Friday, March 19, 2010

Govt clears ONGC's Venezuela investment: Rediff.com Business


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New Sky Energy Turns Waste Water Into Clean Water, Green Chemicals | Sustainability | Fast Company

  • tags: wastewater to clean water

    • New Sky Energy Turns Waste Water Into Clean Water, Green Chemicals

      BY Ariel SchwartzThu Mar 18, 2010

      central valley

      Ever heard of California's Central Valley? You might soon--the region, known as the nation's breadbasket for its agricultural plenitude, is facing severe droughts for a number of reasons. But now One Sky, a former Cleantech Open winner, is swooping in to hopefully save the day by providing a new source of clean water for the region.

      New Sky is teaming up with the Westlands Water District to build a drainage water treatment facility in the Central Valley that uses New Sky's proprietary salt conversion technology. The process concentrates and converts waste salts from drainage water into both fresh water for irrigation and carbon-neutral and carbon-negative chemicals--incuding acid, caustic soda, and solid carbonates like limestone and soda ash. These chemicals can then be used in everything from fertilizers to building materials.

      Next up: building a $3.2 million demonstration water treatment facility in the Central Valley later this year. If all goes well, New Sky expects that it will desalinate approximately 240,000 gallons of water each day and convert approximately five tons of waste brine salts into chemicals, and trap 2.8 2.8 tons of CO2 daily. Not bad for a day's work.

      [Via Cleantech Open]


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Indian Ambassador Arif Khan's Remains Laid to Rest

  • tags: no_tag

    • Mortal remains of Arif Mohd Khan, India's Ambassador to Italy who died three days back, were laid to rest here today.

      Vice President Hamid Ansari was among those who attended the last rites performed at a cemetery at Lodhi Road.

      Ansari, a former diplomat, participated in the 'namaz-e- janaza' (last prayers) and joined scores of IFS officers at the funeral of the former colleague.

      Khan passed away in Rome on Tuesday at the age of 58.

      The 1974-batch IFS officer was suffering from cancer for some time.

      Prior to his posting in Italy in February 2008, the Secretary-rank officer had served in various key positions, including as the first head of Public Diplomacy Division of MEA that was created four years back to explain diplomatic activities to the domestic audience.

      He had also served as spokesperson of Ministry of External Affairs in the post of Joint Secretary (External Publicity) besides his postings in the Indian Missions in Paris and New York.
  •  
.outlookindia.com |
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Nifty may consolidate around current levels: Aditya Birla

  • tags: no_tag

    • ``In the beginning of the week, market attained its highest closing levels since on January 2010 on account of encouraging advance tax figures of Indian corporate for Q4 march 2010. Moreover heavyweight reliance industries surged to higher levels and supported the market. Fed rate was kept near to zero thereby rising confidence among the global market. Moreover Standard & Poor`s outlook on Indian market to be on stable raised confidence among the investors and boosted the market to be on positive zone. By end of week market ended on positive zone at 5255.20 levels. Food Inflation for the week ended was at 16.3% Vs 17.81%(w-o-w), `` said Aditya Birla Money, a leading broking firm on the current week`s market performance.
    • `In the beginning of the week, market attained its highest closing levels since on January 2010 on account of encouraging advance tax figures of Indian corporate for Q4 march 2010. Moreover heavyweight reliance industries surged to higher levels and supported the market. Fed rate was kept near to zero thereby rising confidence among the global market. Moreover Standard & Poor`s outlook on Indian market to be on stable raised confidence among the investors and boosted the market to be on positive zone. By end of week market ended on positive zone at 5255.20 levels. Food Inflation for the week ended was at 16.3% Vs 17.81%(w-o-w), `` said Aditya Birla Money, a leading broking firm on the current week`s market performance.
    • `In the beginning of the week, market attained its highest closing levels since on January 2010 on account of encouraging advance tax figures of Indian corporate for Q4 march 2010. Moreover heavyweight reliance industries surged to higher levels and supported the market. Fed rate was kept near to zero thereby rising confidence among the global market. Moreover Standard & Poor`s outlook on Indian market to be on stable raised confidence among the investors and boosted the market to be on positive zone. By end of week market ended on positive zone at 5255.20 levels. Food Inflation for the week ended was at 16.3% Vs 17.81%(w-o-w), `` said Aditya Birla Money, a leading broking firm on the current week`s market performance....

