Monday, December 12, 2022
Phobjika's Reeds and Cranes
Sunday, December 11, 2022
Credit Cards in Bhutan
In the age of digital payments it feels strange to carry around wads of currency notes.
This is exactly what happened to me last week in Bhutan. For the entire duration of the trip that covered about 800km, from Paro to Thimpu, Punakha, Phobji Valley, Trongsa and onward to Bumthang and back, I was unable to use any of my credit or debit cards, let along e-payment apps like PayTM, GPay or Bhim-UPI. At all hotels and shops, my attention was drawn to the fine-print behind every card issued in India - "Not valid for payment in foreign exchange in Nepal and Bhutan".
The question is why would any Indian want to make a payment in foreign exchange? India and Bhutan share open borders, and Indian currency is freely accepted everywhere, but the use of anything other than cash is quite difficult. While it is possible to withdraw cash from the Bank of Bhutan (BoB) ATMs in the capital city, Thimphu, a steep fee of N300 is charged for each transaction.
How did this strange situation come to pass? How much of tourist income is Bhutan losing due to these rules?
Explanations available online point to apprehensions at the central banks that these steps are in place to prevent Hawala transactions and money laundering across the open borders...yet, things do not seem to add up.
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REFERENCES & LINKS
- Hawala transactions - https://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/fandd/2002/12/elqorchi.htm#:~:text=The%20hawala%20system%20refers%20to,transaction%20and%20the%20countries%20involved.
- RBI Rules - https://www.rbi.org.in/Scripts/FAQView.aspx?Id=66
- Hindi YT - https://youtu.be/zAdIYHdO7VU
Saturday, November 12, 2022
Numbers in Perspective - II: Wages & Taxes
I was struck by this chart which appeared in a report published last week, titled, "The New India", by Morgan Stanley Research.
The tapering bars represent manufacturing wages inAsia, and India figures at the right extreme, with a wage-rate per employee that is among the lowest in the world. At US$0.8/hour, India's wage-rate was lower lower than Indonesia at US$1, China at US$7.1 and South Korea at US$22.3.
These might seem like random numbers until your place them in perspective. An hourly wage of USD 0.8/hour is about INR 64/hour. For an eight-hour work-day, the wage is just INR 512, or INR 13,412 for a 26-day-month. This leads us to an annual income of about INR 1,60,944 for the whole year (~USD 2,000)!
So the average manufacturing wage in India is not far from its latest per-capita GDP, which according to the World Bank, is now USD 2277 , or INR 1.82 lakhs. One just has to remember the average wages of a semi-skilled worker in Delhi NCR to realise that these depressing numbers are factual - a housemaid earns about INR 12,000 a month, a security guard about INR 15,000, and the sweepers & cleaners, or those employed by the unorganised sector, far, far lesser.
This also holds the answer to a related question - Why are the direct taxes collected by the Government of India so disproportionate to the population of the country?
Consider these facts:
- The largest employer of wage-earners is the farming sector, and agricultural income is tax-exempt in India
- A measly 5% of Indians actually pay tax. A maximum of around 80 million people out of 1.30 billion Indians (6.1%)
- India has only seven income taxpayers for every 100 voters, among the lowest of all G20 democracies
- Only about 40% of India’s population is currently employed or looking for work. So that cuts the 1.3 billion figure by more than half
- Only 3% of Indians take home an annual salary of more than ₹ 500,000 - the government exempts all those who earn less than this.
- The threshold of ₹ 500,000 is actually over three times the per capita GDP of the country. For context, it’s just 1.1x in Indonesia, 0.9x in Mexico, and 0.4x in the Philippines.
It is possible for the government to capture more people in its tax net, if it really wants to, but it may not be the humane or even politically expedient option, given the current state of affairs of the average wage-earner in New India.
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REFERENCES & LINKS
* India - GDP per capita - https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/NY.GDP.PCAP.CD?locations=IN- USD 2277 = INR 1.82 L
* * (15Mar2022) - https://www.livemint.com/news/india/how-many-indians-pay-tax-in-a-country-of-1-3-billion-govt-answers-11647352021053.html
* (20Feb2017) - Decoding India’s Low Tax Base Conundrum - BQ Prime- https://www.bqprime.com/opinion/decoding-indias-low-tax-base-conundrum
Monday, October 31, 2022
Numbers in Perspective - I: Capital Markets
The stock market in USA tanked a few days ago after Elon Musk finally decided to take over Twitter.
While it is the dharma of markets to swing and sway wildly to various sentiments, one data-point stood out - the loss of market-cap suffered by seven top companies of USA was bigger than the entire capitalisation of the Indian market!
Only a few months ago the newspaper headlines had announced that India's equity market had broken into the Top Five Club in terms of capitalisation for the first time. At $3.21 trillion, India was now UK ($3.19 trillion), Saudi Arabia ($3.18 trillion), and Canada ($3.18 trillion).
