CNN's Eco Solutions – Solar cooking & solar lamps in India

March 15, 2010 · 5 comments

CNN’s ‘Eco Solutions’ presents India’s green movement in a special – ‘Greening India’

On this special edition of CNN’s Eco Solutions, Mumbai based international correspondent, Mallika Kapur takes viewers on a scenic tour of India’s greener side. A few small institutions to corporate India have focused on green initiatives and significant changes are visible today from cutting-edge clean technology to innovative grassroots projects.

Eco Solutions ‘Greening India’ captures the huge impact that the green movement is making in India in a half-hour special airing on Thursday, March 18 at 1400hrs IST. CNN Eco Solutions journey starts from Shirdi, a holy destination in the western region of India where solar cooking is revolutionizing life at one of India’s most celebrated temples. Solar cookers have replaced heavy-polluting traditional stoves making it cheaper and greener for the temple to host hundreds of thousands of pilgrims visiting daily.

Next, Eco Solutions visits a remote village in South India where the solar lamp is lighting up thousands of life stories. Solar energy may be the answer to India’s huge energy deficit as today almost half of the country’s population lives without power. Deepak Gadhia of Gadhia Solar Energy Systems Pvt. Ltd. said, “We soon realized what India needed was appropriate technology, not high technology. The most satisfying projects are the ones we do in the villages, where we can convert the whole thing into a smoke free village. We realize that it’s not about technology, it’s about social engineering. For those who cannot afford it, we have to social engineer so that they can pay from the profit and not from the pocket. India would change if we could have this technology in 500,000 villages in India.” S

iddharth Pathak, Greenpeace India said, “In India, you still have a long, long way to go for environment friendly technology innovation, but the potential is immense. We need to exploit that potential rather than waiting for the world to change and world technologies to come into India. I would say India can take on a leading role in developing solar or renewable technologies in the world.” India is known around the world as a burgeoning car market and CNN’s Eco Solutions takes a closer look at India’s homegrown brand that hopes its green technology can capitalize on this potential. Kapur finds out how an electric car company has big plans for more than one billion people in India and even bigger plans for the world. Stay tuned in to CNN International and for more information, visit website, http://www.cnn.com/ecosolutions

Source – http://www.webnewswire.com/node/514487

Bookmark and Share

Leave a Comment

{ 5 comments… read them below or add one }

Abba Shehu March 20, 2010 at 11:36 pm

we need tha addresses of this lighting and cooking solar manufacturers here in Nigeria.please forward the Indian address.

Reply

Yoni September 21, 2010 at 9:32 am

What we saw amazed us and we would like to know the name of the company and the name of the inventor of the solar project, that is used in shirdi india, we would also like and email address and his website on how to contact him and see other projects that he is involved in.
Thank You Yoni South Africa

Reply

Office Lamps October 19, 2010 at 11:09 pm

I actually saw the special on TV. It’s nice to see peopel taking action and using the earth’s energy to fuel everyday life. Solar power is a great source of eneergy for lamps or lighting.

Reply

Gabriel Kaunda December 20, 2010 at 9:36 am

I will appreciate if you can assist us get in touch with that Phillipines Project on Power generation using mthane gas thas is also generated by refuse/garbage. Iam working on women empoerment programmes and waste management and recycling intervention is one of our challenges.

Reply

Daniel January 11, 2011 at 6:17 pm

One of the nicest things about the greening movement in India is that it puts green power to operate from the grass roots.

Solar power can operate off the grid, literally, providing more and more green options that don’t rely on centralized planning.

Reply

Previous post:

Next post: