Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Kerala. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Kerala. Sort by date Show all posts

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

A serious Concern - OVERLOADED PLANET

By J Ajit Kumar

It has been quite clear for sometime now, that Earth is an overloaded planet. The six billion human load is unbearable and making life more and more miserable for an increasing number of people every year, though there exists some organisations making a living out of this business of population growth.

Sustainability is the hottest topic in every international forum now and it is quite surprising that all of us are missing the fact that our own planet has already reached unsustainable proportions. The utopian concept of Socialism can be thought of in two ways – bringing in ‘equality’ either by trying to make all people rich or by making everyone poor. By increasing the denominator, whatever be its justification, the chosen route seems to be the latter. At this rate one of our future children will definitely step on the destruction button for planet Earth.
 
India is one of the most overloaded geographical areas in the whole world and within it the state of Kerala presents the extreme limits of population density. Not a single rainy season passes off in Kerala without the spurts of Dengue fever, Rat fever, Cholera, Jaundice etc., etc. What is the most important reason for this? Nothing but an unsustainable number of human beings per square kilometre.


Kerala has one of the maximum density of population and the ‘safe’ inhabitation land area now available is carrying almost double the advisable number of people. The net result is pollution of all water bodies, lack of safe drinking water, lack of infrastructure to process the human waste etc., etc. Almost three fourths of all human problems relate to population explosion and yet there are no serious attempts to control. The revered Justice V.R. Krishna Iyer has recently come out with a report recommending strong measures against population explosion and as usual all religious retarders have jumped in.

Discourage Overproduction
There is no doubt and no two opinions about the need for children to sustain humanity. Nobody has ever questioned that. And nobody questions the relevance of marriage and family in human lives. All the questions now center around the number of children each family must have. But invariably the religious retarders always succeed in confusing birth control measures with abortion and pro-life slogans and defeat any initiatives in population control. All they want is license for uninhibited reproduction like animals.

All forms of excuses (including God) are drawn into the debate to camouflage and confuse any debate between restrictive reproduction for common good versus wanton reproduction with ulterior motives. Though God often finds a mention in their arguments, the real motives behind increasing ‘tribal’ strength is crystal clear to everyone.

It is always the organized religious groups that oppose any restrictions on population growth. The logic is obvious. The strength of any organization is directly proportional to its strength and all organizations want to be strong and powerful. And all organizations are self-centered and bothered only about their own God, their own office bearers and their own tribe in that order. The point they often miss is that the whole world is interconnected and each of us (including our man-made Gods) are dependent on each other.

Any attempt to grow beyond the limits of sustainability will unleash destruction from within our own system. An overcrowded Earth is an unsustainable entity and no amount of organization or religion can remove the limits. Restriction in numbers is one of the basic requirements in any organic system and Earth is no exception.

Encourage Restriction  
Restrictions are often positive when compared to complete ban imposed by religious doctrinaires. Like animals, every man is born free and what ultimately differentiates man from animal is due to the reasonable restrictions imposed on him or her by the society. Our culture is nothing but a sum total of the impact of these restrictions. But for these restrictions and regulations, man will go down the evolution chain again to the level of animals and birds. Present condition of humanity is even more precarious.

We have in our midst a set of people who are monopolizing the custodianship of all morality and liaison with God. Acceptance of reasonable restrictions, as opposed to illogical do’s and dont’s imposed by such monopolizers, is the need of the hour. If they are not shown their place, perpetrators of such obscurantist ideologies will make our lives unbearable mentally also. While population explosion is putting our physical existence at risk, victory for religious obscurantism will make us animals again.

Imposing reasonable restrictions on the size of families should come natural to any society or government in twenty first century. It is common knowledge that Mother Earth cannot sustain a population of more than say 4 or 5 billion humans, which is just one living species among millions of others in this planet. We simply do not have the natural resources to sustain so many human beings and all natural disasters happening now are indeed man-made in a way. And restricting our numbers is the only way to ensure progress and development with social justice.