All is is small change compared to the total market-cap of USA which is over $47 trillion...We have a long, long way to go!
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REFERENCES & LINKS
* (12 March 2022) - India breaks into world's top five club in terms of market capitalisation - https://www.business-standard.com/article/markets/india-breaks-into-world-s-top-five-club-in-terms-of-market-capitalisation-122031200004_1.html
* Visualising market capitalisation - https://howmuch.net/articles/all-stocks-capitalization-around-the-world
* Pearls of wisdom on investing in India - mostly from Mohandas Pai at a @TheRepublic event - https://youtu.be/Vtitg-o-8FI
Sunday, October 30, 2022
Dutch Doors, English Windows
Tuesday, October 11, 2022
DW News: Cynical Green
The title is, of course, misleading - "Does the World Want a Greener India? - International investors view India as both risky and vulnerable". At a time when the words 'risky' and 'vulnerable' would best describe the condition of the West which is confronting a multi-layered crisis emerging from the Ukraine-Russia conflict, Germany's official news agency, DW News, turns its focus on solar energy initiatives in India.
DW Asia Today has a byte from Kartik Sachdeva of Energific Solar, company that is unable to keep up with the demand for rooftop solar systems in Delhi; it talks of government subsidies to get rural areas to adopt solar energy, and then, and interview with Chandra Bhushan, CEO of iForest. It is this interview that takes the cake :)
The interviewer wants to know - "Does India have the financial responsibility, the transparency and viability...to convince international investors that it is the place to invest?"
Do listen.
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LINKS & REFERENCES
* Solar Park, Gujarat - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gujarat_Solar_Park-1
* Charanka Solar Park - 700MW - https://www.dnaindia.com/ahmedabad/report-solar-power-capacity-at-charanka-solar-park-to-touch-790-mw-2607133
* Chandra Bhushan, iFOREST - https://iforest.global/people/governing-council/chandra-bhushan/
Sunday, September 25, 2022
Booze for a Balanced Budget
I have been trying to figure out the relationship between booze and state revenues for a while now.
States in India seem to have a whole spectrum of different approaches to alcohol sales. On one end of this spectrum you have states like Gujarat that have had an official ban on alcohol sales for decades, and at the other end, there are states like Kerala that actually depend on taxes from alcohol sales for a major chunk of their revenue. The extent of this dependence is not something I had understood until I reeled in a thread on Twitter a few days ago.
On 23 Sep., 2022, @thekaipullai mocked the communist-led coalition government in Kerala for their dependence on alcohol sales and the sale of lottery tickets. Out of Kerala's total state revenue last year, which amounted to INR 1.03 lakh cr (USD 13,733 million @INR75/$), more than 60% came from:
- Central Govt grants contributed to INR 36,000 cr (USD 4800 m)
- Alcohol sales contributed INR 13,000 cr (USD 1730 m)
- Lottery sales, INR 9000 Cr (USD 1200 m)
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LINKS & REFERENCES
* 13 Jun 2022 - https://english.mathrubhumi.com/news/kerala/lottery-sales-in-last-six-years-kerala-govt-added-more-than-rs-56-000-cr-to-its-kitty-1.7602280
* 17 Mar 2022 - https://prsindia.org/files/budget/budget_state/kerala/2022/Kerala%20Budget%20Analysis%202022-23.pdf
* 14 Jan., 2022 - https://www.moneycontrol.com/news/business/economy/covid-and-lockdowns-chill-liquor-sales-in-kerala-7938201.html
* Karala Govt - Revenue Collection - http://www.statelottery.kerala.gov.in/index.php/revenue-collection
Tuesday, August 23, 2022
Codling Moth - True or False?
There is an insect called the False Codling Moth - true or false?
True!
An insect that goes by this name is now at the centre of an an international trade dispute between South Africa and the European Union. The False Codling Moth (henceforth FCM) infects a range of fruits, especially citrus and is perfectly adapted itself to Global Warming (unlike the original Codling Moth) and a range of climatic zones. It is the fear of FCM infestation that has recently driven the EU to put up stricter measures to prevent its spread into Europe.
About 3.2 million cartons of citrus worth about 605 million rand ($36 million) is now rotting in European ports because of a change in rules that happened even while the fruit containers were on their way to the northern hemisphere. In face of a growing apprehension that its own horticulture may be affected by this moth, EU wants all citrus consignments from South Africa to go through a freeze treatment - an expensive add-on in the supply chain that makes the exports more expensive, and perhaps economically unviable for the African farmers.
This is not very different from the dilemma faced by Indian mango exporters. Different countries demand different post-harvest treatments before they allow imports of mangos - hot water treatment, vapour heat treatment or irradiation. Japan, UK and EU countries do not allow import of mango without vapour heat treatment - again an expensive process for small farmers.
