EDITORIAL

Two mantras we
must remember

During his just-concluded two-day visit to this region Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has made a couple of important points. One is that after having conceived a development project we should not delay its execution. The other is that universities should be big centres of learning and not merely teaching shops. Dedicating the Dulhasti power project in Kishtwar to the nation Dr Singh could not help but point out that it had been delayed for as long as 25 years. It is quite relevant to quote him: "Twenty-five years ago Mrs Indira Gandhi had laid the foundation of this project. This year is the silver jubilee of that keystone. Much time has thus been wasted in completing it. This delay is not desirable. We ought to finish our projects in time… Because we don't do so in time their cost goes up. If we persist with this tendency of 'chalta hai' (anything is good) we will not be able to maintain the present pace of our economic progress; we will not be able to take this State to the pinnacle which we want it to reach." Indira Gandhi had kicked off the Dulhasti project on April 19, 1983. According to original estimates it was to cost Rs 183 crores. Instead, the country has ended up paying Rs 5228 crores for it till now. Admittedly, the militancy also played havoc with it for five years. The kidnapping of one of their engineers by gun-totting militants led to withdrawal by a French consortium which was partner in the work. In our . ..more

Rediscover the Sainik Schools

By M P Anil Kumar

Lately,the media has been awash with reports of just 86 cadets having joined the Indian Military Academy at Dehradun against a strength of 250 for the course. And it is quoted that instead of 300 applicants, just 197 boys turned up at the National Defence Academy, Khadakvasla, at Pune.....more

Controlling climate change

By Smt Anjani Bhushan

Climate change is an issue that impacts not just a person , region or country but the whole world. Realizing early that a solution to the problem of climate change would require the collective and active participation of all segments of society across all nations, a group of people in the USA got ...more

Need for a policy on bio-fuel

By R.S. Wahi

We are now in the midst of a global food crisis. Over the last few years, prices of wheat, corn, rice and other basic food items have doubled or tripled, with much of the increase taking place just in the last few months. There are no indications of the trend reversing in the near future. Research by the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) of the UN indicates that ..more

EDITORIAL

Two mantras we
must remember

During his just-concluded two-day visit to this region Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has made a couple of important points. One is that after having conceived a development project we should not delay its execution. The other is that universities should be big centres of learning and not merely teaching shops. Dedicating the Dulhasti power project in Kishtwar to the nation Dr Singh could not help but point out that it had been delayed for as long as 25 years. It is quite relevant to quote him: "Twenty-five years ago Mrs Indira Gandhi had laid the foundation of this project. This year is the silver jubilee of that keystone. Much time has thus been wasted in completing it. This delay is not desirable. We ought to finish our projects in time… Because we don't do so in time their cost goes up. If we persist with this tendency of 'chalta hai' (anything is good) we will not be able to maintain the present pace of our economic progress; we will not be able to take this State to the pinnacle which we want it to reach." Indira Gandhi had kicked off the Dulhasti project on April 19, 1983. According to original estimates it was to cost Rs 183 crores. Instead, the country has ended up paying Rs 5228 crores for it till now. Admittedly, the militancy also played havoc with it for five years. The kidnapping of one of their engineers by gun-totting militants led to withdrawal by a French consortium which was partner in the work. In our State terrorism is a virus that has checked our advancement. At the same time we must concede that even otherwise we have been extremely lazy in our approach. Corruption is another factor that has eaten into our vitals. By and large the same is the story about well-intentioned schemes in the country as a whole. Hardly any of them has met the deadline. It is only the metro railway experience in the national capital that is turning out to be refreshing and reposes faith in our own capacity and system. Officially it is claimed that three turbines of 130 megawatts each at Dulhasti had started commercial production from March 31, 2007. Generation targets have already been surpassed which almost sounds like music to our ears. We sincerely hope that it makes up for the years and money that has been lost.