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Saturday, March 13, 2010

India ties among most consequential in 21st century: US



Tags: Ties , Us , India , Washington
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Washington:Looking at relations with India "as one of the most consequential of US foreign policy in the 21st century", the US wishes to capitalise on their converging values and interests to confront global challenges, said a senior US official.

"India is going to be an increasingly important factor in the 21st century, but also an increasingly important friend," Robert O. Blake, Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs, said in an interview with Asahi Shimbun.

"So, it's very much in our interest to seize that opportunity now," he said noting, "That's why you saw President (Barack) Obama make Prime Minister (Manmohan) Singh the very first state visitor of the new administration."

"And that's why, I think, you're going to see the United States working very, very closely with India in the course of the Obama administration," Black said explaining why Washington wanted to take ties with New Delhi to what Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called to a higher "US-India 3.0." level.

"I think President Obama and Secretary Clinton really see that our relations with India are going to be one of the most consequential of US foreign policy in the 21st century," he said according to the transcript of the interview released

by the State Department.

"So we see it as very much in our interest to try to capitalise on the converging values and interests that we have between the United States and India, and the strong people-to-people ties that we have with India," Blake said.

The US wanted to do so to not only make progress on the wide range of bilateral activities that it has with India, "but also, increasingly, to cooperate with India to confront the challenges of the 21st century, be they global proliferation concerns or trying to complete the Doha Round of global trade negotiations, climate change."

Asked if US looked at a stronger US-India relationship as a good diplomatic counter against China, Blake said: "We are pursuing our relations with India on their own merits."

"We don't put it in the context of our relations with China, which we also greatly value and, of course," he said noting, "China also will be one of the most important powers of the 21st century, and we have our own, separate partnership with China that is extremely important to the United States as well."

"So, we try not to hyphenate those two. I mean, we are pursuing them in their own tracks, and we value both," the official said. "But, we don't try to put our relations with either one of those countries in the context of our relations with the other."

India, not Kashmir, is Lashkar's true goal: US congressman




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Washington: A resolution of Kashmir dispute between India and Pakistan would no longer satisfy Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) and the terrorist outfit responsible for 26/11 and attack on Indian Parliament would continue to pose a serious threat to both India and the western world in particular the US, top experts have told American lawmakers.

"There is no doubt in my mind that we have to find ways to resolve the issues relating to Kashmir. But I think resolving Kashmir is not going to solve the problems relating to LeT," Ashley J Tellis, senior associate at the prestigious Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, told US lawmakers at a Congressional hearing on Thursday.

"Resolving the Kashmir problem by itself is not going to remove this threat because the aim of these groups is to leverage themselves into a position of power inside Pakistan and to take control," said eminent Pakistani scholar, Shuza Nawaz, Director, South Asia Centre, the Atlantic Council of the United States.

Both Nawaz and Tellis were responding to concerns of the US Congressmen at the hearing if LeT would abandon terrorism if Kashmir dispute was resolved; given that Lashkar was initially popped up by the ISI of Pakistan for the specific purpose of targeting Kashmir and India in particular.

"I always find it interesting that the people conducting the murder and mayhem (in the Valley) today are not Kashmiri. The people who actually are deprived of all their political rights, they are not conducting the murder and mayhem," Tellis said.

"The murder and mayhem is being conducted by groups that have absolutely no connections to Kashmir. To my mind that is story, the fact that this is a group that has operations in 21 countries, that has an ideology that is completely anti-western, that is opposed to modernity and secularism and all the kinds of values that we take for granted. This group is not going to be satisfied by dealing with the issue of Kashmir," Tellis said.

