|
|
|
Articles 21 through 120 of 500:
- Regulation In India: Inevitable Reality (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Nov 03, 2007)
Regulation is inevitable in all areas of activity and it should be transparent with rights of consultation for all.
- Stay Away From Uncle Sam's Cabin (Pioneer, Correspondent or Reporter, Nov 03, 2007)
Cheerleaders of the India-US nuclear deal betray their innocence of the trap Washington is leading India into.
- 30 Lost Years (Pioneer, Harinder Sekhon, Nov 03, 2007)
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's assurance that it's 'not the end of the road' for the nuclear deal does little to soothe the anguish felt over the frittering of the gains of three decades of diplomacy to end India's nuclear isolation.
- Ring For The Butler (Telegraph, Sunanda K. Datta-Ray, Nov 03, 2007)
George Orwell describes somewhere the bustling arrival at a dak bungalow in Burma of a Burmese official of modest rank.
- Us Nuclear Plant Sealed (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Nov 03, 2007)
The Palo Verde nuclear power plant, the largest in the United States, was sealed off on Friday after security guards found a pipe bomb in a worker's car as he tried to enter the facility, officials said.
- Global Positioning (Hindustan Times, Editorial, HindustanTimes, Nov 03, 2007)
A recent issue of a news magazine proclaimed that Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s volte face on the nuclear deal had destroyed his credibility.
- Debating Points (Pioneer, G Parthasarathy, Nov 03, 2007)
The CPI(M) has announced that it is set for a debate, but not voting. But what will its argument be based on?
- Power Grid To Set Up Base In Dubai (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Nov 02, 2007)
Buoyed by the excellent rating given by the Power Ministry for its performance during the year, power transmission utility Power Grid Corporation Limited (PGCIL) on Thursday announced that it is setting up a base in Dubai and is eyeing up . . . .
- Russia, China Have Blocked Tough Iran Sanctions: Us (Indian Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Nov 02, 2007)
A senior US official said on Thursday Russia and China had been blocking tough UN sanctions against Iran for months but there would be a push to impose them if Tehran had not suspended nuclear activity within two weeks.
- Hooda Announces Tax Waiver Scheme (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Nov 02, 2007)
Chief Minister Bhupinder Singh Hooda on Thursday announced a bonanza for the people on the occasion of Haryana Day and the ongoing festive season.
- Global Positioning (Hindustan Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Nov 02, 2007)
A recent issue of a news magazine proclaimed that Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s volte face on the nuclear deal had destroyed his credibility.
- “We Must Intensify Efforts To Tap Non-Conventional Energy Sources” (Hindu, K. Venkiteswaran, Nov 02, 2007)
The debate over the 123 agreement with the United States has generated much heat.
- No Right For Turkey To Violate Iraqs Sovereignty: Kurds (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Nov 02, 2007)
Turkey is stepping up pressure on the Kurdistan regional government in northern Iraq to force it to tackleTurkish Kurdish rebels holed up in the inaccessible Qandil mountains along the Iranian border.
- Extremes Cohabit In India (Deccan Herald, Thomas L Friedman, Nov 02, 2007)
India could actually mint more land in the countryside, but it can't do it off car batteries. It will take a real energy revolution.
- The Power From The Final Frontier (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Nov 02, 2007)
At some point before 2050, satellites collecting solar power and beaming it back to Earth will become a primary energy source, streaming terawatts of electricity continuously from space.
- Red Terror (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Oct 31, 2007)
This seems to be the season for Maoist strikes. Last Saturday night, the son of Babulal Marandi, former chief minister of Jharkhand, was gunned down at a football match along with 18 others, including women and children.
- N-Deal Must To Meet India's Power Target: Kakodkar (Pioneer, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 31, 2007)
If the India-US nuclear deal does not go through, India will have to slash at least 6,000 MW from its projected 20,000 MW by 2020 in the absence of international civilian nuclear cooperation, Atomic Energy Commission Chairman Anil Kakodkar said on . . . .
