Thursday, December 22, 2011

Speech by Kumar Viswanathan gave at the award ceremony

This is the speech that my son Kumar Viswanathan gave at the award ceremony of the European Civil Rights Prize in Berlin at the German Foreign Ministry.
The prize went to 18 Ostrava Roma children- now youth- for their courageous fight against segregation and right to education. The European court for Human Rights at Strasbourg made a historical judgement that is often compared to the Brown vs the Education Board of the black civil rights movement.Please open the link below for the speech.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bFDDbQLWO4E





YouTube - Videos

STOCKHOLM SPEECH SRIKUMAR

Presentation by Dr. Waldo Villalpando
Presentation by Mr. Kumar Vishwanathan
Presentation by Mr. Michel Samson
Presentation by Mr. Jeffrey Kaplan
Message by the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Justice of the Czech Republic, Pavel Rychetský
Message by the Minister of Interior of Germany, H.E. Otto Shily
Message by the Attorney General of Israel, Elyakim Rubinstein
Message by the Minister of Integration of the Netherlands, H.E. Roger van Boxtel

Presentation by Mr. Kumar Vishwanathan
Vishwanathan, Sri Kumar

Some strategies for improving the relationship between the Roma and the Czechs

I
Ostrava.
Ostrava is an industrial city in the Czech Republic, located close to the Polish border. Ostrava is known for its tough, skilful and hardworking population. However, it has recently seen the closure of all its big mines and is now trying desperately to get over the stagnation of its two giant steel mills.
Ostrava region is said to have the biggest concentration of Roma minority in the Czech Republic. They came in, r were brought in, after the Second World War, to carry out tough, unskilled, manual labour.
Ostrava is a potential flash point of Czech-Roma tension. In 1997, following major floods, the delicate fabric of co-habitation in Ostrava, was ripped at places and went through a severe test.

Three events from the history of Ostrava

On the 18th and the 27th of October 1939, after a period of humiliation followed by persecution, 1300 Jewish men, between the ages of 17 and 70, were separated from their families and expelled from the Moravian part of Ostrava to a place called Nisko in German occupied Poland. One of the first Jewish transports in Europe was from Ostrava. 1)
In 1946, following the end of the war, in a period of hate, the German inhabitants of the Silesian parts of Ostrava and its surroundings were expelled from their homes to distant Germany.
In 1993, following the creation of the Czech Republic, from former Czechoslovakia, in a period of phobia of Roma immigration from Slovakia, many Roma permanently or effectively living in Ostrava, as in other parts of the country, were declared foreigners and their permanent residence declared invalid. This shameful Citizenship act was an attempt was to expel Roma to Slovakia.
History tells us of the need to be vigilant and aware. The pattern is often the same.We see everyday prejudices of majority populations escalating to hate, persecution, expulsion or even annihilation of the minority.

II
A wounded relationship.

Sylvie
Sylvie is a young Czech-Roma. She and her friend Pepik had lost everything they had during the disastrous summer floods of 1997. They had been evacuated to a local school. They had to live there, together with other Roma families, for many weeks.
Their children had no toys and nothing to play with.
One day, they were accused of stealing the school toys. The media picked it up to cast a very negative picture of these families. The public started discussing which of the flood victims really deserve a helping hand. There were opinions that the Roma do not deserve any help at all.
In autumn, Sylvie and the other Roma were sent to tiny make-shift cabins in a new neighbourhood. The whole neighbourhood rose up against them, signed petitions. The municipal officials brought in police vans. It looked like a little Beirut.
Sylvie was pregnant. She was in her eighth month. One day while she was in a half-empty bus, an elderly man approached her and asked her to get up from her seat. Sylvie refused. The man said, .What are you doing here? You should be in Canada..
The air was hostile. Many Roma left the country to live in safety and dignity.