Testifying before the same committee, Lisa Curtis of the Heritage Foundation, referred to the Musharraf formula on resolving the Kashmir dispute; which the then Pakistani President made in a statement in December 2006.

"He (Musharraf) made a very important statement in December of 2006, where he said Pakistan would be willing to give up its claim on Kashmir if four things happen. He said, if the Line of Control that divides Kashmir was made irrelevant, which means people could freely pass back and forth could pass back and forth," said Curtis, who is known as an American authority on South Asia.

"Two, (Musharraf said) if Kashmir was given greater autonomy. Three, if both sides could figure out a joint mechanism to interact, to have the two sides of Kashmir, Pakistani Kashmir and Indian Kashmir interact. So he made a very forward looking proposal. And as we know by Steve Coll, who wrote about this in the New Yorker Magazine not too long ago, they were very close to coming to some kind of agreement or understanding on Kashmir," Curtis said.

Except for Congressmen Dan Burton tended to agree with the observations made by these eminent experts. Burton, who is well-known for his anti-India approach at the Congress, believed otherwise.

"I wish all of the experts and the people in the governments involved, as well as the US would make as their number one goal resolving the issues that have been prevailing for a long, long time. And that is resolving the issue of Kashmir," he argued.

"I think the only way to do that is to get the Pakistani government and the India government and the people in Kashmir together and resolve some way for them to solve that problem in Kashmir that's been existing since 1948. Until you get that done, you're not going to solve this problem.

India can't attack Pakistan because if they do, Pakistan's got the ability to retaliate with a nuclear weapon and vice versa. So the killing's going to go on and the festering that's created from this impasse is just going to grow," he said.

Noted Pakistani scholar Shuja Nawaz said, "LeT represents -- a word that's been used often -- a Frankenstein's monster created for the purpose of assisting the Kashmiri freedom movement but that ended up becoming a powerful Sunni Punjabi movement with an independent agenda that appears to have taken on a broader regional role."

It was born out of the US-backed Afghan jihad against the Soviets, and built on the training provided by that war to Punjabi fighters who could then inculcate Kashmiri fighters in their ways.

Successive civil and military leaders of Pakistan supported the movement as a strategic asset to counter a powerful India to the East and to force it to negotiate for a settlement of the disputed territory by waging a war of, quote, "a thousand cuts", he told the lawmakers.

"Over time, however, the sponsored organisation took a life of its own, finding the economically disadvantaged area of Central and Southern Punjab to be a fertile territory for recruitment of Jihadi warriors," he said over time, the ISI began losing its control as the LeT became self sufficient.

"But the realisation that the LeT had become autonomous was slow in being understood or accepted in the ISI and by the military leadership of Pakistan under General Pervez Musharraf," he said.

"General Musharraf did make an effort to lower the political temperature in Kashmir and began distancing the state from the LeT. However, the process was not handled as well as it could have.

Similar to the disbanding of the Iraqi army after the US invasion when thousands of trained soldiers and officers were let go, the LeT was cut loose without a comprehensive plan to disarm, re-train, and gainfully employ the fighters."

A dangerous corollary was the induction into the militancy of some former members of the military who had trained and guided them in their war in Kashmir, Nawaz said.

Congressman Gary Ackerman said there is a temptation to think that the LeT is really India's problem, that the LeT is just interested in the so-called "liberation" of Jammu and Kashmir.

"While it's true that the primary area of operations for the LeT has historically been the Kashmir Valley and the Jammu region, the LeT has also undertaken repeated and numerous mass casualty attacks throughout India and, in particular, directed at the Indian government. But the idea that this group can be appeased on the subject of Kashmir is dangerous nonsense," he said.

"The LeT's true goal is not Kashmir, it is India. And the LeT is not shy about announcing that its intention is to establish an Islamic state in all South Asia. Neither does it hide or try to play down its declaration of war against all Hindus and Jews, who they insist are "enemies of Islam", Ackerman said.