- Storage Level Crosses 136 Feet In Periyar Dam (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 31, 2007)
Third and final flood alert issued to people in Kerala
- Not The End Of The Road: Manmohan (Hindu, SANDEEP DIKSHIT, Oct 31, 2007)
‘Efforts on for consensus on nuclear deal’
- N-Deal Delayed, Not Dead, Says Pm (New Indian Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 31, 2007)
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said on Tuesday the controversial nuclear deal with the United States had been delayed but was not dead.
- Nuke Reactor (Statesman, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 31, 2007)
Russia could sign an agreement with India next month to build four more reactors for the Kudankulam nuclear power plant in Tamil Nadu, a senior Russian official said here today.
- Nuclear Deal Delayed, Not Dead: Manmohan (Express India, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 31, 2007)
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said that India's controversial nuclear deal with the United States had been delayed but was not dead.
- Let The Rupee Go (Indian Express, Bibek Debroy, Oct 31, 2007)
Market capitalisation is not the best indicator. Nor may Reliance Petroleum equity have been counted properly.
- Economic Consequences Of Talibanisation (Daily Times, Editorial, Daily Times, Oct 31, 2007)
During the 1990s Pakistan’s annual growth rate averaged about 3 percent.
- Collective Punishment, Say Palestinians (Hindu, Atul Aneja , Oct 30, 2007)
Israel’s Defence Minister Ehud Barak has approved sanctions against the Gaza Strip to discourage rocket attacks from the territory on Israel.
- The Future Is Black (Pioneer, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 30, 2007)
Almost nonstop, gargantuan 145-tonne trucks rumble through China's biggest open-pit coal mine, sending up clouds of soot as they dump their loads into mechanised sorters.
- Punjab’S Fractured Governance (Tribune, Gobind Thukral, Oct 30, 2007)
PArkash Singh Badal, the fourth time chief minister of Punjab is indeed a lucky man. He has fought many a battle over the span of 40 years and survived to lead the state.
- The Battle Of The Kurds (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 30, 2007)
Mardu, Iraq — It is a land of resistance, the mountain peaks and winding valleys where Iraq’s own Kurds battled Saddam Hussein for decades.
- Egypt To Build Nuclear Power Plants (Indian Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 30, 2007)
Egypt said on Monday it would build several nuclear power plants, moving into the front of a group of nations raising fears of Middle Eastern proliferation with new pushes to develop nuclear energy.
- Raise And Fall Of The Index: Some Blunders (Deccan Herald, Editorial, Dawn, Oct 30, 2007)
The RBI governor has hit India's first industrial boom in 13 years on the head with a club, wtrites Prem Shankar Jha.
- Cong To Target Modi Detractors (Pioneer, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 29, 2007)
The Congress has pulled out all the stops for Gujarat Assembly elections. The party is looking at poll alliances with UPA partners, trying to rope in BJP rebels, finalising its candidates earlier than usual and fielding party president . . . .
- Nuclear Deal Will Be Beneficial, Says Kakodkar (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 29, 2007)
Defending the India-U.S. civil nuclear deal, Atomic Energy Commission Chairman Anil Kakodkar on Sunday said it could help in fulfilling growing energy requirements of the country.
- Winning In The Indian Market (The Economic Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 29, 2007)
If the ET awards had a category for the non-Indian multinational that built a businesses in India of the scale, scope and profitability of either ICICI, Bharti or Infosys, it is a reasonable guess that the jury would not have . . . . .
- A Day In The Prison (New Indian Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 29, 2007)
It was our third visit to San Francisco. I was determined not to miss the visit to Alcatraz, which had somehow eluded us the first two times.
- Carbon Blueprint (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 29, 2007)
Having given up on the nuclear deal and with elections in the not-to-distant future, the Congress (in particular the prime minister) has turned its attention to economic reform and governance, which should have been priorities at the beginning of . . . .
- Supercritical Thermal Power Plant By 2011 (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 27, 2007)
A thermal power project with supercritical technology is to come up on a 900-acre ‘government poromboke’ site at Udangudi in Tuticorin district.