Given his excellent academic record the Prime Minister has to be taken very seriously when he speaks about education system. He knows its nuances from a long personal experience. As he himself said at the first convocation of Shri Mata Vaishno Devi University at Painthal, "I have strayed into politics by accident but my preferred career was teaching." We share his anxiety: "It is a matter of some concern that over the years many universities have become teaching shops and degree-giving authorities. We must reverse this trend and revive the tradition of teaching and research in our university system." There can't be two opinions that an overwhelming number of students go through universities simply to add to their qualifications with the solitary objective of enhancing their stakes in job market. In the process they remain ignorant of the real purpose of gaining knowledge and applying it for the emancipation of their minds and welfare of society as a whole. Research is a big casualty. In quite a few cases research scholars are made to do errands by their guides making a mockery of the very concept of delving into new and existing horizons of learning. A detailed investigation in at least one top university in the Hindi heartland has revealed something sickening. It has noted woes especially of girl students about how they are mistreated before being awarded higher degrees. Can anything be more distressing? Dr Singh has done well to quote Jawaharlal Nehru in this context: "A university stands for humanism, for tolerance, for reason, for progress, for the adventure of ideas and for the search for truth. It stands for the onward march of the human race towards even higher objectives. If the universities discharge their duty adequately, then it is well with the nation and the people. But if the temple of learning itself becomes a home of narrow bigotry and petty objectives, how then will the nation prosper or a people grow in stature?" Who can disagree with our first Prime Minister? Dr Singh thinks likewise. It is to be welcomed that he places great confidence on measures being taken to refurbish the country's academic life: 30 new Central universities half of which are to be world-class institutions; establishment of five more national institutes of science in addition to many more Indian institutes of technology and Indian institutes of information technology;, increase in number of scholarships particularly for scheduled castes, scheduled tribes and minorities and the biggest increase in public spending on education. Will these steps enable us to turn the corner and sharpen our spirit of inquiry? As far the Vaishno Devi University the Prime Minister is apparently satisfied with its progress in its brief journey so far. Rightly he has told the State government to ensure better road connectivity to the University.

Anybody trying to read political meaning into the Prime Minister's tour is bound to be disappointed. No doubt he has highlighted initiatives taken by his Government for the State. In an election year one can also read a message of its own kind into dedicating the Dulhasti a year after its commissioning and inaugurating the second Akhnoor bridge some time after it has been erected. However, unlike Congress president Sonia Gandhi who had sought vote only for her party ignoring her major coalition partner People's Democratic Party (PDP) at a women's convention not very long ago in this city Dr Singh has been rather circumspect. He has lauded both Chief Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad and his predecessor Mufti Mohammad Sayeed for giving "undivided attention" to the economic development of the State. Does this observation imply anything in the context of forthcoming Assembly polls? Whatever that may be we would do better to learn two mantras we have on hand: "chalta hai" attitude is counter-productive and academic environment is meaningless if it does not hone our thinking faculties.


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Rediscover the Sainik Schools

By M P Anil Kumar

Lately,the media has been awash with reports of just 86 cadets having joined the Indian Military Academy at Dehradun against a strength of 250 for the course. And it is quoted that instead of 300 applicants, just 197 boys turned up at the National Defence Academy, Khadakvasla, at Pune.

The media reports also highlighted the staggering number of officers who have sought premature retirement or release. Worse, this knell has struck at a time when the Indian Army, Navy and Air Force combined are already crippled by a shortage of around 14,000 young officers. This should worry not just the Ministry of Defence but the nation too, for, like nation-building or statecraft, the war machine too depends on mettlesome leadership to deliver results.

This plight has been blamed on the usual welter of reasons: unattractive salaries, tough working environment, limited growth opportunities etc.

Also, there have been reports of the Army Chief hinting at conscription or making service compulsory as a way out if the trend snowballs into a crisis. Earlier, the Defence Minister Shri AK Antony had urged the Pay Commission to issue bumper pay-packets so as to help in retaining those itching to leave and to entice bright youngsters into signing up.

Though the intake to the corps of officers has been on the wane, the UPSC and the SSB (Services Selection Board) have not compromised on their standards; they continue to pack the right material. Had it not been the case, our army would have begun crumbling in the nineties under the onslaught of the inimical elements in J&K and the North-East.

The make-up of the officer cadre of the Indian armed forces a decade after independence was disquieting for a Republic still writhing from the throes of its birth. It was a monopoly of the patrician, blue-blooded alumni of public schools and the so-called martial races- the ‘more-than-equal’ gentry who had little in common with the men they led.

The officer cadre patently lacked the grassroots character and ethos of the newborn nation and needed to be ‘Indianised’. The infrastructure to nurture the essential levels of physical, mental and intellectual calibre for induction into the officer cadre was found wanting in common schools. Since public schools were beyond all but the affluent, in 1960, the then Defence Minister VK Krishna Menon envisioned Sainik schools—at least one in each state—to select boys from across the spectrum through an open entrance examination and to rear them for leadership in the armed forces.