This has been proven beyond doubt in almost all European countries and states like Kerala in India. The present high standard of living in colony-dependent European countries and self-sufficient Asian states is additional proof for this. The only mistake that happened is the case of some European countries is that they went into a negative growth in population.

Justice Krishna Iyer’s recommendation to Kerala government to impose restrictions, including penalties, on families with more than two children is a progressive step in the right direction. It is exactly what is needed in a progressive society with cent percent literacy, highest rate of family suicides and complete consumerism.

Kerala is not producing anything sufficient enough for itself other than children which further increase its needs. Thus it is caught in vicious circle and the only way to break it is to restrict its population growth. Other than the petty minded religious hierarchy, no one is expected to oppose it. But the famed Kerala elite must speak out and defeat all the religious obscurantism that is overtaking Kerala these days.

Thursday, June 11, 2015

Knotty Problems: Kerala Debates On Wedding Restrictions

A proposal by the Kerala Women’s Commission proposal to curb marriage expenditure has started a debate that touches on issues like class and migration.

A proposal by the Kerala Women’s Commission proposal to curb marriage expenditure has created ripples in the state’s wedding industry and sparked a debate that touches on issues like class and migration.

The panel urged the state government to draft a legal framework limiting the total wedding expenditure to Rs 5 lakh by imposing caps on individual expenses.

Thursday, May 02, 2013

'ARUNACHAL' TOPS IN HANDLING 'CHILD NUTRITION'

By M H Ahssan / New Delhi

The problem is likely to be less severe than UN statistics indicate, given faulty yardsticks. If asked to name the state with the lowest incidence of child malnutrition in India, readers will overwhelmingly pick one of Kerala, Goa, Himachal Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, Punjab or West Bengal. But they will all be wrong by a wide margin: none of these states appears among even the top five performers. 

IN LAKSHADWEEP, PETROL IS SELLING AT 200 PER LITRE!

By CJ Rajendran in Lakshdweep

At Lakshadweep Islands, which is not quite the paradise you would have imagined. Muhammad Basheer is the only and well-known Cameramen in the island of Kavarati, to whom islanders are used to reach for the video coverage of wedding ceremonies. He is roaming besides the sea by carrying his camera on the left shoulder. As all other youngster in islands he was studied in Kerala and successfully attained graduation in Arabic language.

During his Kerala days he was being dreamt about to own a Motor cycle. Five years ago his dream accomplished with unlimited pain and sorrows.

Tuesday, May 10, 2016

HOW MANY MORE? The Indian Police’s Guide To Royally Screwing Up A Rape Investigation

By M H AHSSAN | INNLIVE

The body of the 29-year-old lies in a pool of blood in a shack-like house. Thirty deep wounds all over. Private parts slashed over 20 times. Stab wounds on the back of her head, on the chest, chin, and cheek. Intestines pulled out by an iron rod thrust into the vagina, chest torn open by stabs.

And it is not 6 pm yet. She lies dead for over two hours before her mom returned after the day’s labour.

Monday, September 30, 2013

Focus: Indian Temples Guard Their 'Gold, Hundi' From Govt

By Ramesh Menon / Trivandrum

India's temples are resisting divulging their gold holdings - perhaps nearly half the amount held in Fort Knox - amid mistrust of the motives of authorities who are trying to cut a hefty import bill that is hurting the economy.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI), which has already taken steps that have slowed to a trickle the incoming supplies that have exacerbated India's current account deficit, has sent letters to some of the country's richest temples asking for details of their gold.

Monday, September 16, 2013

This 'Onam' 2013 Festival, Hope For Good Governance!

By Dr.Perumal Koshy (Guest Writer)

Onam, festival celebrated by Keralites across the world, has significance in today’s context, not just because it is a festival that is being celebrated by one and all and other interesting festivities associated with it. Its message needs to be identified and meditated upon each year. Onam commemorate more than anything prosperity of Mahabali Kingdom!. That prosperity was the result of good governance, rather than anything!