So ultimately, the irony - countries that produces that produce the best variety of citrus or mangos are unable to export it to the very markets that pay the best rates.
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REFERENCES & LINKS
* SA oranges to EU - https://www.euractiv.com/section/agriculture-food/news/tonnes-of-fruit-stranded-in-eu-south-africa-battle-of-oranges/
* Constraints in mango exports from India - http://indianecologicalsociety.com/society/wp-content/themes/ecology/volume_pdfs/1651904681.pdf
* https://www.thehindu.com/sci-tech/science/managing-fruit-fly-in-mango/article7130611.ece
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/False_codling_moth
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Codling_moth
Monday, August 15, 2022
A Calculus of Crystals
The word "calculus", I discovered last month, has two meanings. The first is of course what we learn at school - a branch of mathematics that deals with variable quantities. The second one is common only in the world of pathology - "a stone-like concretion of minerals and salts found in ducts or hollow organs of the body".
It is shards of the second calculus that we see in the picture above, the 'concretion' that caused me much pain and discomfort last month. It was apparently a set of two minerals attached to each other, calcium oxalate and uric acid, one smooth and layered while the other one with its typical radial spikes.
Whatever be its composition and size, one first-hand lesson was that the degree of pain and discomfort depends primarily on where the stone is lodged. Mine was 6.4mm wide, and stuck at a bend on the ureter, just before it empties into the urinary bladder.
This was not a recent development. Call it carelessness or apathy but I had been carrying this one in my system for at least the past 15 years, and it used to show up with clockwork regularity during the annual medical check-ups. The radiologist would stop at a particular point on my belly and say, "There seems to be an obstruction here...do you feel any pain?...No? Well, then, drink lots of water, and maybe it will get flushed out on its own."Years rolled by. I started every morning with a few glasses of water, I continued with my regular distance-running, trekking and traveling. At some point the annual check-ups ceased, and I all but forgot about the the radiologist's word of caution...until last month.
On a hot, humid July afternoon, I developed a niggling pain under my left ribs. Initially I assumed it was due to a particularly heavy lunch I had that weekend - rajma-rice followed by a double helping of ice-cream. I thought it would clear up on its own but the pain just doubled up, even after a bout of vomiting.
For the next few days, there was no let up on the pain, just the intensity varied during the day. Sometimes dull and deep, then sharp and persistent, there was no posture that eased it - sitting, walking or lying down. Even taking a deep breath seemed to take some effort; the elastic on pyjamas hurt, and a complete loss of appetite meant that that I was consuming only liquids.
At a nearby hospital the GP too read the symptoms wrong - it was misdiagnosed it as acute Gastritis. When three days of medication did not provide any relief from the sharp, persistent pain that kept me awake all night, an ultrasound test gave the first clue that the doctor was trying to solve the wrong problem. The stomach was perfectly fine but there was a significant swelling of the left kidney - "Left distal uretic calculus with moderate hydroureteronephrosis, and mild perinehpritic soft tissue stranding".
Translated from doctor-ese this simply meant that a stone in my left ureter had blocked the plumbing. The old 'obstruction' had travelled down the ureter to a point where it had got completely stuck at a bend. Fluid trapped in my kidney had not only inflamed it but the tissues had also started getting damage. Something had to be done immediately to remove the blockage, before the rot spread into other complications.
I was actually quite relieved to hear this. It is a blessing to have an 'ordinary' problem, one that has a handy acronym, KSD (kidney stone disease), and something that affects 12 percent of the population. This also meant that there were SoPs for dealing with this in almost every hospital with minimum of hassles from the health insurance companies. So the course of action was also quite straightforward - find a suitable hospital, and get the stone out ASAP.
We zeroed in on a hospital recommended by a friend, one that had an unusual name for an institution based in Delhi - Tirupati Stone Centre (TSC). Even though it was located at one of the busiest crossings I have seen in East Delhi (Karkadi Mor, Gagan Vihar), the hospital itself was an island of quiet efficiency, staffed by sensitive folks and a set of supremely competent nurses from Kerala.
At TSC, Dr. Ajay Agarwal took a look at the ultrasound and CT scans and concluded that immediate action was required. The very next day afternoon I was on an operation table for a spinal anaesthesia followed by a procedure that blasted my kidney stones with a laser-beam, and propped up my urethra with a temporary stent. The procedure took about 40 minutes but it took about four hours for the anaesthesia to wear off, and for the gradual return of sensation to my limbs - little toes, ankles, knees, hips, and then the big toes!
I feel perfectly fine now - only the stent needs to be removed later this month. As in the case of high-school mathematics, it is quite a relief to be spared of the pain and discomfort that emerges from an unresolved calculus problem!