The Sainik Schools were modelled on public schools minus the elitism and snobbery. The syllabus-the examination approach -the bane of our education system-was cast aside. These schools would aim at all-round development to enhance competitive and survival skills, and to foster personality development subliminally. To ensure mainly smart boys from the economically backward bracket joined these schools, the states were mandated to provide merit-cum-means scholarships. The campus life would be free from communal and social bias, and insulated from the rumpus that bedevil student life outside.

Given their background and grooming, they would identify themselves with the men they command. Sainik Schools would thus serve as feeders to the National Defence Academy and the three service academies.

Did it work? Of course. The Sainik School cubs had their baptism of fire in the 1971 Indo-Pak war and emerged with flying colours. Remember how the young officers led their troops upfront, uphill, undauntedly through the cannonade to recapture the Kargil massifs? And last year, General Deepal Kapoor, a Sainik School product, took over as the Army Chief.

The call to establish an Indian Military College to raise an army officer cadre on the lines of the Royal Military Academy (Woolwich, later Sandhurst) and the United States Military Academy (West Point) was made in a Congress resolution way back in 1887. This demand was renewed subsequently at the Indian National Congress session of 1917. These ultimately led to the institution of the Indian Military Academy in 1932. This is a testimony to the vision and quality of leadership during the freedom struggle. Madan Mohan Malaviya confirmed this when he argued in the legislative assembly in 1928; The question whether a military academy shall or shall not be established is a question of life and death to the people of this country. The whole question of future governance in this country hangs upon that question.

In the past two decades, the profile of those joining the officer cadre and the students entering the Sainik Schools has changed. Earlier, sons of officers followed in their fathers’ footsteps into the officer cadre. No more. Now boys from a lower pecking order are the ones joining the service academies, a sign of social mobility up the ladder.

As for Sainik Schools, initially boys from indigent and not-so-rich background made it, but gradually they were replaced by those from the better-off stratum. Two reasons: one, in quest for sound education; two, given the steep rise in the fees, only the well-heeled could afford education in Sainik Schools. Thus, Sainik Schools, once acclaimed as the poor man’s public schools, became unaffordable for the poor man.

The economic boom in the nineties opened several avenues, but since the parents were paying up the fees, their wards were not motivated enough to see the armed forces as their profession. Naturally, the tally from Sainik Schools dipped. Setting this right is a solution to the intake-deficit ailing the services.

The need to nurture and maintain the talent pool and its cost are an important dimension of overall defence planning. If the government is canny, it would regard the 22 Sainik Schools (plus the five Military Schools and the Rashtriya Indian Military College at Dehradum) as the catchment area-cum-nursery of the ‘right material’, not only to overcome the present shortfall of officers but also as an inexhaustible wellhead for future officers. The annual overhead of the 22 Sainik Schools is nearly Rs. 96,000 crore for the year 2007-2008. The Ministry of Defence should pick up this tab as grant-in aid, not as largesse but as sagacious investment.

With aspirations booming proportional to the GDP growth, defence planners need to target the section of society which is likely to see becoming service officers as upward mobility. If 20 to 25 percent make it to the academies, the services will never face a shortage of officers. As for the rest, they will serve the country in other capacities. This will also accomplish the upliftment of those languishing on the margins of our society. Hence, the Centre footing the bill will provide a fresh lease of life to the Sainik Schools currently fighting a battle for survival, with phenomenal returns on this investment. A win-win scenario. In brief, rediscover the Sainik School to bridge the shortfall.

The National Cadet Corps needs to be made universal and mandatory for two or three years at the school level. NCC, besides doing the students a world of good, would inspire at least a few to join the services.

Lastly, many officers have sought premature release for reasons other than lucre. Like elsewhere, corruption has been corroding the vitals of the services, and the skeletons tumbling out apace have severely dented its image. Few will be tempted to prefer a career in the forces if the slide downhill is not undone. It’s time for the top brass to set the house in order. Besides, the services need to frame a modern appraisal system to ensure that only the deserving ascend the totem pole.

 

Controlling climate change

By Smt Anjani Bhushan

Climate change is an issue that impacts not just a person , region or country but the whole world. Realizing early that a solution to the problem of climate change would require the collective and active participation of all segments of society across all nations, a group of people in the USA got together to draw world attention to it and the First Earth Day was celebrated there in 1970 on April 22. Since then, it is observed worldwide as a reminder of our shared responsibility to protect the planet earth.