- Uk Green Fellowship For 4 Film Makers (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 27, 2007)
Four young film-makers from India have been selected for the UK Environment Film Fellowships for 2007 for their work on subjects that primarily focus on environment-friendly and sustainable use of natural energy sources.
- Merkel For Closer Ties With Asia (Hindu, SANDEEP DIKSHIT, Oct 27, 2007)
German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Friday called upon the West to acknowledge “different structures” for resolving conflicts and be “open-minded” about religions from Asia. Calling on the West to be “more than willing to learn from . . . .
- What Hillary Can Learn From Obama (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 26, 2007)
Proposal by proposal, Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama are constructing policy agendas that present their party with mirror-image choices.
- “In The World Economy, There Must Be Freedom For People And Ideas To Move” (Hindu, SANDEEP DIKSHIT, Oct 26, 2007)
It was at the end of the IBSA (India-Brazil-South Africa) summit in Tshwane (Pretoria) that one met Roberto Mangabeira Unger, a don at Harvard University, author of numerous articles, and Brazil’s Minister for Long-Term Strategic . . . .
- Every Us Govt Since ’70s Secretly Helped Pak Become Nuke Power (Asian Age, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 26, 2007)
Every successive American government, from President Jimmy Carter to incumbent President George W. Bush, has turned a blind eye to Pakistan’s nuclear programme and allowed Islamabad to build nuclear facilities at . . .
- I Stand For Moderate Face Of Islam: Musharraf (Tribune, Afzal Khan, Oct 26, 2007)
Emphasising that Islam must not be interpreted to serve personal agenda, President Gen Pervez Musharraf has said that he is being branded as a weak Muslim because he calls for moderation and enlightenment.
- Pm To Discuss Upa's Flagship Schemes (Pioneer, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 26, 2007)
With the political crisis paralysing the functioning of the Government, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh will preside over a high level meeting of the officials to finalise a strategy for expediting implementation of the UPA's flagship schemes within. . .
- Power Capacity Addition A Herculean Task (Hindu, A N Sudarsan Rao , Oct 26, 2007)
Experts are raising doubts about achieving even the lowered target of 60,000 MW.
- Us, Uk Knew About A Q Khan But Kept Quiet: New Book (Indian Express, Shyam Bhatia, Oct 25, 2007)
Four years before Pakistan’s Dr Abdul Qadir Khan was publicly humiliated, then pardoned and placed under house arrest, the British and US authorities were briefed about his role in selling nuclear weapons technology to North Korea, Libya and Iran.
- Israel Backs Indo-Us N-Deal (Indian Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 25, 2007)
Coming out in support of the Indo-US civil nuclear deal, Israel on Wednesday welcomed the ongoing negotiations to end India’s nuclear isolation but said that a broader criteria-based policy was required to decide on entry of other countries into . . . .
- Big Blaze Empties California Homes (Telegraph, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 25, 2007)
Dying winds gave California firefighters their first big break today after four days battling wildfires, but San Diego faced more calamity as blazes there burned out of control and kept more than half-a-million evacuees from returning home.
- ...Malaysia Takes A Dive (Statesman, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 25, 2007)
Malaysia's ambitious plans to have a submarine fleet to enhance the nation's defence capabilities is bearing fruition, with the launch of its first submarine.
- Final Advice From Drucker For Knowledge Organisations (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Oct 25, 2007)
What is the first sign of decline of a company? Not a splash of red on the financial statements, as accountants may tend to think, but ‘loss of appeal to qualified, able, and ambitious people,’ as Elizabeth Haas Edersheim writes in . . . .
- Israel Readies To Severe Electricity To Gaza This Week (Statesman, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 25, 2007)
Israeli military experts have formulated a plan to gradually cut off electricity and fuel to the Gaza Strip in response to ongoing rocket fire from the Palestinian area, officials said today.
- Growing Russia, Iran Ties (Dawn, Tariq Fatemi, Oct 25, 2007)
MOST summit meetings these days are uneventful, because of the primacy given to protocol and publicity rather than to substance.