Svìtlana, Marie and Jan
I had decided, to move in, to live with the flooded Roma families, in the Autumn of 1997. Gradually, I began to get a deeper insight into their many problems.
One thing that shocked me then was the fact that most of the children were officially considered mentally retarded. My gut reaction was that they were in no way inferior to the children of a good British-Czech school, where I had taught physics for several years. Little children of six could actively communicate in two or three languages and could remember the lyrics of some thirty songs. They also had a remarkable ability to take care of one another and share things. But, as Roma children, they didn.t quite fit the Czech-centric notion of .school maturity.. Children who attend the school for the mentally retarded have practically little possibility of completing their basic schooling. Most of them end up as unskilled or semiskilled labourers on the job market. Svìtlana Kro.tenová, Marie and Jan .iga are probably among the first children to be ever moved from a school for the mentally retarded to a normal school. The transfer was made possible thanks to active support and the courage of a local head teacher- Mrs.Helena Balabanová.
All the three - Svetlana, Marie and Jan- are doing very well, for the fourth year, within a normal curriculum.

Renata
Renata lives in Hru.ov, is a single parent, a mother of two children. Hru.ov is a district of Ostrava, heavily mined, sinking for decades and badly flooded in the summer of 1997. In December 1997, the city council declared Hru.ov to be unfit and unsafe for living and decided to turn it into an industrial zone. The municipality stopped taking care of Hru.ov.
People felt abandoned. Other municipalities openly refused to accept the Roma. Some frustrated families had fled flooded Hru.ov for abroad.
Renata had worked for many years as a crane driver at a steel plant. Having run into difficulties, the plant was forced to lay off its workers and Renata lost her job. She then did a nursing course and applied for a job. She was told, .Sorry, we don.t accept gypsies..
In the summer of 1998, Renata became responsible for LifeTogether.s modest aid program for the flooded families. In 1999, together with Joseph, a retired Czech teacher, Renata founded LifeTogether.s first nursery school to offer a pre-school program aimed at overcoming the disadvantage of Roma children in meeting .school maturity. criteria. Renata is working now as a Roma classroom assistant. She has got the support of the mothers. Roma mothers. This is very important.
The municipal authorities however consider Renata, like the other Roma, to be .socially unadaptable.. She has been denied a flat outside Hru.ov for three years.
Renata is a member of the Council of Hru.ov. It was formed last summer and unites the poor Roma and the few Czech villa owners who also live there. It.s a common platform that puts pressure on the local authorities to respect the law and not ignore the problems of the people still left in Hru.ov.

I believe there is some thing like a Roma emancipation in the making, a kind of slow,sure dignified grass-root upheaval.

Katka
Katka is not Roma. She lives in a block of flats in a middle class part of Ostrava. Not far away live a few poor Roma families.
Every morning, before going to work, Katka takes her little dog for a walk. One morning Katka came to work, upset. Some of the older Roma boys had kicked her dog and attacked her.
Katka is now under a lot of pressure, from people close to her, to give up her job, stop working for the Roma. Katka has decided to stay. .It is only those boys., not everybody is like that.. She has not stopped teaching accountancy to a Roma girl in a ghetto either.
I think that there is a strong growing social impulse among the better-educated Czech youth who, a decade after bringing down the wall that divided Europe is now breaking down the narrow domestic walls of misery that divide and marginalize people at home.

III
Our Work.

LifeTogether works with the poor and needy families of Ostrava. We visit families at home. We work in the streets. Sometimes, we organise whole community gatherings to identify problems or work together in solving them- for e.g. community cleaning campaigns. Sometimes, we organise meetings of two neighbouring communities to diffuse tensions, express the problems, identify common priorities and work on the solutions. We identify active members of both communities interested in working together, organise informal local community elections and create local councils.
We have organised three local councils in different parts of Ostrava and the council members are from both communities. We work for the empowerment of both communities. This might seem paradoxical, but, vis a vis local authorities and big private housing corporations, it is not only the Roma who are dismissed away. In the past two years we have managed to open two nursery schools, a social and legal advise bureau and three community centres in the Roma ghettos to offer a variety of services.
The community centres have programs mainly directed at children and youth- games and education.
We offer emergency shelter to families with nowhere to go especially in winter. We work with prisoners who have committed crimes due to poverty and support their early family reunion.
On special occasions we also invite local policemen to do some shared activity with the Roma youth and get to know them from a different perspective.
The centres provide employment to 10 Romany men and women.. The community centres have been partly supported by European Phare funds- administered by the Prague based Foundation for a Civic Society- and the British Know How Fund. In Autumn 2000, we completed the Model house project where all the eight Roma families living in a house repaired the interior of the house that they live in. The municipality, which provided the building material, has decided to support this program to cover other houses.
LifeTogether, together with Caritas, began a social-housing project called the Common Life Village- Vesnièka Sou.ití. The idea for the village was born when it became quite clear to the flooded Roma families, after more than a year of waiting, that the municipality was not sufficiently committed in keeping its promises for an early solution to the housing problem.
Last year, at a site not far from the street that looked like Beirut in 1997, the local bishop blessed the foundation stone for the village. Thirty families are now involved in the construction of their houses. It is fascinating to see the end to a period of hate and rejection. The Common Life Village express the faith of the Romas and Czechs that they can work and live together. This project is, among others, supported by the Czech government, and by several European non-governmental organisations.