--------------------------- Get a second opinion on the initial diagnosis - tests are important. In my case it was the ultrasound that led us to discover that the problem was with the kidney, not the stomach.
- At private hospitals that are run like Yatharth Hospital Noida, doctors can get their diagnosis wrong
- Hospital admin & accounting rules are such that the emergency services the staff is very hesitant about using their own stock of drugs and disposables. Even in a critical situation be prepared to see your 'attendant' being sent off to buy injections and syringes!
- Telemedicine may be the in thing but insurance companies want prescriptions on paper! On a Sunday the doctor sent us a message on WhatsApp recommending a CT scan but this became s sticking point for the mediclaim company (NIAC) and caused considerable delay in approvals.
Tuesday, July 12, 2022
Revisiting the Epics
I thought I knew a thing or two about Indian epics and classics. Over the past months, two books and a podcast have undermined this notion, and reminded me that my knowledge is, at best, narrow and woefully shallow.
The two books were - S Jaishankar's "The India Way" and Roberto Calasso's "Ka: Stories of the Mind and Gods of India" (Translated by Tim Parks), and the podcast series, "The Vatapi Curry Point" by Krish Ashok and Anirudh Kanisetti.
Jaishankar's book is mainly about the evolving global stance of the Indian state - the way it views itself, and the rest of the world. Much of the book reads like a guide for career diplomats, but still, what is of interest in this context is Chapter 3, titled "Krishna's Choice". In this he lays out observations on India as a civilisational entity trying to fit itself into a narrower idea of a nation state, a concept born from the Peace of Westphalia - 'an international society of sovereign state entities possessing the monopoly of force within their mutually recognised territories'.
He begins with a quote (or admonition!) from Goethe - "A nation that doesn't honour its past has no future", and discusses the importance of dissimulation in statecraft. While most of us may be familiar with Kautilya's 'Sama, Dana, Danda, Bheda' (alliance, compensation, force and trickery), as ways of approaching political challenges, the role of specific characters in the Mahabharata was something I did not know.
Take for instance, the role of Susarma. He was the chief of the Trigarta warriors from a kingdom around present day Punjab:
"Traditional allies of the Kurus, they conceived a special enmity towards Arjuna, who defeated them while preparing the ground for Yudhistira's coronation ceremony....their single-minded hostility proved very dear to the Pandavas. Constantly pouring oil into the Kaurava fire, they collaborated in the effort to smoke the Pandavas from the Virata kingdom during their period of exile...their challenge to Arjuna of a fight to the death diverted him away from the main battle, leading to the capture of his brother Yudhistira alive by the Kauravas...The moral here is of the danger of smaller adversaries whose single-mindedness goes to the extent of destroying themselves to inflict damage."
Obviously the reference here is to Pakistan and the state's attitude towards India. Jaishankar presents other examples as well: Shalya, the maternal uncle of Pandavas, who is tricked by a false flag operation into committing to the Kaurava side; Krishna's brother Balarama, is genuinely neutral as he has taught warfare to both sides and opts out of the conflict by taking a long pilgrimage during the war; and Rukmi of Vidharba, another notable warrior who stays out of the war, by overestimating his own value to both sides and ends up accepted by neither.
Calasso's "Ka", on the other hand, examines the epics from a different dimension. While in Jaishankar's book we can connect to geographical locations that match places in India today, Calasso reminds us that the stars and constellations in their supra-human forms played an active role in the human drama, in this part of the world:
Daksha - "he who is skillful" - emerges from the thumb of the creator, Prajapati / Brahma's right hand. Over time, he becomes a king and weds Prasuti, and the couple have a whole bandwagon of daughters. 27 of these daughters marry Soma, the moon god, who places them in the heavens as dancing troop of 27 Nakshatras/stars. The most headstrong of his daughters is Sati who insists of marrying Shiva, the most reclusive and fiery-tempered of all gods; the one who traps the whole Milky Way (Akashaganga) in his tresses and brings it down to earth as the river Ganga!
The last one, a podcast, is delightfully irreverent. It is a freewheeling discussion on history, food, and science between two authors and social-media-stars, Krish Ashok and Anirudh Kanisetti on Instagram. It pokes fun at the prevailing dogmas, ridicules folks set on creating communal divisions while also asking interesting questions.
Here is one: What is the similarity between Arjuna and Maradonna?
According to Krish Ashok, the Sanskrit name Arjuna is based on the Indo-European word for silver - "Argentum". Arjuna - Argentum - Argentina - Maradonna!
There is certainly a lot more to the epics than meets the eye :)
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REFERENCES & LINKS
- Jaishankar, S (2021): The India Way
- Calasso, Roberto (): Ka - Stories of the Mind and Gods of India
- Vatapi Curry - Insta - https://www.instagram.com/_masalalab/?hl=en
Thursday, June 30, 2022
Power Supply vs. Demand
A couple of days ago Delhi consumed more power in a single day than ever before.