To create an informed environment amongst the various stakeholders on climate change in India, and to encourage various representatives to work together by sharing and communicating best practices, the Ministry of Science and Technology and the Ministry of Earth Sciences, and HSBC India signed a Memorandum Of Understanding at Delhi, creating a forum to be known as the ‘ Earth Sciences Forum’.

Speaking about the launch at a Press Conference, Union Minister of Science and Technology and Earth Sciences, Shri Kapil Sibal said: "…we have created a platform where informed people from academia, industry and even the general public can put forth their views and help find ways to mitigate the effects of climate change on all of us."

Ms Naina Lal Kidwai, Group General Manager and Country Head, HSBC India said: "HSBC is at the forefront among global companies, in the study of the impact of climate change and has been working towards doing its bit as a concerned global citizen… We are extremely hopeful that the Earth Sciences Forum will result in not just a constructive dialogue on climate change but active participation from all stakeholders".

The Climate Change Leadership Council under the Forum is to meet at least twice a year to chart a climate action course and will consist of representatives from the industry, government, academia, and NGOs. Periodic industry-specific learning workshops will be conducted in cities and the main target will be carbon-intensive industries such as Iron and Steel, Electricity, Automotive, Extractive industries(oil, mining), Real Estate, Information Technology, and FMCG among others.

The Forum is also expected to disseminate the Climate Change Leadership Council Proceedings, Research Monographs, Industry-specific low Carbon Strategies, Theme Papers, Country Climate Report etc. Additionally, the Forum will create communication to bring about awareness on climate change amongst general public, children and youth.

In India, the various activities to celebrate the Day started from first week of the month. More than 50 schools in the National Capital Region of Delhi participated in an inter-school poster-making competition with the theme "Creating Awareness On Use Of Public Transport". Through various campaigns, the students requested people travelling in personal vehicles to opt for public transport. They distributed car stickers. The ongoing programmes culminated with the celebration of Earth Day at National Science Centre, Pragati Maidan where Audio and Video clippings of Earth Week celebrations were demonstrated as ‘Earth Day Impressions’.

The Minister of State for Environment and Forest, Shri Namo Narain Meena released the first children Newsletter on environment ‘The Green Crusader’ and also released the Interactive State of Environment Atlas of India. The Atlas is a compilation of categorized thematic maps on green(forest, biodiversity), blue(water resources), and brown (air pollution)environmental issues and provides flexibility and versatility for users to visualize environment spatial data using simple Geographic Information System(GIS) functionalities. The Atlas is the first of its kind in India with regular updates and is available both as a CD and as an interactive website.

Shri Meena also felicitated 29 students, the State winners of the Green Olympiad 2007 at the Earth Day programme. The Green Olympiad, launched in 1999 on Earth Day is India’s First National Level Environment Examination for school children and is held annually in India and abroad with a focus on environmental concerns and needs of the present and the future.

The examination – Green Olympiad is conducted in association with the Ministry of Environment and Forests and culminates in the TERRAQUIZ, the first environmental quiz programme for school students on Indian television. School Health and Hygiene Programme is being carried out in the government schools of Haryana (Gurgaon, Sonepat and Panipat) and Delhi under the Yamuna Action Plan – II. Workshops, seminars, training programmes and educational field trips on environmental issues are organized for teachers and students at regular intervals.

Addressing the Earth Day Celebrations – 2008, Shri Meena said: "The mother earth gives us all life-saving substances and valuable services. The process of economic development and changes in consumption patterns have degraded the land. Therefore, we must put in all efforts to utilize natural resources judiciously. We should observe self control in consumption and we should live with modesty and compassion to protect mother Earth".

 

Need for a policy on bio-fuel

By R.S. Wahi

We are now in the midst of a global food crisis. Over the last few years, prices of wheat, corn, rice and other basic food items have doubled or tripled, with much of the increase taking place just in the last few months. There are no indications of the trend reversing in the near future. Research by the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) of the UN indicates that stocks have been declining across crops and that this was a crisis waiting to happen.

The high prices of essential items are creating unrest in many countries. This has become a grave concern for policy makers, economists and the media have been exercised over this as well.

After realising the implications of rising food inflation and its impact, the governments of different countries have resorted to all possible measures including trade, tariff and administrative. These would undoubtedly ease prices of food commodities temporarily but a long-term solution has to be found. There is a consensus that long-term global prices well be driven by a combination of demand and supply factors like the rate of expansion in food consumption, weather aberrations and climate change.

