent commentators consider to be wildly overoptimistic) UNICEF has reported that at least 35 million children (14 percent of those of school age) work as, overwhelmingly rural, laborers (some breaking stones in quarries to provide for European patios). A huge amount of these are “bonded”, effectively a form of slavery.

In a further blow to the poor, the government has embarked on creating a series of “special economic zones” (SEZs), effectively tax havens for rich multinational companies as an incentive for their inward investment. This has entailed a huge land grab, with millions being displaced with little or no compensation. The promise is that these SEZs will bring employment and prosperity. However, the Indian Ministry of Finance said that there would be a net loss on these projects of around US$36.5 billion by 2010.

Evidence for the great divide between haves and have-nots can be seen all over the country. In

Gurgaon, middle-class enclave extraordinaire, house prices start at Rps 10 billion, about 270 times the average annual income. Close by in Delhi, 32 percent of the population live in jhuggis (slums), although the city has a Bentley showroom. Meanwhile, poverty-stricken survivors of the 2004 tsunami in Tamil Nadu have resorted to selling their kidneys in order to survive.

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