Thursday, September 26, 2013

Exclusive: Is The ‘Gujarat Model Of Growth’ A Sheer Bluff?

By M H Ahssan / INN Live

So whether the likes of Jagdish Bhagwati, Arvind Panagariya and hundreds of  their parrots like it or not, the Raghuram Rajan committee has called the Narendra Modi bluff. Kerala model is no Gujarat model at all. Kerala model is simply the Kerala model and the best Gujarat model under Modi’s two terms can do is only lag way behind. In fact, at position number 12. 

In fact the Rajan committee didn’t surprise anybody – Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Goa have been working at it for year.

Saturday, May 18, 2013

SREESANTH: FROM 'ANGRY BIRD' TO A 'ROTTEN EGG'?

By M H Ahssan / Hyderabad

The spot-fixing controversy has left people from Sreesanth's home state fuming, who they say, has discredited Kerala and his fans.

Till Thursday morning, 30-year-old Sreesanth was an icon who inspired young cricketers in his home state of Kerala. Considered an angry bird with a killing instinct, people waited outside his house to catch a glimpse of him, heroines danced with him and even senior bureaucrats and politicians hosted him. But today, he is being berated as a rotten egg.

Monday, December 15, 2014

Why Kerala Is like Kuwait & Madhya Pradesh Is Like Haiti?

For its level of income, India, as well as many of its states, could do a much better job in taking care of their most vulnerable people.

American poet Walt Whitman’s “Song of Myself”—“Do I contradict myself/ Very well then I contradict myself/I am large, I contain multitudes”—seems tailor-made for India. Which country can India be compared to, in economic terms? Is India’s level of economic development more or less like Vietnam’s, because their per capita incomes, in international dollars and in purchasing power parity terms, are almost the same?

Monday, September 30, 2013

How A Smuggler Fayaz Managed To Stay Under The Radar?

By Shiraz Fazil / Trivandrum

37-year-old TK Fayaz, who was arrested for smuggling gold, had links with leading politicians, celebrities, police and customs officials of Kerala. He lived like a king. His acquaintances consisted of celebrities, politicians, police officers, customs and Directorate of Revenue Intelligence (DRI) officials in Kerala. 37-year-old TK Fayaz from Pallur village, Kannur district, Kerala was considered a role model for the youth of the state. But on 21 September, everything changed – Fayaz was arrested in a gold smuggling case in New Delhi. 

According to customs officials, Mustafa, an NRI businessman based in Dubai, and Fayaz had smuggled 42 kg of gold worth Rs 12 crore during the last two months through the Kochi airport using women carriers.

Monday, December 02, 2013

Criminals Updating Facebook Pages From Jails In Kerala

By Shalini John | Trivandrum

The shocking revelation that the main accused in the sensational TP Chandrasekharan murder case In Kerala were active on Facebook using smartphones from a jail in Kozhikkode has plunged the Congress-led government into a deep law-and-order embarrassment. 

It has also set new standards for the audacity of criminals, ostensibly strong supporters of the CPM and DYFI, and their luxurious life in jail. TV channels in the state on Monday showed Facebook pages of most of the main accused, allegedly members of a gang of contract killers from northern Kerala, that have been frequently updated from the jail. One of them was updated as recent as yesterday.

Saturday, January 10, 2015

Uncertainity Clouds Over 'National Games 2015' In Kerala

It’s a holiday season that has gone awry for the National Games organising committee. The multi-discipline event stares at another postponement after the organisers failed to procure necessary equipment for at least half-a-dozen sports in time owing to the Christmas and New Year period.

The organisers fear that the equipment ordered for events such as wrestling, canoeing, gymnastics and boxing, among others, will reach India only after the Games begin on January 31 and are making a last-ditch effort to rent them either from the Sports Authority of India (SAI) or respective national federations.