- Electronic Vision (Frontline, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 25, 2007)
THE Chandigarh administration is working towards making the city grow as a knowledge-based one.
- A Disk Revolution (Frontline, R. Ramachandran, Oct 25, 2007)
THE first computer hard disk drive (HDD) was introduced by IBM in 1956. Called the 305 RAMAC (Random Access Method of Accounting and Control), this first data storage system comprised 50 disks, each about 60 metres in diameter, and stored about five . . .
- Sarabhai's Vision (Frontline, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 25, 2007)
Governments lay down policies, but their implementation depends a lot on the personality and outlook of officials who, in turn, influence policymaking.
- Indian Pm’S Fund Missing Millions Of Dollars: Report (Dawn, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 24, 2007)
More than three million dollars donated to the Indian prime minister’s relief fund for victims of disasters such as the Asian tsunami and Kashmir earthquake are missing, reports said on Tuesday.
- Low On Uranium, 5 N-Power Units Are Shut Early (Indian Express, Kandula Subramaniam, Oct 24, 2007)
Faced with an acute shortage of uranium to run existing power stations, the Nuclear Power Corporation of India Ltd has advanced its maintenance schedule and started shutting down individual power units.
- A Church On The Move In Germany (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 24, 2007)
A 660-tonne stone church was lifted lock stock and barrel on to a giant rolling platform in eastern Germany on Monday to make the 12-kilometre journey to its new home.
- Lacking Spark (Telegraph, S.L. Rao, Oct 24, 2007)
In the years that I have been actively engaged with energy, more particularly electricity, I have been surprised by the inability — even of experienced journalists, let alone the ordinary public — to understand the simple facts that lead to the . . . . .
- India Serious On Deal: Ashwani (The Economic Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 24, 2007)
India may continue to hard-sell the Indo-US nuclear deal to the international community despite problems at home. Addressing business leaders and academics at Gordon Institute of Business Sciences, here on Monday, Union minister of state for . . . .
- Nuclear Power To Remain Important Energy Source: Iaea (The Economic Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 24, 2007)
Nuclear power is to remain a major source of energy around the world in the coming decades, especially given the concerns over climate change and energy security, the UN nuclear watchdog said.
- Mystique Of Moscow (Frontline, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 24, 2007)
THE structure of a megalopolis is clear, simple and immediately recognisable: airports, railway stations, public transport, supermarkets, cinemas, theatres and nightclubs.
- 'India Must Seek N-Self-Reliance Through Thorium' (Rediff on the Net, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 24, 2007)
Former president A P J Abdul Kalam has said that India should seek to achieve self-sufficiency in nuclear power through thorium fuel-based reactors.
- Steep Decline In Oil Output May Cause War (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 23, 2007)
Production peaked in 2006 and will fall 7 per cent a year, says new study
- Special Article (Statesman, Amulya Ganguli, Oct 23, 2007)
There is a saying in Bengali, pagoler go badhey ananda. It means that a mad man rejoices at the killing of a cow.
- Cost Of The Reverse (Telegraph, Ashok V. Desai, Oct 23, 2007)
The prime minister’s abandonment of his campaign to take India into the nuclear club has been a sensation. Since he had himself initiated and steered the manoeuvre, the media have taken its abrupt termination to be a personal defeat for him.
- 'Pak Is The Most Dangerous Place In The World' (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 23, 2007)
Pakistan, which recently witnessed a series of suicide attacks by pro-Taliban and al-Qaida militants, is the most dangerous country in the world, and has become a safe haven for terrorists, a media report says.
- ‘Germany Respects Any Decision Of The Indian Side Regarding The Specific Mix Of Energies Deemed Appropriate’ (Indian Express, Kandula Subramaniam, Oct 23, 2007)
Bilateral ties between India and Germany are closer than ever before. We have established a strategic partnership which is far more than establishing close economic ties that traditionally exist between our countries.
- Investigation In Karachi Bomb Blasts (Pakistan Observer, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 23, 2007)
Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz said that PML and its coalition partners are confident of their success in the upcoming elections due to their performance and quality of candidates.