According to reports from the State Load Dispatch Centre (SLDC), the national capital recorded its highest ever peak power demand on Tuesday (29 June 2022) noon when it crossed 7,695MW. In the coming days this is expected to cross 8000MW - this is quite a jump from the previous recored of 7,409MW on 2 July, 2019.
The spike in demand has been attributed to the really hot and and humid summer this year with the city's Heat Index (HI) or 'real feel' temperature climbing up to 53C.
While such high temperatures are par for the course for summers in North India, what surprised many of us is near absence of power outages this year. Not once did an extended power cut knock out the inverters leaving us sleepless on sweltering, sweat-soaked bedsheets, seeking refuge on balconies teeming with mosquitos.
What explains this?
A part of the answer comes from an oped written earlier this month by RK Singh, the current cabinet minister for power and renewable energy. Writing for the Hindustan Times, he presented some interesting numbers:
- India's capacity to generate power was 248,554 MW in 2014. in the last 8 years this has increased by 169,110MW, taking the total power generation capacity to over 400GW
- Maximum demand this year - 215 GW
- The country now has the world's largest integrated grid. Inter-regional transfer capacity has increased from 37,950MW to 112,250MW.
- At COP-21 India pledged to increase power generated from renewable energy sources to 40% by 2030. This goal has already been achieved in November 2021
What is puzzling here is the big gap between capacity and demand. Why are we ramping up power generation capacity when the actual demand is far less?
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REFERENCES & LINKS
* SinghRK(2022): The Growth of the Energy Sector is Unparalleled, HT, 16Jun22 - https://www.business-standard.com/article/economy-policy/no-power-crisis-in-india-generation-capacity-more-than-peak-demand-govt-122031500831_1.html
* PTI (2022): No Power Crisis in India, Business Standard (15 Mar., 2022) - https://www.business-standard.com/article/economy-policy/no-power-crisis-in-india-generation-capacity-more-than-peak-demand-govt-122031500831_1.html
* GoI - Ministry for Power and Renewable Energy - https://powermin.gov.in/en/content/honble-cabinet-minister-power-new-renewable-energy
Sunday, June 12, 2022
Kokoro
I like books that breathe life into familiar streets.
"Kokoro" by Natsume Sōseki begins with a brief description of the streets of Kamakura, Japan, as seen through the eyes of a young student in the early 1900s. Almost a century after the book was written I too made my way from famous Buddha statue at Kōtoku-In, down from Hase to the road that leads to the main beach where the main protagonist of Kokoro records his first meeting with an older man who becomes his "Sensei", his mentor and guide.
The Sensei is a compulsive loner - a reticent man who prefers to keep to himself. Yet an equation develops between the old man and his persistent, and oftentimes insolent student, which bring up interesting discussion on the nature of life and relationships. I was struck in particular by this observation -
"You seem to be under the impression that there is special breed of bad humans. There is no such thing as a stereotype bad man in this world. Under normal conditions, everybody is more or less good, or, at least, ordinary. But tempt them, and they may suddenly change. That is what is so frightening about men. One must always be on one's guard."
Sunday, June 05, 2022
Toyota's Rogue Wipers
Toyota has a flaw that has slipped through its famous production systems. A problem it chooses to ignore - or brazen it out - but the backstreet mechanics of Delhi are making the most of it, poking fun at the global auto giant and its much vaunted claim to high quality products.
The problem is with the switch assembly that controls a range of functions related to windscreen wipers, headlights and indicators.
Set yourself in this situation: You are driving down a busy expressway. It is rush hour traffic and there are vehicles of all shapes and sizes speeding alongside with their customary disregard for driving etiquette - jumping lanes, flashing high-beams, blasting away at their horns...you get the picture. Suddenly, for no apparent reason your windscreen wiper jumps to life, squeaking long arcs on the dry glass surface, refusing to respond to any switches, distracting you from your focus on the road. Clearly a dangerous situation to be in.
The first time this happened on our Toyota Etios in 2018, the only way to stop the windscreen wipers was to pull off the road, to shut down the engine and restart. We took it immediately to the Toyota workshop and they said it was a 'rare malfunction' and that the only solution was to replace the entire switch assembly. At around INR8000 it was an expensive spare part to replace.
A few months into the Covid lockdown the new assembly unit developed exactly the same problem. This had happened well within a year of replacement but the vehicle could not be taken to the workshop due to the lockdown restrictions, and the only consolation Toyota could offer was, "If you had sent us an email complaint during the lockdown we could have extended the warranty period...".
So what was the solution? - "Sorry, but the only option is to replace the assembly unit once again...it is however not readily available, so once you confirm your order, we will get it for you in a month's time..". Then came the kicker - the cost of the unit had gone up - it was now over INR12,000!
