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Japan ready to finance India’s coal-fuelled projects

@Nihonjin1051 - You are again collaborating with the Enemy ! :pissed:

Brotherhood doesn't mean anything to you...does it ? :(

I am not going to call you Ani again ! :cry:
 
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We should think about doing some solar powered projects instead.

There is no shortage of sunshine in India, realizing that quite well this summer..
 
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I had the honor of meeting Mr Piyush Goyal last year though very briefly.Even though he is not a full cabinet minister he holds similar sway over the ministry since he is next in hierrarchy of power ministry which is directly under Modi.
He is highly intelligent man with great charisma,energy and a real presence.
Rest assured that power ministry is in very capable hands unlike the previous incumbent shezada Jyoti Scindia aka pappu mark 2.

Too bad capable people like him are not able to become mass leaders as majority of the electorate comprises of small minded idiots .
If modi had'nt gotten an outright majority he wouldn'nt have gotten a chance and it would have been India's loss. Mark my words, power ministry will be among the best run ministries of this govt under Piyush Goyal.
 
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Communal modi why no Special cells for Islamic countries
Nope He is secular. The special cell for islamic countries is headed by
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;)
 
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We should think about doing some solar powered projects instead.

There is no shortage of sunshine in India, realizing that quite well this summer..

My advice is don't, at least not on large scale. Solar is clean and all, but it wrecks havoc on grid stability.

Unless India's electric coordination committee(s, yes, India has multiple of them for some reason) is completely reworked and the grid instability greatly improved, I would stick with coal/gas/nuclear instead of solar or wind. Ideally you would use nuclear. Since it is both clean and provide a lot of power for low cost, but that has its own set of problems.
 
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My advice is don't, at least not on large scale. Solar is clean and all, but it wrecks havoc on grid stability.

Unless India's electric coordination committee(s, yes, India has multiple of them for some reason) is completely reworked and the grid instability greatly improved, I would stick with coal/gas/nuclear instead of solar or wind. Ideally you would use nuclear. Since it is both clean and provide a lot of power for low cost, but that has its own set of problems.

hmm.. Interesting.. yes Nuclear power is the way to go, but incidents like Fukushima and god forbid, Chernobyl, scares the hell out of me.
India presently has an installed capacity of 5780 MW from nuclear power, being generated from 21 reactors distributed across 7 plants. Only 7 nuclear power plants across the entire width and breadth of a large country like India is terribly less. India has an ambitious plan to increase nuclear power generation to 63000 MW capacity by 2032. Let's see how that goes.

I have always been a great supporter and ardent fan of renewable sources of energy. I have been into seminars, wrote papers, conducted tours, did my graduation project on that too. Grids are always a problem and I'm aware it will be a problem integrating large farms into them. But then, that is a solvable problem and should not take much of an effort to do so.
Recently, someone came up with this interesting idea of setting up solar panels over water-canals, used for irrigation purposes. I must say, I liked it very much. You don't have to find plane land, and setting up these panels over the canals reduces water loss due to evaporation.

SolarPowerplant+Guj.jpg


702cccb57d8944098cc4cc97dda7f4b9.jpg



We can also use solar energy on smaller scales, even on personal level, like running small home appliances. I myself recharge my laptop, tablet and phones on solar power.

I say, we should start taking baby steps in this direction. Changes may not be realized overnight, Rome was not built in a day. But, we should focus on giving consistent efforts and gradually situation will improve. Tropic of Cancer passes through the center of India, enough sunlight. We should put all possible forms of available resources to good use.
 
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Do you know that there's already over 1300 Japanese businesses that call India home? More and more of the facilities once located in China are offshoring to India. The more and more I'm liking Mr. Modi for his vision and investor friendly policy stance.
Finally, you Japanese find a good place to make money. Congratulations!

Leave China, just leave.:cheers:
 
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Finally, you Japanese find a good place to make money. Congratulations!

Leave China, just leave.:cheers:

Both of you morons are incredibly wrong, and are treating companies as if they are yours to control.

I repeat, companies can only have very limited influence on day to day operations, and investment decisions. Most of that effect can happen through trade, fiscal, financial, and preferential policies.