- Talk To Iaea First: France (Statesman, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 22, 2007)
Uncertainty over the Indo-US nuclear deal cast a shadow over the first Indo-French nuclear business meet here which was aimed at strengthening bilateral cooperation in the atomic field.
- 'Iran Will Be Denied N-Weapon Permit' (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 22, 2007)
The United States and other nations will not allow Iran to obtain a nuclear weapon, US Vice President Dick Cheney said.
- 'Pak Is The Most Dangerous Country' (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 22, 2007)
Pakistan, which recently witnessed a series of suicide attacks by pro-Taliban and Al-Qaida militants, is the most dangerous country in the world, and has become a safe haven for terrorists, a media report says.
- Govt Wary Of Telling Left Nuclear Deal Is Off (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 22, 2007)
Though the Indo-US nuclear deal is on the backburner for all practical purposes, the government may not categorically acknowledge this when it talks to the Left in the joint mechanism meeting on Monday.
- ‘We Should Neither Proceed With N-Deal Nor Dump It Altogether... To Avoid Immediate Elections’ (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 22, 2007)
My guest today is one of the greatest characters in our politics today, one of our greatest writers — M. Karunanidhi, chief minister of Tamil Nadu. Let me also introduce his daughter Kanimozhi, a Member of Parliament, who will be our interpreter . . . .
- Memory Hope For Computers (Telegraph, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 22, 2007)
A US research team including an Indian-American scientist has cracked a seven-decade-old chemical puzzle involving a material commonly used in computer memory devices, optics and lasers.
- From Raj To Swaraj (Pioneer, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 22, 2007)
It would be unfair to compare Peter Clarke's book, The Last Thousand Days of the British Empire, with Stanley Wolpert's Shameful Flight: The Last Years of the British Empire in India and Alex Von Tunzelmann's Indian Summer:
- Us Acknowledges India’S Firm Stand On (Tribune, Ashish Kumar Sen, Oct 22, 2007)
Faced with the prospect of losing the support of its Communist Party allies over a civilian nuclear deal it struck with the United States, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s government has received a pat on the back from Washington for its “firm” stand.
- No Deal Till Agreement With Iaea, Says France (Asian Age, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 22, 2007)
Uncertainty over the Indo-US nuclear deal cast a shadow over the first Indo-French nuclear business meet here which was aimed at strengthening bilateral cooperation in the atomic field.
- Nuclear Power Corpn Stepping Up Uranium Mining (Business Line, Anil Sasi, Oct 22, 2007)
Turns focus to indigenous reactor programme
N-power plans
The company has targeted installed nuclear capacity of 20,000 MWe by 2020.
The company has plans to double indigenous uranium availability during the Eleventh Plan.
Jaitapur in Maharashtr
- Is It Pause, Halt Or End? (Hindu, M.R. Srinivasan, Oct 19, 2007)
A look at the possible scenarios in the event that the Indo-U.S. nuclear deal is put on the back burner.
- Dimensions Of Rural Poverty In Tamil Nadu (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 19, 2007)
In Tamil Nadu, the rural poor are the marginal and small farmers and landless agricultural labourers. A comprehensive agricultural strategy should include conferment of land ownership with increased public investment in agriculture.
- Transport Strike Brings France To A Halt (Hindu, VAIJU NARAVANE, Oct 19, 2007)
Nicolas Sarkozy’s fledgling presidency faced its first major challenge on Thursday as thousands of French transport workers brought the country to a standstill in response to his plans to extend the retirement age and cut down on . . . .
- Left Parties Will Not Allow India To Be Junior Partner Of U.S., Says Karat (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 19, 2007)
CPI (M) general secretary Prakash Karat said here on Thursday that the Left parties were firmly against the India-U.S. nuclear deal and would not allow India to be a junior partner of the United States.
- Putin Announces New Nuclear Weapon (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 19, 2007)
Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday chastised the United States over its policy in Iraq and Iran, and announced "grandiose" military plans, including development of a new nuclear weapon.