We fretted about this for a while. Was it worth spending so much money for second replacement? Would we have to replace the assembly yet again a year later? What if the sudden activation of the zombie wiper led to an accident on the roads?
Ultimately we decided to get a second opinion from one of the numerous mechanics who hang around the tiny workshops at Sector 2, NOIDA. It was young Irshad who took up my case. He took one look at the car and said nonchalantly, "Since you don't want to get the assembly replaced again, I will solve this problem for INR300. It will take about 15 minutes."
Then, as I stood by watching in wonder and amazement, he deftly removed the steering wheel, pried out the assembly panel, and opened a plastic cap that exposed the electronic circuitry. He looked closely at the soldered points for a few minutes, turning it over, checking and re-checking, and then with a quick, sharp flick of the screwdriver, made a 3mm incision into the green plate.
Clearly this was nothing new for him - it was a practiced hand at work. "I have done this for scores of cars", he confirmed, "It is a common problem in Toyota cars as well as the Maruti Swift model...the assembly is too expensive so I get lots of business!"
As promised by Irshad the car wipers have never gone rogue after this 'operation'. The only downside is that the 'mist' and 'low' options on the switches do not work anymore but I am quite happy with the remaining two options, 'medium' and 'high', fully functional. On the whole this was like having an appendicitis operation instead of suffering a sudden, painful rupture!
One important learning from this experience has been that the Japanese claim to high quality autos needs to be taken with a pinch of salt and loads of skepticism...so much for the acclaimed Toyota Production Systems.
Sunday, May 22, 2022
Trek to Indrahar Jot
It had been more than two years since Covid-19 scuttled my annual treks into the Himalayas. So when a friend set up a new WA group titled, "Ab-ki-baar-Indrahar" (This time, Indrahar), the first thing I did was to look up the place on Google Maps.
At an altitude of 4342m it did not seem like a big deal. After all, our last trek was to Kugti Pass on the Pir Panjal Range at 5050m. Indrahar Jot is further south within the Dhauladhar range, the first snowbound mountain ranges that you see as you approach the Himalayas from the Punjab plains. I had imagined this to be be an easy trek. It was not.
This trek was a reminder - if any were needed - that each mountain range has its own personality and quirks. The most striking thing about this trail is that despite being located in an area that receives good rainfall, there are no natural streams along the entire route. Water is available for free at only one point near the snow-line, and that too from a PVC pipe carrying glacier meltwater!
Our trail started from Gallu Temple, just a few kilometres away from Mcleodganj, the home of the Dalai Lama and the Tibetan Government-in-exile. A few hours of walking through forest trails carpeted with rhododendron leaves brought us to the barren Triund ridge. Until this point you could see plenty of casual touristy visitors dressed in summer clothes, many accompanied by children, and a few with their jarring bluetooth speakers in full blast.
At this time of the year, mornings are nice and bright in Triund but the weather turns foul in the afternoon. Mountain peaks that are clearly visible in the morning light get enveloped in heavy clouds by noon. We did not know that the weather would change so suddenly, and so ended up losing half-a-day on this ridge, huddled in a stone cottage, sheltering from howling winds, hailstones and stinging raindrops sweeping down from the slopes of the Dhauladhar mountains.
One important thing to remember on this trail, apart from the dearth of spring-water, is that the climbing window here is rather small. We missed half a day stuck at Triund, so even though we started before 0600 and pitched our tents at Snowline by 0730 it was already past 0830 when we started the final leg. This was about three hours too late because by the time we reached close to the pass it was already past 1330 and heavy clouds were blocking the path ahead. Not wanting to get stuck in blinding fog and rain, we had to turn back about 500m away from the ridge.
Perhaps the most memorable thing about treks like these are the amazing people you get to meet along the way. On our way to Triund we met Mr. A who was climbing on a prosthetic leg; At Snowline there were two cheerful 65+ year's old German ladies, both avid trekkers on their way back home to Auroville after spending a week in the mountains. Then there was Nitin Vashisht a sprightly young fellow from Dharamsala who cheerfully sped past us at Snowline, climbed up alone to the top of Indrahar, right through the cloud cover, and met us a few hours later on his way back when we were still resting at Lehesh Cave!
The most unexpected meeting was with Santosh Babu, a Tamilian working as a government Revenue Inspector in Chennai who also served as a part-time instructor with the Bharat Scouts and Guides. A compulsive mountaineer, he had trained himself at the IISM Gulmarg and set aside two months every year to climb mountains. He had already crossed the Hanta Pass and Keliheni Pass. This year, Babu has set his sights on the Moonpeak (4750m), the highest point up the Indrahar Jot ridge. In 2023 he planned to scale the Manaslu in Nepal, and then hoped to get a sponsorship of about INR 3,000,000 required to climb Mt. Everest!
