Monday, September 23, 2019

Making a house from trash, water from air and Aussies going green in a slum...



While many of us have just woken up to the idea of a climate emergency, some have worked hard to kick the CO 2 habit. Ketaki Desai profiles three such people to see what we can learn from them





SECOND-HAND LIFE

What makes a 40-something sell their car and start cycling to work? In G V Dasarathi’s case, the motivation was his daughter’s childhood respiratory problems. “My daughter was five, and had awful asthma. I was contributing to the very pollution that was the cause of her illness. When I can’t make changes in my own life, then how can I blame anyone else,” says the 59-year-old, who ten years ago built his dream home — from kachra.


“We took many of the materials from demolished homes,” says the mechanical engineer who cut building cost to half. From tiles to commodes, everything in their bathroom is second hand. An award-winning architect helped them turn waste into a home that draws many curious visitors in Bengaluru.

The sustainability doesn’t stop with the house. The family does not have air conditioning, cars, or a TV connection. Dasarathi also harvests their grey water — water that comes out wash basins, kitchen sinks and bathwater. “We use that for the garden, or for commode flushing. We also drink the rainwater we harvest, which one can do with a UV filter,” he adds. His blog, Low Carbon Life, is where he collects all the learnings from the last few years of dedicated environmentalism in his everyday life. “There are plenty of little things all of us can do to help, such as buying clothes that don’t need ironing or buying thin bath towels that dry easily. That reduces the load on water bodies and our groundwater.”

BARE NECESSITIES

Mark and Cathy Delaney were college students who wanted more from life than the average middle class Aussie (stable job, expensive car, fancy vacations). The couple wanted to be able to make a difference in the lives of people in the developing world. That’s why they not only packed up and moved to India in 1995, but decided to spend two decades living in slums in Delhi, mostly in Janta Colony. “The essence of good community work is understanding the lives of the people you’re working with,” says Mark.

Living without air conditioning, a washing machine, a fridge, as well as any form of private transport, the Delaneys didn’t even realise they were living a low-carbon life. It wasn’t until their son Tom took an interest in environmental issues, and an article about them in an Australian daily mentioned the sustainable aspect of their lives, that they began to focus on it.

Tom Delaney, 22, and his father cowrote a book about their lives titled Low Carbon and Loving it. In it, they identified six ways to break down one’s carbon footprint — the items we buy, our diet, local transport, long-distance transport, and electricity. That’s why they don’t drive, don’t eat meat, and try to take trains over flights as much as possible. Tom, who works in an NGO in Lucknow and lives in a slum, says, “The gist of our book is that things like flying, driving, and eating meat are luxuries, not essential to live a happy life.”

The book stemmed from the family’s frustration with the thoughtlessness with which other Australians lived back home. Mark notes that they just assumed that Australians must be working to reduce their very high carbon emissions, but the reality was that they

were more focused on the newest car model, or whether their football team is winning. Tom says, “The average carbon footprint in Australia is 20-22 tonnes of CO2 a year, whereas the average Indian is closer to the sustainable level of two tonnes.” Mark and Cathy are back in Australia for a year to settle their younger son into college, and it hasn’t been easy to keep their footprint as low as it was in India. When travelling to Melbourne or Sydney from Brisbane, where they live, they opt for 12 to 20-hour train rides instead of hopping on a plane, and they still don’t use a car. “The list of what is essential in the modern world keeps getting longer, but part of our purpose is to challenge those assumptions,” says Tom.

THE AQUA MAN

While most residents of Chennai were grappling with water shortages this summer, D Suresh — referred to as Solar Suresh by many — was flooded with H2O. “It started 25 years ago, when I saw water stagnating in my house, and how it was breeding mosquitos, so I started harvesting rain water,” says the 72-year-old.

The next project on his green docket was the one that lent him his nickname — he installed a rooftop solar plant after years of searching for the right vendor. In 2012, he finally managed to install it, and the 1 kilowatt solar set-up provides the electricity needed for his computer, refrigerator and everything else. “Now, I am part of a new scheme called net metering, where people like me who have excess solar power give it back to the grid. And in the evenings, I can take power from the grid in return,” he says. Other than his domestic biogas plant that he uses to produce manure to grow organic veggies on his terrace garden, his most recent acquisition is an air-to-water machine. “The machine, produced in Mumbai through a tie-up with an American company, compresses the moisture in the air to give cold water. It runs on electricity, and my next goal is to put the machine on solar energy.”