IV
The ideas underlying our work.

LifeTogether is widely known as a civic organisation that has helped, through community work, to combat intolerance and maintain social stability in parts of Ostrava. This may be true, although one never knows. However, we can only say that we are committed to respond to a range of problems as and when they appear. The problem of intolerance needs to be addressed at a local level. These are our basic strategies.
• To help improve the quality of life of the marginalized Roma families by offering a range of services.
• To identify the needs of both communities in gatherings and prioritise common problems
• To present both communities with opportunities for coming together in a non-threatening, friendly atmosphere and take part in some common activities. When individuals can meet in such a neutral platform, they often find ways to a new respectful relationship.
It is helpful, if as an outcome of these activities both communities are able to perceive some beneficial change.
• To empower both communities to solve their common problems in an atmosphere of mutual respect
• To present good outcomes to the wider public as facts. Such facts can counter widespread prejudices
• To avoid legal battles, although legal counselling is an important part of our work. To strive for a consensual solution to conflicts.

However, while working at a local level it is important to get the support and involvement of local authorities. But, sometimes it happens that local authorities just prefer to ignore or even wall awsituations are thus left to get out of control, relationships between the Roma and the Czechs can suffer. Right wing sympathies catch on. An increase of such cases might put young Czech democracy to risk.

I believe, it is crucial, at this stage, to propose mechanisms to stimulate the full participation of local authorities in solving the problems of marginalized communities. I believe, this is not just a local problem confined to Ostrava. This is a challenge that we face. How can we make local councils more responsible to ay the marginalized Roma together with their problems. When marginalised communities?

STOCKHOLM SPEECH SRIKUMAR

Presentation by Dr. Waldo Villalpando
Presentation by Mr. Kumar Vishwanathan
Presentation by Mr. Michel Samson
Presentation by Mr. Jeffrey Kaplan
Message by the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Justice of the Czech Republic, Pavel Rychetský
Message by the Minister of Interior of Germany, H.E. Otto Shily
Message by the Attorney General of Israel, Elyakim Rubinstein
Message by the Minister of Integration of the Netherlands, H.E. Roger van Boxtel

Presentation by Mr. Kumar Vishwanathan
Vishwanathan, Sri Kumar

Some strategies for improving the relationship between the Roma and the Czechs

I
Ostrava.
Ostrava is an industrial city in the Czech Republic, located close to the Polish border. Ostrava is known for its tough, skilful and hardworking population. However, it has recently seen the closure of all its big mines and is now trying desperately to get over the stagnation of its two giant steel mills.
Ostrava region is said to have the biggest concentration of Roma minority in the Czech Republic. They came in, r were brought in, after the Second World War, to carry out tough, unskilled, manual labour.
Ostrava is a potential flash point of Czech-Roma tension. In 1997, following major floods, the delicate fabric of co-habitation in Ostrava, was ripped at places and went through a severe test.