- State Of Complicity (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 19, 2007)
Why is it that, for a country which is experiencing record-breaking economic growth with nascent super power aspirations, we have been so unsuccessful in tackling corruption?
- New Clarity (Indian Express, Rajeev Shukla, Oct 19, 2007)
When the dust finally settles on Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s decision to avoid a confrontation with the Left over the Indo-US nuclear deal, few will doubt the sensibility and political wisdom concealed within the decision.
- For A Transshipment Hub In India (Singapore Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 18, 2007)
While ports are traditionally classified as major or minor ports, it is difficult to define transshipment ports in these terms as they target mostly international traffic.
- Nuclear Power Is Way Forward For China, India: Iaea (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 17, 2007)
Amid uncertainty over the Indo-US civilian nuclear deal, a senior IAEA official has said that nuclear energy is the way forward for the booming economies of India and China.
- N-Power Is "Way Forward" For China, India: Iaea (Pioneer, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 17, 2007)
Amid uncertainty over the Indo-US civilian nuclear deal, a senior International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) official has said that nuclear energy is the "way forward" for the booming economies of India and China.
- Build An Energy-Efficient India (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 17, 2007)
India is a country of extreme weather. It has large regions with burning hot seasons in summer and freezing cold winters.
- States Want To Modify Rti Act (Tribune, A N Sudarsan Rao , Oct 17, 2007)
Information Commissioners of different states meet in New Delhi on Wednesday to assess the implementation of the Right to Information Act since it was launched two years ago.
- India 'To Overtake Uk' (British Broadcasting Corporation, A N Sudarsan Rao , Oct 17, 2007)
India could overtake Britain and have the world's fifth largest economy within a decade as the country's growth accelerates, a new report says.
- Cong Should Forget N-Deal: Yechuri (Tribune, Bijay Sankar Bora, Oct 17, 2007)
The Communist Party of India (Marxist) today said it would be better for the Congress to forget the nuclear deal and George Bush for the survival of the UPA government.
- Nuclear Power Will Hurt India’S Development (Asian Age, V.R. Krishna Iyer, Oct 17, 2007)
The independence that India gained sixty years ago had a mission beyond liberation from the British.
- Putin Warns Us Against Attacking Iran (Indian Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 17, 2007)
Russian leader Vladimir Putin met his Iranian counterpart on Tuesday and implicitly warned the US not to use a former Soviet republic to stage an attack on Iran.
- The Village And Canal (Deccan Herald, A N Sudarsan Rao , Oct 17, 2007)
No one thought the picturesque villages near Wagah would one day see an exodus.
- Iran’S N-Plan On Putin’S Agenda (Hindu, Atul Aneja , Oct 16, 2007)
Russian President Vladimir Putin is set to visit Iran as scheduled, despite reports of an assassinate plot. Mr. Putin would take part in a summit involving heads of the countries straddling the resource rich Caspian Sea.
- Pranab For Collaboration In Tackling Climate Change (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 16, 2007)
India has called for collaboration between developing and developed countries in creating technologies to deal with climate change while ensuring energy security and economic growth.
- Let’S Not Be The Submissive Spouse (Indian Express, V.R. Krishna Iyer, Oct 16, 2007)
The Indo-US nuclear agreement — 123 — is a major energy refuge for India, says the prime minister. But it is of alarmingly adverse national interest according to many informed critics, and so the subject desiderates public debate.
- “Nuclear Power Is Simply Not Necessary” (Hindu, Marcus Dam, Oct 16, 2007)
By awarding the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize jointly to Al Gore and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the Norwegian Nobel Committee has more than simply underscored the need to reduce the threat of climate change to the security of mankind.
- Unleashing Little India’S Natural Enterprise (Business Line, R. GOPALAKRISHNAN, Oct 16, 2007)
We need to liberate Little India by empowering the people and promoting more local governance. That is the only way to spread prosperity to larger sections of our population, says R. GOPALAKRISHNAN.
Next 100 Power, Electricity Generation Articles
Home
Page
|
|