The Japanese companies willing to come to India are in search of low cost labor, or domestic market, or preferential policies.
It will be a business loss to both Chinese and Japanese, if there right wingers like you two guys were actually heard.

The fact of the matter is @Nihonjin1051 that many Japanese companies are coming to China, and vice versa. Not only this, this will continue. Regardless of what you think, Japanese companies have made huge Chinese connections, and are doing business together. Case in point being Soft Bank, and Alibaba. Not only this, till now Abe has only used financial repression, in that he has depressed yen, decreased nominal household earnings, decreased household expenditures, and brought great benefits to his industry wide friends. It remains to be seen that benefits will percolate downwards.
 
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hmm.. Interesting.. yes Nuclear power is the way to go, but incidents like Fukushima and god forbid, Chernobyl, scares the hell out of me.
India presently has an installed capacity of 5780 MW from nuclear power, being generated from 21 reactors distributed across 7 plants. Only 7 nuclear power plants across the entire width and breadth of a large country like India is terribly less. India has an ambitious plan to increase nuclear power generation to 63000 MW capacity by 2032. Let's see how that goes.

I have always been a great supporter and ardent fan of renewable sources of energy. I have been into seminars, wrote papers, conducted tours, did my graduation project on that too. Grids are always a problem and I'm aware it will be a problem integrating large farms into them. But then, that is a solvable problem and should not take much of an effort to do so.
Recently, someone came up with this interesting idea of setting up solar panels over water-canals, used for irrigation purposes. I must say, I liked it very much. You don't have to find plane land, and setting up these panels over the canals reduces water loss due to evaporation.

SolarPowerplant+Guj.jpg


702cccb57d8944098cc4cc97dda7f4b9.jpg



We can also use solar energy on smaller scales, even on personal level, like running small home appliances. I myself recharge my laptop, tablet and phones on solar power.

I say, we should start taking baby steps in this direction. Changes may not be realized overnight, Rome was not built in a day. But, we should focus on giving consistent efforts and gradually situation will improve. Tropic of Cancer passes through the center of India, enough sunlight. We should put all possible forms of available resources to good use.

To be honest, everything else really is just work in progress and given enough time it will get done. The biggest problem I had with Indian grid is that coordination is done by multiple agencies rather than one. It is rather inefficient and sometimes let politic get into what should a purely mathematically activity.

Solar panel over water canal is an interesting idea. I am not an expert on Solar panel construction. I guess there are two concerns that comes into mind immediately: 1. Would water vapor reduce the lifespan of the solar panel? Water evaporates naturally, especially in a country as hot as India. 2. Would water quality be affected if solar panels are damaged and the shards fall into the water?

I worked in a nuclear research laboratory before. Nuclear power stations are pretty safe as long as it follows the standard operation procedure. For example, the Chernobyl disaster happened when a less experience crew disengaged multiple safety feature for the test. In Fukushima, the Tokyo Electric did not want to spend the money to replace the reactor, so they waited four whole days without responding to the hydrogen build up. Had they followed the established safety procedure from the start, the disaster wouldn't have happened.

As long as the safety procedures are followed, nuclear stations are actually quite a bit safer than hydro or fire stations.
 
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hmm.. Interesting.. yes Nuclear power is the way to go, but incidents like Fukushima and god forbid, Chernobyl, scares the hell out of me.
India presently has an installed capacity of 5780 MW from nuclear power, being generated from 21 reactors distributed across 7 plants. Only 7 nuclear power plants across the entire width and breadth of a large country like India is terribly less. India has an ambitious plan to increase nuclear power generation to 63000 MW capacity by 2032. Let's see how that goes.

I have always been a great supporter and ardent fan of renewable sources of energy. I have been into seminars, wrote papers, conducted tours, did my graduation project on that too. Grids are always a problem and I'm aware it will be a problem integrating large farms into them. But then, that is a solvable problem and should not take much of an effort to do so.
Recently, someone came up with this interesting idea of setting up solar panels over water-canals, used for irrigation purposes. I must say, I liked it very much. You don't have to find plane land, and setting up these panels over the canals reduces water loss due to evaporation.