Friday, February 08, 2013

UGC 'Golmaal' in NET, Justice Delayed!

Arbitrary cut off in NET June 2012 Exam. Thousand of students were reportedly cheated by University Grants Commission (UGC) and they are waiting for justice. Many victims in this scam wrote to HNN to help them to get fast justice as they are losing their education, career, money and social status and undergoing severe mental agony.

The Cause
UGC is taking NET (National Eligibility Test) exam twice a year for lectureship positions all over India. According to the original notification and trends in last few years, criteria for passing NET has been 40%, 40%, and 50% in paper 1, 2 and 3 respectively for gen students. Their last minute specification (after publishing the result) that an aggregate of 65 per cent (an arbitrary and discriminatory cut off) in three papers was necessary for qualification for general category candidates has demolished the wishes of more than 100000 wishes all over. UGC declared the criteria after the declaration of the result which is totally unlawful and breach to the constitutional right to equality. 

Students have protested all over including New Delhi at ‘Jantar Mantar’ on 30-31 Jan, 2013 for this arbitrary norm followed by UGC. Students have already won the case against this in Kerala High Court. According to Justice Ramachandra Nair, KHC (Kerala High Court) "Rules of a game can not be changed in the middle or at last of a game". And the result since it is a public cause so it would be applicable to all the students all over India. Also Court has directed UGC to take appropriate action as soon as possible and give the students certificates within one month from the date when they receive the judgment copy. The judgment copy has already been received by UGC on Jan 5, 2013 and one month period would over on 5th Feb, 2013 itself.

Cases in different High Courts
There are more then 25 cases in various high courts all over India like Patna, Gwalior, Kerala, Bangalore, Chennai, Raipur, New Delhi, Lucknow, Dehradun, Bombay, Nagpur etc... Many of them (cases) are in double bench as well. In the coming days we are going to win this in double bench also in few of the high courts. Now UGC is dragging the matter since they have money taken from students (just for example in NET June 2012, No. of students: 4 Lacs, on an avg. they are taking 300 frm each of us) UGC is willingly delaying the court procedure and not giving justice to the students who actually have scored much better than the criteria mentioned in the original notification in June 2012. They are misutilising the Public Money and it can not be supported by law.

There are various issues regarding a new Supplementary Result. Without their notification they again gave a supplementary result which was a baseless act and not supported by even their notification June 2012. The notification June 2012 does not say anything about the supplementary result. There has not been any clarification on this issue. Without any prior notice UGC cannot publish any supplementary result. 

Your officer says that subject wise cut off has been followed and 7% in each subjects have been passed. The matter of subject wise cut off is to be followed in coming Dec examination which is not valid for the examination in June 2012 without any notification. There are many students who have passed in this supplementary result who have much less than the specified criteria as per their increased criteria i.e. aggregate 65% (gen), aggregate 60%(OBC) and aggregate 55% (SC/ST). Many people below these criteria perhaps are the in laws or have some good reference in UGC.

UGC has manipulated the criteria after publishing the results. It seems that the students near and dear ones have passed due to their arbitrary criteria. The criteria they have made open after 4 months after declaration of the result. They are playing with the lives of Indian youth.

Also the quality of lecturers/ professors/ researchers would increase due to highly competitive market. More the no. of students passed more would be the competition. Best of the students from the lot would go for teaching.

As UGC NET is a qualifying examination and just provides a minimum eligibility criterion to give interviews and not a competitive exam, UGC cannot fix up a certain merit based criteria. From 2006 to 2011 you have followed the same criteria and sudden increase in the cut offs is not applicable. As, a lecturer is recruited on the basis of good marks in post graduation, papers published, extracurricular activities etc. and not on the basis of NET only. So this is not the only criteria, a students should have good academic records and other credentials.