It is hard to believe that just a few days ago I was trudging across a Himalayan glacier, sweating from the strain, struggling to catch my breath...and here I am now, back on the hot, sultry plains, sitting in an apartment in Noida, and sweating profusely without doing anything!
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REFERENCES / LINKS
* India Hikes - Indrahar Pass Trek - https://indiahikes.com/documented-trek/indrahar-pass-trek
* Wiki page - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indrahar_Pass
Thursday, April 28, 2022
Vatapi Ganapati
"Vatapi Ganapati" is a much loved composition in Carnatic Music, one of the two branches of classical music in India. Composed by the great poet-composer Mutthuswami Dixitar (1775-1885), it is a hymn praising a specific idol of Ganapati, worshipped in a small shrine in Tiruchenkattankudi Utrapatishwaraswamy Temple, in Thiruvarur district in the Tamil Nadu state of India.
The name of this place may seem long and complicated to those who are unfamiliar with South Indian languages, but so is the distance covered by this Ganapati. Vatapi (present day Badami), is a place located about 1000 km away from this coastal town. According to the g-maps, it would take a brisk walker about 190 hours or a week to cover this distance.
How did a temple idol get its name from a place so far away?
Anirudh Kanisetti's answers this question (and many others) through his fascinating new book titled, "Lords of the Deccan". For the vast majority of us who had been brought up on passing references in our history books to this part of this country, Kanisetti's book is a revelation, an eye-opener to the array of kingdoms that had ruled this vast area in central India from 500 to 1200 CE.
Is is the story of the powerful dynasties that ruled this part of the country before the Islamic invasions - the Chalukyas, Pallavas, Rashtrskutas, and the Cholas. It is also a rather sad commentary on the shortage of written records that tells us about the life and times of those who built some of the massive temples of South India. Among these is the Kailashnatha temple at Ellora that was 'built' top-down by cutting through solid rock on a cliffside, after carefully chipping away more than 200,000 tonnes of granite stone!
Coming back to the story of Vatapi Ganapathi, it turns out that this idol was actually war booty that was brought here more than 1300 years earlier by the Pallava kings of Kanchipuram. Tiruchenkattankudi was the birthplace of Paranjothi, the commander-in-chief of the Pallava king Narasimhavarman I (reign: 630–668 CE).
Contrary to the Hindutva tropes about Hindu temples getting destroyed by exclusively by Muslim invaders, it is interesting to know that ever since temple building became a popular symbol of power projection after 500 CE, it was fairly common for Hindu kings to loot and destroy the temples of their rivals.
Some other nuggets are even more surprising, such as the extent to which foreigners, especially West Asians, were welcomed by the kingdoms of ancient India. Muslim Persians and Arabs, as well as Zoroashtrians, Jews and Christians of diverse ethnicities, had not only settled in large numbers in the port cities but also rose to high positions in the civil and military hierarchies:
One fascinating example is a Persian Muslim known to us a Madhumati, son of Sahiyarahara (a Sanskritised version of Muhammad, son of Shahryar). In the tenth century, Madhumati was appointed the Rashtrakuta governor of the entire region of Sanjan, including much of northern Konkan.
Long before "Globalisation" became a buzzword, the Rashtrakutas, Pallavas and Cholas were already convinced of the strategic, political and economic benefits of encouraging meritocracies that were multi-ethnic, multilingual and cosmopolitan!
Friday, April 01, 2022
Rubber and the Path to Preserving Biodiversity
"El Sendero de la Anaconda" or the Path of the Anaconda, must be one of the most impressive documentaries I have seen recently. It is gentle, persuasive storytelling that weaves history, science and adventure to tell us about our fragile ecosystems, and the urgent need to preserve it for the future generations.
Strange as it may sound, the film does not feature any Anaconda snakes, let alone any other exotic creatures of the Amazon forests. It is instead the story of a student tracing the path taken by his teacher about 80 years ago. It is also the story of how rubber got tangled with the fate of this planet.
The teacher in this story is Prof. Richard Evans Schultes, and his student is a Canadian author named Wade Davis. Schultes is considered the father of modern ethnobotany, who is perhaps more famous among junkies of this world for his greatest popular book, "The Plants of the Gods: Their Sacred, Healing, and Hallucinogenic Powers" (1979).
A few decades before he popularised hallucinogenic concoctions such as ayahuasca, he was roped in by the US government for an important project during the second world war. In 1940, 95% of the world's rubber supply was grown in roughly 12 million acres of plantations of South East Asia. Within six weeks of the attack on Pearl Harbour, the Japanese had seized control of literally the entire world's supply. The supply of rubber had become so crucial to the war effort that an alternative source had to be found. This source lay in the original mother lode of the rubber tree - the Amazon forests.