Three events from the history of Ostrava

On the 18th and the 27th of October 1939, after a period of humiliation followed by persecution, 1300 Jewish men, between the ages of 17 and 70, were separated from their families and expelled from the Moravian part of Ostrava to a place called Nisko in German occupied Poland. One of the first Jewish transports in Europe was from Ostrava. 1)
In 1946, following the end of the war, in a period of hate, the German inhabitants of the Silesian parts of Ostrava and its surroundings were expelled from their homes to distant Germany.
In 1993, following the creation of the Czech Republic, from former Czechoslovakia, in a period of phobia of Roma immigration from Slovakia, many Roma permanently or effectively living in Ostrava, as in other parts of the country, were declared foreigners and their permanent residence declared invalid. This shameful Citizenship act was an attempt was to expel Roma to Slovakia.
History tells us of the need to be vigilant and aware. The pattern is often the same.We see everyday prejudices of majority populations escalating to hate, persecution, expulsion or even annihilation of the minority.

II
A wounded relationship.

Sylvie
Sylvie is a young Czech-Roma. She and her friend Pepik had lost everything they had during the disastrous summer floods of 1997. They had been evacuated to a local school. They had to live there, together with other Roma families, for many weeks.
Their children had no toys and nothing to play with.
One day, they were accused of stealing the school toys. The media picked it up to cast a very negative picture of these families. The public started discussing which of the flood victims really deserve a helping hand. There were opinions that the Roma do not deserve any help at all.
In autumn, Sylvie and the other Roma were sent to tiny make-shift cabins in a new neighbourhood. The whole neighbourhood rose up against them, signed petitions. The municipal officials brought in police vans. It looked like a little Beirut.
Sylvie was pregnant. She was in her eighth month. One day while she was in a half-empty bus, an elderly man approached her and asked her to get up from her seat. Sylvie refused. The man said, .What are you doing here? You should be in Canada..
The air was hostile. Many Roma left the country to live in safety and dignity.

Svìtlana, Marie and Jan
I had decided, to move in, to live with the flooded Roma families, in the Autumn of 1997. Gradually, I began to get a deeper insight into their many problems.
One thing that shocked me then was the fact that most of the children were officially considered mentally retarded. My gut reaction was that they were in no way inferior to the children of a good British-Czech school, where I had taught physics for several years. Little children of six could actively communicate in two or three languages and could remember the lyrics of some thirty songs. They also had a remarkable ability to take care of one another and share things. But, as Roma children, they didn.t quite fit the Czech-centric notion of .school maturity.. Children who attend the school for the mentally retarded have practically little possibility of completing their basic schooling. Most of them end up as unskilled or semiskilled labourers on the job market. Svìtlana Kro.tenová, Marie and Jan .iga are probably among the first children to be ever moved from a school for the mentally retarded to a normal school. The transfer was made possible thanks to active support and the courage of a local head teacher- Mrs.Helena Balabanová.
All the three - Svetlana, Marie and Jan- are doing very well, for the fourth year, within a normal curriculum.

Renata
Renata lives in Hru.ov, is a single parent, a mother of two children. Hru.ov is a district of Ostrava, heavily mined, sinking for decades and badly flooded in the summer of 1997. In December 1997, the city council declared Hru.ov to be unfit and unsafe for living and decided to turn it into an industrial zone. The municipality stopped taking care of Hru.ov.
People felt abandoned. Other municipalities openly refused to accept the Roma. Some frustrated families had fled flooded Hru.ov for abroad.
Renata had worked for many years as a crane driver at a steel plant. Having run into difficulties, the plant was forced to lay off its workers and Renata lost her job. She then did a nursing course and applied for a job. She was told, .Sorry, we don.t accept gypsies..
In the summer of 1998, Renata became responsible for LifeTogether.s modest aid program for the flooded families. In 1999, together with Joseph, a retired Czech teacher, Renata founded LifeTogether.s first nursery school to offer a pre-school program aimed at overcoming the disadvantage of Roma children in meeting .school maturity. criteria. Renata is working now as a Roma classroom assistant. She has got the support of the mothers. Roma mothers. This is very important.
The municipal authorities however consider Renata, like the other Roma, to be .socially unadaptable.. She has been denied a flat outside Hru.ov for three years.
Renata is a member of the Council of Hru.ov. It was formed last summer and unites the poor Roma and the few Czech villa owners who also live there. It.s a common platform that puts pressure on the local authorities to respect the law and not ignore the problems of the people still left in Hru.ov.

I believe there is some thing like a Roma emancipation in the making, a kind of slow,sure dignified grass-root upheaval.