A new dimension has been added to the galloping food crisis, and that is the clamour for green fuel, which has to come from soyabean, rapeseed, sugarcane, sorghum, oil palm or corn in the main and also from jatropha, now added to the list.

The use of bio-fuel has picked up in the last few years because of government support in industrialised countries. Blending is mandatory and there is financial support in the form of incentives granted to producers and consumers. Importantly, the US and other countries use their own domestic production for this purpose. After using food crops for this producing bio-fuel, their export surplus has declined and this has decreased supply of these items in the world market.

Take the case of bio-fuels. Ethanol from sugarcane and bio-diesel from jatropha are the two key options being talked about in the Indian context.

In order to ensure that our bio-fuel policy does not conflict with our food needs, at least one basic principle must be adhered to: that there should be no subsidy whatsoever on any bio-fuel programme, including the pricing of power and water being used for irrigating sugarcane for ethanol.

Jatropha, which is supposed to be somewhat drought-tolerant and can be grown in so-called wastelands, is better from that point of view. But its potential seems rather limited given its existing low yields. British Petroleum and TERI have been engaged in piloting some programmes in this direction, but the country is yet to see any convincing results that are economically and environmentally sustainable and scalable.

It is being pointed out that the diversion of food crops for bio-fuels by countries such as the US has resulted in food inflation and contributed greatly to world food crisis. The policies of these countries that support bio-fuels are being criticised.

Many experts in food policy consider that the diversion of crops into fuel production has contributed partly to higher prices of food crops. But other factors have also played an important role including droughts and rapid global economic growth that has sparked higher food demand. In addition, continued neglect of agriculture in countries like India is also responsible for this situation. In fact, policy makers in some countries have failed to pay adequate attention to agriculture growth and self-sufficiency in food.

World needs to review the fundamentals. Currently, there is a debate between need for bio-fuels. Major food producers need to revise policies to create a balance between food production and use of traditional crops for bio-fuels.

The multilateral bodies like the WTO and UN can play an important role by convincing countries to maintain a fine balance to help the humanity to save from hunger and food insecurity.

Agriculture has been ignored for too long and all of a sudden, we are talking about food insecurity, food riots, etc. It is true that the share of agriculture declines as there is economic progress, but this sector has a vital role to play especially in highly populated economies like India to provide food security. Hence, there is an urgent need to rejuvenate agriculture and usher in reforms and investments so that productivity of food crops, which is stagnating for past two decades, may increase. There is an urgent need to look at agriculture in a holistic manner. Under the circumstances, technology is the long-term answer.

The world needs a policy for bio-fuels. First, it must accept that the "switch" to bio-fuel will do little to avert climate change in the current circumstances. In the US, if the entire corn crop is diverted to ethanol, it would replace only 12 per cent of the petrol used today. And this use is increasing. Instead, global climate policy must be to change consumption patterns to reduce emissions. Governments should not provide subsidies to grow crops for bio-fuel but spend to limit their fuel consumption by reducing the sheer number of vehicles on their roads.

The policy must be to use non-edible bio-fuels on non-arable land only in high efficiency vehicles of mass transit-buses, not cars. If this is done, bio-fuels, which are renewable and emit less greenhouse gases, will make a difference. Otherwise, we are only fooling ourselves.

Bio-fuels could well be a big part of the climate solution but only if they are used to help the world's poor to leapfrog into a non-fossil based energy future. What we do not realise is that the bulk of what we call renewable energy-as much as 80 per cent-is the biomass energy (chulha) used by the poorest to meet their cooking and fuel needs. Therefore, the opportunity for a massive bio-fuel revolution is not in the rich world's cities to run vehicles, but in the grid-unconnected world of Indian or African villages.

This fuel market will demand a different business model. It cannot be conducted along the current so-called free market model, which is based on economies of scale and, therefore, demands consolidation and leads to uncompetitive practices. In today's business model, the company will grow the crops, extract the oil, transport it first to refineries and then back to consumers. The new generation bio-fuel business needs a model of distributed growth in which we have millions of fuel growers and millions of distributors and millions of users.

For this to happen, we will have to remember that climate change is not a technological fix but a political challenge. Bio-fuel is one part of that new future but only if we can get politics right. INAV

 
 



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