Kerala High Court Judgment
The Kerala high court on Monday 17 Dec, 2012) declared as illegal the new norms fixed by the University Grants Commission (UGC) for the National Eligiblity Test (NET) for college and university lectureship. The main points of the Kerala High Court declaratory judgment are:

“The power of UGC ought to have been excercised in a proper, fair and reasonable manner,” Justice T.R. Ramachandran Nair held while allowing a batch of petitions challenging the new norms.

The court held that fixing of higher aggregate marks for three categories, that too just after the announcements of results, cannot be justified as the same was “not supportable by law”.

By changing the standards at the final stage and just before declaration of results, “it can definitely be seen that it affected adversely the expectations of a large number of candidates”, the court said.

Justice P.R. Ramachandran Nair held that the UGC regulations did not confer any right on the UGC to fix high marks after holding of the NET. Nor could such criteria be introduced just before the announcement of the results by executive orders.

The introduction of the new criteria was not supported by the law. The court added that the students were jolted when all of a sudden the UGC prescribed the percentage of the aggregate marks. The adoption of such norms at the final stage and just before the declaration of the results had affected the candidates.

The change of the cut-off marks at the final stage violated Article 14 of the Constitution (equality before law).

The court also declared that the petitioners, who had obtained the separate minimum marks prescribed in the UGC notification, had cleared the NET. It also declared that all those who have obtained minimum marks prescribed in the notification have cleared NET and appropriate follow-up action be taken to issue certificates to them within one month.

Various unsolved Questions...
There are various questions which can be asked from UGC for their misconducts and irresponsible behavior:
  • Are two criteria's are allowed for the same exam that too after declaring the result? (Firstly category-wise on 18 Sept 2012 then subject wise on 12 Nov 2012. The criterion had not been uploaded till 18 Jan, 2013 on their website.)
  • Why the UGC people changed the criteria's of Dec 2012 just 3 days before the exam? (In December also they changed their notification just 3 days before the examination , which shows that they know about the loopholes of their previous notification in June 2012)
  • Why they are not implementing the Kerala High court decision (is this not a breach of law)?
  • Is UGC allowed to violate the laws of this country, or they have special permission to do such practices from government of India? It would be a contempt of court and there should be stringent actions to be taken by the law and constitution against them.
  • Why UGC people are silent and not speaking and answering students?
  • How come a student with 64% aggregate marks is fail for lectureship and a person with 40 % aggregate marks is passed?
  • Should UGC chairman be allowed to continue on his services, who is violating every law with is own dictatorship...and with a team of foolish experts who are not able to make a single policy for an Eligibility exam (Not a competitive exam)?
  • Should there not be a charge of scam and a cheating case against UGC? 
Since lowering the eligibility for an objective type exam that also without a negative marking gives them more applicants (making huge money out of this) and they changes the criteria of an eligibility exam after declaration of results and after passing their near and dear ones.

The unethical and unlawful act of UGC is hitting hard to our knowledge economy. Moreover one of the JNU student belongs from Ludhiana (she has been a throughout topper) has taken an extreme step to commit suicide and later rescued by her friends.

Media’s support is very significant in the common cause. More than one lacs post graduate students all over India, whose lives are dependent on this result, are affected by this. As Media is the 4th pillar of democracy, their support in this matter is very much needed to give a lesson to the inappropriate/ unconstitutional actors in this to hinder the knowledge growth in the country.

Friday, September 06, 2013

Agri-Innovation: The Wonder Climber For Areca Nut Trees

By Srikrishna D / Bangalore

A new mechanical device that makes areca nut harvesting less labour-intensive and hence affordable could solve one of the major problems faced by farmers of the crop. 

In recent years, labour scarcity has emerged as one of the foremost challenges in farming. One crop that has been most affected by this is the supari, or areca nut. Areca nut trees attain a height of about 60-70 feet. It is mandatory to climb the trees a minimum of five times a year for a successful harvest - twice for the preventive spray against fungal disease, and thrice to harvest the areca bunches. The spraying is done in monsoon, while harvest time is typically in summer.