SolarPowerplant+Guj.jpg


702cccb57d8944098cc4cc97dda7f4b9.jpg



We can also use solar energy on smaller scales, even on personal level, like running small home appliances. I myself recharge my laptop, tablet and phones on solar power.

I say, we should start taking baby steps in this direction. Changes may not be realized overnight, Rome was not built in a day. But, we should focus on giving consistent efforts and gradually situation will improve. Tropic of Cancer passes through the center of India, enough sunlight. We should put all possible forms of available resources to good use.


@nForce ,


This year Japan has financed Norway in the amount of over $1.5 Billion to $3 Billion to produce wind power turbines. They're actually implementing Japanese technology of off-shore win turbines.
800px-Hywind.jpg


This is something that will regenerate energy , renewable power, and a source of power that has little to no carbon footprint. This is something that I believe Japan and India should look into the future. There is a great potential to build these wind turbines in the North of India ; Rajasthan, Gujarat, Arunachal Pradesh, as well as Kashmir are areas that have relatively high amount of wind , and strategically building these wind power plants can theoretically power these states with little to no dependence on natural gas, petro. :)

hmm.. Interesting.. yes Nuclear power is the way to go, but incidents like Fukushima and god forbid, Chernobyl, scares the hell out of me.
India presently has an installed capacity of 5780 MW from nuclear power, being generated from 21 reactors distributed across 7 plants. Only 7 nuclear power plants across the entire width and breadth of a large country like India is terribly less. India has an ambitious plan to increase nuclear power generation to 63000 MW capacity by 2032. Let's see how that goes.

I have always been a great supporter and ardent fan of renewable sources of energy. I have been into seminars, wrote papers, conducted tours, did my graduation project on that too. Grids are always a problem and I'm aware it will be a problem integrating large farms into them. But then, that is a solvable problem and should not take much of an effort to do so.
Recently, someone came up with this interesting idea of setting up solar panels over water-canals, used for irrigation purposes. I must say, I liked it very much. You don't have to find plane land, and setting up these panels over the canals reduces water loss due to evaporation.

SolarPowerplant+Guj.jpg


702cccb57d8944098cc4cc97dda7f4b9.jpg



We can also use solar energy on smaller scales, even on personal level, like running small home appliances. I myself recharge my laptop, tablet and phones on solar power.

I say, we should start taking baby steps in this direction. Changes may not be realized overnight, Rome was not built in a day. But, we should focus on giving consistent efforts and gradually situation will improve. Tropic of Cancer passes through the center of India, enough sunlight. We should put all possible forms of available resources to good use.



In Japan we are now designing and testing giant offshore wind turbines that can be a game changer in regards to efficient renewable power sources.

130123714159016122451_image001futaifuuryoku.jpg



:)
 
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"Since it's birth"?

Umm.. Do you consider the birth of Japan what after the World War?

It pretty much wreaked a lot of havoc on China and Korea for quite a number of years. And it was not only military. Japanese occupation was felt by the Chinese and Korean people in very personal and intimate ways. Many people in modern day China and Korea, have grandparents who can actually recount the horrendous tales of pretty inhumane capacity. Nanking Massacre and Unit 730, along with the whole sexual slavery issue is a fact, which the Japanese establishment is not willing to recognize.

There can be no reconciliation in Asia, until the Japanese come up with a thorough and deep felt apology from the society. Not the for face ones like Kono statement or Murayama statement, where not only are most issues not mentioned, senior politicians the very next day go on around rejecting claims of a of WW2 attrocities.

Not our concern
 
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Not our concern


Precisely said. India and Japan have much to worry about than dwell in the happenings of the past.

Our friend Ramjet Bhai is becoming more and more an agitator. Which makes me suspect if whether or not he's even Indian.

LOL.
 
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Precisely said. India and Japan have much to worry about than dwell in the happenings of the past.

Our friend Ramjet Bhai is becoming more and more an agitator. Which makes me suspect if whether or not he's even Indian.

LOL.

Fully agreed we have a lot of things to think about & what happened 70 years ago is not our concern
 
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