Katka
Katka is not Roma. She lives in a block of flats in a middle class part of Ostrava. Not far away live a few poor Roma families.
Every morning, before going to work, Katka takes her little dog for a walk. One morning Katka came to work, upset. Some of the older Roma boys had kicked her dog and attacked her.
Katka is now under a lot of pressure, from people close to her, to give up her job, stop working for the Roma. Katka has decided to stay. .It is only those boys., not everybody is like that.. She has not stopped teaching accountancy to a Roma girl in a ghetto either.
I think that there is a strong growing social impulse among the better-educated Czech youth who, a decade after bringing down the wall that divided Europe is now breaking down the narrow domestic walls of misery that divide and marginalize people at home.

III
Our Work.

LifeTogether works with the poor and needy families of Ostrava. We visit families at home. We work in the streets. Sometimes, we organise whole community gatherings to identify problems or work together in solving them- for e.g. community cleaning campaigns. Sometimes, we organise meetings of two neighbouring communities to diffuse tensions, express the problems, identify common priorities and work on the solutions. We identify active members of both communities interested in working together, organise informal local community elections and create local councils.
We have organised three local councils in different parts of Ostrava and the council members are from both communities. We work for the empowerment of both communities. This might seem paradoxical, but, vis a vis local authorities and big private housing corporations, it is not only the Roma who are dismissed away. In the past two years we have managed to open two nursery schools, a social and legal advise bureau and three community centres in the Roma ghettos to offer a variety of services.
The community centres have programs mainly directed at children and youth- games and education.
We offer emergency shelter to families with nowhere to go especially in winter. We work with prisoners who have committed crimes due to poverty and support their early family reunion.
On special occasions we also invite local policemen to do some shared activity with the Roma youth and get to know them from a different perspective.
The centres provide employment to 10 Romany men and women.. The community centres have been partly supported by European Phare funds- administered by the Prague based Foundation for a Civic Society- and the British Know How Fund. In Autumn 2000, we completed the Model house project where all the eight Roma families living in a house repaired the interior of the house that they live in. The municipality, which provided the building material, has decided to support this program to cover other houses.
LifeTogether, together with Caritas, began a social-housing project called the Common Life Village- Vesnièka Sou.ití. The idea for the village was born when it became quite clear to the flooded Roma families, after more than a year of waiting, that the municipality was not sufficiently committed in keeping its promises for an early solution to the housing problem.
Last year, at a site not far from the street that looked like Beirut in 1997, the local bishop blessed the foundation stone for the village. Thirty families are now involved in the construction of their houses. It is fascinating to see the end to a period of hate and rejection. The Common Life Village express the faith of the Romas and Czechs that they can work and live together. This project is, among others, supported by the Czech government, and by several European non-governmental organisations.

IV
The ideas underlying our work.

LifeTogether is widely known as a civic organisation that has helped, through community work, to combat intolerance and maintain social stability in parts of Ostrava. This may be true, although one never knows. However, we can only say that we are committed to respond to a range of problems as and when they appear. The problem of intolerance needs to be addressed at a local level. These are our basic strategies.
• To help improve the quality of life of the marginalized Roma families by offering a range of services.
• To identify the needs of both communities in gatherings and prioritise common problems
• To present both communities with opportunities for coming together in a non-threatening, friendly atmosphere and take part in some common activities. When individuals can meet in such a neutral platform, they often find ways to a new respectful relationship.
It is helpful, if as an outcome of these activities both communities are able to perceive some beneficial change.
• To empower both communities to solve their common problems in an atmosphere of mutual respect
• To present good outcomes to the wider public as facts. Such facts can counter widespread prejudices
• To avoid legal battles, although legal counselling is an important part of our work. To strive for a consensual solution to conflicts.

However, while working at a local level it is important to get the support and involvement of local authorities. But, sometimes it happens that local authorities just prefer to ignore or even wall awsituations are thus left to get out of control, relationships between the Roma and the Czechs can suffer. Right wing sympathies catch on. An increase of such cases might put young Czech democracy to risk.