Not only does the planet gain from his efforts, he does too. He pays just Rs 500 every two months for his electricity bill, and while most Chennai folks were forking out thousands a month for water tankers, he generated his own at just 50 paise a litre.

Monday, September 9, 2019

What are some interesting facts about Pakistan?

Top 10 interesting facts about Pakistan


1. To obtain a passport in Pakistan, the Prophet and his education have to declare their support in the form of Islam. Ahmadiyya has a small Muslim sect, which has a population of about 2 million in Pakistan, will have to fill a separate form because Pakistan does not consider them Muslim.


2. In Pakistan, there is no death penalty for killing Ahalya because they are Kafirs under Islamic law of Pakistan.


3. Pakistan's passport was ranked 4th worst in the world after Afghanistan, Somalia and Yemen.


4. Pakistan PKR currency is the weakest currency in entire Asia, weaker than Afghanistan.


5. Pakistan 72 years after independence, saw 22 Prime Ministers, 4 Army Dictators, 3 President's rule and yet is not a democratic country.


6. Dr. Abdus Salam was the first Nobel Prize winner of Pakistan whose tomb was ransacked by the Pakistan Army simply because his tomb said that he was Muslim and he was Ahmadiyya.


7. Only Pakistan Army in the world is the army that owns and operates 4 factories of sugar production and cement production to sell and export to other countries. Every country in the world has an army but the Pakistan Army has a country.


8. Although the ISRO version of SUPARCO, Pakistan, had already been installed before ISRO, it has not been able to send itself a satellite, which places the upper atmosphere alone.


9. Pakistan's army lost all 4 wars against India, they lost half of Pakistan as Bangladesh during 1971 war, but still, you can see the commander wearing the medal hell to lose those wars. Are.


10. Pakistan never won a World Cup cricket match against India and the record was consolidated in the latest edition of the World Cup held in England.

Why do Indonesia print a photo of Lord Ganesha on their notes despite being a Muslim majority country?

Ganesh ji's picture remains on the 20000 note of Indonesia country of Asia. Here 87.5 percent of the population believes in the religion of Islam and there is only 3 percent Hindu population. Despite this there is so and different reasons are given for it.


It is believed that during the economic recession of Asia in 1997, the price of currency fell in many countries including Indonesia. During this time, Indonesia's currency also fell so low against the dollar that there was a severe economic crisis in the country. It can be called a coincidence, but it is true that after the photo of Ganesh ji was printed on the 20,000 note in 1998, the economic condition of Indonesia and its currency had improved rapidly in 1999. In Indonesia, Lord Ganesha is considered a symbol of education, art and science and hence he has been given a special place on the note there.


You will be surprised to know that in this country, not only Ganesh, an airline operates in Indonesia in the name of Garuda, which is called the vehicle of Lord Vishnu. In Indonesia, stamps have been issued in the names of the Pandavas along with Ganesh, Krishna and Hanuman. Jakarta, the capital of Indonesia, also houses a huge statue called Arjuna Vivah, which depicts the scene of the Mahabharata. The National Album of Indonesia is also called Garuda Panchsheel.

The logo of Lord Ganesha is also on the logo of Bandung Institute of Technology, a prestigious engineering college in Indonesia. Not only this, a huge statue of goddess of learning Saraswati has been installed outside the Embassy of Indonesia in America. The mascot of the Indonesian Army is Hanuman ji, and a famous tourist destination there is a statue of Arjun and Shri Krishna. Arjun and Shri Krishna are also remembered as excellent policy makers.

Which places are good for a summer vacation in South India?

छुट्टियाँ मनाने के लिए दक्षिण भारत में अनेक जगह हैं. यह आप पर निर्भर करता है की आपको कौन सी जगह पसंद आती है. पर्यटकों की कुछ चुनिन्दा जगहों की बात करें तो ये पर्यटक स्थल काफी मशहूर हैं दक्षिण भारत में.

There are many places in South India for holiday. It depends on you which place you like. Talking about a few selected places of tourists, these tourist places are quite famous in South India.

Munnar, Kerala

Ooty, Tamil Nadu

Idukki, Kerala

Kodaikanal, Tamil Nadu

Coorg, Karnataka

Coonoor, Tamil Nadu

Yercaud, Tamil Nadu

मुन्नार, केरल

ऊटी, तमिलनाडु

इदुक्की, केरल

कोदैकनल, तमिलनाडु

कूर्ग, कर्नाटक

कुनूर, तमिलनाडु

येर्कौद, तमिलनाडु

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