Only skilled labourers can carry out these farming operations. They have to climb the trees using muscle power. In an acre that has 550 trees, a labourer has to climb a minimum of 100 to 150 trees.

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

'IT'S CLEAR, JIHADIST MOTIVE BEHIND THE BANGALORE BLAST'

In March, 1764, two men burst into the Portuguese church inside the fort at Darmapatnam, and attacked the congregation with swords.  Lizardo Evans was cut down and several other worshippers injured, before the attackers were killed.

“The bodies of the above Moors”, a colonial chronicler recorded, “were immediately ordered to be thrown into the sea as an example to deter from the like attempt in the future and to prevent any religious [illegible] being got of them, that they may not be worshipped as saints as is the practice of their caste”.


Two and a half centuries on, the rise of political Islamism on India’s spice coast is again stirring violent forces—forces which raise the spectre of the kind of communal conflict that raged, for decades, along the Malabar coast.

No one knows, yet, who bombed the Bharatiya Janata Party’s office in Bangalore—but irrespective of who the perpetrators turn out to be, the event will almost certainly feed the ugly chauvinism long evident across the region.  The political question is thus more important than the criminal one: just what is driving the jihadist moonrise on the spice coast—and what will its consequences be?

Monday, December 23, 2013

Congress Epitome, 10 Janpath Losing Grip On Cong, India

By Balbir Punj | Delhi

Its recent defeat in four major Assembly elections and the support of some of its leaders to the Run for Unity project shows that the ruling party at the Centre has lost popular and political support.

With the BJP’s triumphant march in the recent Assembly elections, the erosion of the Congress’s will to continue to govern at the Centre was obvious in the abandoning of the Winter Session of Parliament midway. Day after day, the proceedings could not be held, not because the main Opposition created any hurdles, but, because Congress MPs and their allies themselves continually disrupted Parliament.

Monday, June 08, 2009

Incredible India: When public sector advertising turned savvy

By M H Ahssan

If the recent Lok Sabha elections are any proof, then no matter how great an advertising agency is and how lavishly the client spends, there is always a sarkaari look to public sector advertising.

Small wonder when the Incredible India campaign was launched, it came as a welcome change from the fuddy-duddy public sector advertising.

The man at the centre of the campaign is Amitabh Kant, who was a joint secretary in the tourism ministry then. He is also the one to have steered the 'God's Own Country' campaign for Kerala for several years.

In his recent book, Branding India -- An Incredible Story, Kant chronicles the story of Incredible India, one of the most awarded and successful destination campaigns worldwide.

Kant begins with the domestic tourism scenario in the backdrop of the 9/11 attacks in the US in 2001. It was a time when tour operators thought there was nothing that could boost consumer demand.

"Global tourism saw a sharp decline... countries like Thailand, Singapore and Malaysia had sharply cut their advertising, promotion and marketing budgets," he writes.

Kant points out that till 2002, India had opened 18 tourism offices abroad, yet none of these gave a clear and singular positioning for India. "One foreign office called it 'Spiritual India', another termed it 'Cultural India', and the third termed it 'Unbelievable India'.

The cliched visuals, the saffron clad sadhus and rope tricks performed amidst crowds..." he laments, "did nothing to reflect the changes India was going through."
That's when a vision statement was drawn out to promote India as a "premier holiday destination for high-yielding tourists".Grey Worldwide and Wieden+Kennedy were roped in as key advertising agencies for the campaign.

Perhaps one of the best chapters in the book is the one where Kant draws from his experience in Kerala and describes the wrong flight of the state's tourism in the 90s, which was punctuated by high volume, low value tourism -- "A solitary ITDC hotel, mass tourist arrivals in the form of garbage collectors from Manchester and cobblers from London contributing not more £15 a night."

The tourism ministry then decided to do away with mass tourism and soon products exclusive to Kerala were promoted to the affluent traveller -- the backwaters, ayurveda, kettuvallams (houseboats), the tree house, butterfly holidays, and traditional cuisines became the rallying points.