I believe, it is crucial, at this stage, to propose mechanisms to stimulate the full participation of local authorities in solving the problems of marginalized communities. I believe, this is not just a local problem confined to Ostrava. This is a challenge that we face. How can we make local councils more responsible to ay the marginalized Roma together with their problems. When marginalised communities?

Thursday, February 18, 2010

MY FAVORITE PHILOSOPHY

Courtesy to the unknown Philosopher

MY FAVORITE PHILOSOPHY

A man with one watch knows what time it is. A man with two watches is never quite sure.

Don’t look where you fall, but look where you slipped.

Look at life through the wind-shield, not the rear – view mirror.

People may doubt what you say, but they will believe what you do.

Be nice to people on your way up, because you’ll need them on your way down.

Never explain your friends do not need it, and your enemies will not believe it.

While seeking revenge dig, two graves one for you.

Time you enjoyed wasting, was not wasted

Courage is not a lack of fear but the ability to act while facing fear.

You’ve got to do your own growing ,no matter how tall your father was.

Never compromise on basic principles.

Saturday, February 6, 2010

POWER SCENARIO


K.R Viswanathan Pillai
January 18

TALENTS AND CHARACTER.

To some extent all people are talented. But some are more talented. Who are these talented people? What are their talents?Thousands are attracted to hear the voice of singers and every one will be wonderstruck, even jealous to hear extempore speeches of great orators God has blessed these singers, orators, handsome personalities, great painters,sportsmen and women , artists etc.These people are wealth to the society if they are superb in thier character.It is possible that a few talented people become leaders and lead a nation.Nothing wrong in leading the nation by these people if they are not self centred . But absence of overt character of some talented leaders who turn to politics, can spell disaster to the country. They try to wriggle out the foundation of the good governance and bend the justice system to suit their convenience. In such a situation any country will turn out to be confluence of all sorts of violence, insurrection and terrorism

The leaders who care and respect the individuality of others are true leaders. They have the mental and moral qualities. The leaders need not be great orators, but should be able to carry the people as a whole forward.Such people should lead a nation or even a group of people



8:50 PM GMT | Read comments(0)

POWER SCENARIO

As per Central Electricity Authority’s monthly update, India’s installed power generation capacity reached 144912.97 MW as of June 2008. The breakdown of the above by energy source was as follows: Coal (76648.88 MW), Gas (14716.01 MW), Diesel (1199.75 MW), Nuclear (4120 MW), Hydro (36033.76 MW) and other renewable energy sources (2194.57 MW).

Considering the fact that there has been significant increase in the power requirement in all states, and that it is likely to increase further in future,the Tamil Nadu Government is implementing projects for installing additional power generation capacity in this state. As per the government report, works for establishing power stations of 600 MW capacity at Mettur and 1200 MW capacity in North Chennai are under progress. Works for establishing 1600 MW capacity power station at Udangudi in Thoothukudi district in joint venture with Bharat Heavy Electricals Ltd (BHEL) will commence soon. In the coming financial year2010-2011, the power generation capacity of Tamil Nadu will increase to 11,533 MW on commissioning of Koodankulam Atomic Power Plant and expansion project of Neyveli Lignite Corporation. By the end of 2011-2012 the projected demand for power in Tamil Nadu is 14000MW

At any given time the demand of power is always higher than the generation of power. Shortage and crisis will continue unless a national grid interconnecting southern grid to northern, northwestern and northeastern region is done. The grid system should be well managed. It should be made mandatory to maintain the plant load factor above 75%.in all power station. The consumption of power in thermal power stations for running its auxiliary equipments is at present around 9%. By proper management and using energy efficient drives the internal consumption of power in thermal power station could be brought down to 8%.

It is said that India plans to generate about 20,000 MW nuclear power by 2020. Of this, indigenous heavy water reactors will contribute 10,000 MW and plutonium-based reactors 2,000 MW. Around 8,000 MW will be generated through reactors being set up by overseas firms,

Large scale exploitation of wind , solar and biomass energy for power generation on war footing is to be initiated. Government plans ,to create 'solar valleys' and to install 20 million solar lights and 20 million square meters of solar panels to generate 20,000MW of electricity by 2020. India plans also to add 1300MW of solar power of which 1,100MW will be grid connected and 200MW will be off grid in the next three years.India revieves 4-7 kwh /day /sq: meter of solar energy averaged over a year.Potential of solar energy is enormous. The potential of biomass energy in the country is 18000MW.

Extract from Government report,

The 'National Solar Mission' is one of the eight mission under 'National Action Plan on Climate Change' is a major initiative to promote ecologically sustainable growth while addressing India's energy security challenge. It will also constitute a major contribution by India to meet the challenges of climate change. The National Solar Mission aims to promote the development and use of solar energy for power generation and other off-grid uses in the country.

The Mission targets 20,000 MW solar powers, by 2020

TD LOSS

Will, the power sector be possible to achieve break-even at T&D loss levels of around 20 per cent or so?. While T&D losses of anything below 20 per cent means the power utilities in the country would start making operational profits, any higher loss levels would push the country's power sector into the red.

According to the Central Electricity Authority data, though the country's T&D losses have come down marginally by a percentage point from 33.54 per cent in 2002-03 to 32.53 per cent in 2003-04, the losses levels are nowhere close to the country plugging the leak in the power sector.

While the Government has tried to reduce the loss levels through efforts at metering of HT feeders and electronic consumer meter, energy accounting and auditing, the Centre's key reform project — the Accelerated Power Development and Reforms Programme (APDRP) — has been perceived to be losing steam. In domestic and commercial levels and in industries usage of CFL and LED lighting is to be made compulsory. LED lights consume 80% less energy than the traditional incandacent bulbs. More over longer life and environment friendly LED lights are a better choice over incandacent bulbs. Organic LED lights are next generation of environmentaly friendly lights. These lights are reported to be 2.5 times more energy effiient than LED lights.It is said carbon emissions around the world could fall by 7.4 million tonnes by 2050 if all the modern lights are replaced by OLEDs.In agriculture sector and in industries in particular energy efficient drives are to be used to conserve energy. Idle running of electrical equipments are to be avoided. Any equipments running near to its full load is more efficient than that running idle or at reduced load.Selection of correct capacity of the motors for specific drives , is impotant for not only conserving power but also for reducing the reactive load in the grid.Power conserved by switching off unwanted equipments will ensure power for the needy.Energy efficient buildings based on average annual hourly energy performance index(AAhAPI)viz purchased and generated eletricity divided by built area in sqm plus total annual hours of operation should be rated and encouraged to come up in cities.

No power generated can be stored,but can be conserved by using it judiciously.


TALENTS AND CHARACTER

K.R Viswanathan Pillai
January 18

TALENTS AND CHARACTER.

To some extent all people are talented. But some are more talented. Who are these talented people? What are their talents?Thousands are attracted to hear the voice of singers and every one will be wonderstruck, even jealous to hear extempore speeches of great orators God has blessed these singers, orators, handsome personalities, great painters,sportsmen and women , artists etc.These people are wealth to the society if they are superb in thier character.It is possible that a few talented people become leaders and lead a nation.Nothing wrong in leading the nation by these people if they are not self centred . But absence of overt character of some talented leaders who turn to politics, can spell disaster to the country. They try to wriggle out the foundation of the good governance and bend the justice system to suit their convenience. In such a situation any country will turn out to be confluence of all sorts of violence, insurrection and terrorism

The leaders who care and respect the individuality of others are true leaders. They have the mental and moral qualities. The leaders need not be great orators, but should be able to carry the people as a whole forward.Such people should lead a nation or even a group of people

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

ONAM FOR ALL

When Malayalees irrespective of caste or religions are celebrating Onam,as Mr Salim rightly told, I do not understand why we are not involving Tamilians also to join with us in the Onam celebration. Nairs in Kerala have changed a lot, and that was one of the reasons for the involvements of all Malayalees in Onam celebration.But Nairs in Chennai have to change a lot, in their outlook towards social integration,and tradition. TNSS has to take a lead in this matter.Hope Onam celebration should not be commercialized . During Onam celebration it was told that Rs1000 Cr's worth,of liquor is sold in Kerala. Traditional way of celebrating Onam is not known to our children.Our children in Chennai are unheard of Thiruvathirakali, Talappanthukali,etc.