"How can India's first communist state be called 'God's Own Country'? There was no end to criticism," he writes. The turning point came when after a series of familiarisation tours with tour operators and travel writers, the National Geographic Traveller featured Kerala among 'fifty destinations of a lifetime'.

In subsequent chapters, Kant describes other tourism makeovers -- Ajanta Ellora, Kumbalgarh, Mahabalipuram and Hardwar -- and also throws light on parallel growth stories such as low carrier airlines, enhanced air connectivity, online travel portals and growing macro-economic confidence about India.

Kant admits that branding a destination is a multi-sectoral challenge. "I was dealing with home ministry for visas, state governments for taxi drivers, there were challenges in customs and immigration, tour operators, ASI sites -- all of them have to become your brand ambassadors," the author states. This was the backdrop when a parallel campaign -- 'Atithi Devo Bhava' -- was conceived.

Indeed, the book effectively conveys the importance and greatness of the Incredible India campaign, but it also gives a feeling that the campaign was too dependent on the success of 'God's Own Country'.One may also feel that the book -- designed stylishly by Wieden+Kennedy's V Sunil -- underplays the role of advertising's contribution to the 'Incredible India' campaign.

Lines such as 'An island a day, keeps the doctor away. Vitamin Sea'for Andaman islands; 'Not all Indians are polite, hospitable and vegetarian,' to talk about the Royal Bengal tiger, and 'One day, man will travel at the speed of thought. Pity,' to describe a calm meditative journey through Kerala's backwaters, are indicative of not just the tourism ministry's welcome savviness as a client, but also of a bureaucracy agreeing to promote Brand India in a slick manner.

True, Incredible India is a rare instance of savvy public sector advertising, which dared to poke fun at the country's glorious self.

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Ghats Stir: Kerala 'Missing The Wood' For The Trees To Use

By Shaju Philip (Guest Writer)

The draft recommendations of the Kasturirangan report on the Western Ghats have triggered a protest in areas of Kerala where prohibitory and regulatory steps are proposed. Syrian Catholics, who had migrated to these areas half a century back from Central Kerala, form a major chunk of farmers in the villages in the Western Ghats. In the recent decade, Muslims have invested their Gulf money in the hills mainly for real estate and commercial purposes.

Saturday, April 13, 2013

CJ REPORT: No Power, No Water Makes Kerala Grim

Deficient rains have compounded power woes in Kerala as the water-level of reservoirs is receding fast in the state which relies heavily on hydro power.

The situation is bound to worsen if the catchment areas of major hydro-power projects fail to receive copious summer rains before the onset of South West Monsoon, which normally hits Kerala coast by the first week of June.

Nearly 71 percent of the state’s total installed capacity of 2,873 MW is accounted by hydel sources.

According to Kerala State Electricity Board, total water storage in all the reservoirs stood at 940 million unit equivalent this week-end against an average daily consumption of 60 million units.

Despite one hour load-shedding, 30 minutes of which is in the peak evening hours, there is a yawning gap between domestic power generation and demand, which is met by heavy dependence on the central pool and other outside sources.

Apart from the uncertainty, the shortage has also cast a huge additional burden on the Power board by way of extra cost for maintaining the supply-demand gap in a state which boasts of cent per cent electrification.

According to Power Minister Aryadan Muhammad tiding over this difficult phase warranted at least six hours of load-shedding since the internal production is around 11 million units a day against the requirement of 60 million units.

The Minister, however, repeatedly made it clear that the government is keen to spare people of staggered switch-offs by making up the deficiency by tapping outside sources, though it entailed a heavy cost on the Power board.

The Kerala electricity regulatory commission has suggested that one of the long-term strategies for the state is to step up solar energy generation to make it at least 25 per cent of the total demand.

There are also suggestions for tapping the potential of mini and micro sources with the participation of the private sector.

                                (This Citizen Journalist Report was filed by Achyuta Menon in Thiruvanantapuram)