However the problem was that South America is also home to the most potent fungal disease affecting this tree -- the South American Leaf Blight. It is because of this disease that the British created large rubber plantations in South East Asia (SEA), far from the Amazon basin, in areas where the fungal disease had not yet taken root. Prof. Schultes was given the task of finding a species of the rubber tree that was resistant to fungal disease, so that rubber production could be jacked up from 50,000T a year in the Americas, to over a million tonnes, to break the Asian monopoly.
Prof. Schultes' mission in 1943 was to travel up the Vaupés River, somehow find a way overland to the headwaters of the Rio Apaporis, and then to determine the quantum of rubber that could be extracted from the area...but as he moved overland, coming to the confluence of the Macayá and the Ajajú, he found himself the mountains of Chiribiquete, the fountain of the rivers of Colombia, where -
An area the size of the full moon probably had 300-400 million individual rubber trees, of three different species, producing high quality latex...among them was a tree resistant to the blight and high yielding...it was like looking for a needle in a haystack...and he found it! - in the Leticia, in the homeland of the Ticunas, he found what the rubber barons would call "the real bleeders"...and with this he laid the foundation of an America based rubber industry.
All this effort came to naught however with the discovery of synthetic rubber. The US State Department took over this project, and in a fit of bureaucratic insanity, destroyed the clonal gardens. Later, better sense prevailed with the realisation that synthetic rubber just could not replace natural rubber completely.
However two developments were not anticipated - one - the radial tyre that must have natural rubber in the sidewall and the belt for strength, but even more importantly, the development of the modern airline industry. On every plane you have ever flown on, those tires are cut 100% from a tree. Only natural rubber has the qualities that allow it to go from the sub-zero temperatures of high altitude to the shock and impact of hitting the tarmac at 250 kmph, within a period of 10 minutes. Because of this we use more natural rubber than ever before and it still is derived from SEAsia from trees that are essentially genetic clones of the original seeds Wickham took out in 1877.
So, in a sense, we are now back to square one. Nearly all the rubber plantations in SEA continue to be vulnerable to fungal blight - a single act of biological terrorism, or the accidental introduction of the spore to SEA will completely disrupt the industry.
Hence a global effort to create a 'Path of the Anacondas' - an ecological and cultural corridor extended all the way from the Andes to the Atlantic, covering eight countries in the upper Amazon basin - Brazil , Colombia, Peru, Ecuador, Venezuela and the three Guineas.
Now, what exactly is a "cultural corridor"? Wade Davis explains this beautifully:
Children in the Northern Americas are raised to think of mountains a piles or rock, while those in the South grow up with the belief that mountains are the abodes of spirits. These belief systems manifests itself in culture with profound ecological consequences.
Culture is not trivial; culture is not decorative; culture is not the songs we sing, the prayers we utter. Ultimately culture is about a body of moral and ethical values that we place around each individual human being, to keep at bay the barbaric heart that history so sadly teaches us lies within all of us. And so the maintenance of cultural integrity is the maintenance of civilisation itself. Cultural diversity is not an academic conceit - it is a fundamental indication of the way things are meant to be.
"El Sendero de la Anaconda" conveys its story very effectively indeed with an engaging narrative, superb photos and drone-videos, and a haunting music score. It leaves two questions unanswered - what happened to that fungus-resistant strain of the rubber tree discovered by Prof. Schultes ? Why has it not been used to replace all the old plantations in SEA and elsewhere?
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LINKS & REFERENCES
* Wendt, Paul (1947): The Control of Rubber in World War II - https://www.jstor.org/stable/1053336
* UNESCO World Heritage List - Chiribiquete National Park - https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/1174/
Thursday, March 24, 2022
Silvia's World
It is difficult to associate the mighty oceans with the word 'vulnerable'.
After all there are few things as humbling as standing on a beach, facing an immense expanse of blue, watching the waves come crashing down, the sting of the salty spray in your eyes, and your body getting tossed around like around like a twig in the surf.
My own introduction to the world of oceans started with a visit to Kanyakumari where, on a clear day, it is possible to see the three different hues of blue that make the Arabian Sea, the Bay of Bengal, and the Indian Ocean. The expanse was however too vast to be covered in small fishing boats so we always saw this world through the eyes of great explorers - the books written by David Attenborough, the tele-series by Jacques-Yues Cousteau, and the paintings of Katsushika Hokusai.
So when one of the most respected marine biologists of the world, Silvia Earle, tells us that the oceans are dying, it does sound a bit incredulous, almost unbelievable. Silvia is however familiar with this sort of reaction - she has been observing the oceans for over 80 years now. Her dissertation in 1954 was on brown algae; in 1964 she was part of a pioneering International Indian Ocean Expedition, and has seen first had the transformation being brought about by human interventions by way of commercial fishing, oil-spills, nuclear tests, and global warming.
Perhaps this is the ultimate Tragedy of the Commons where the stakeholders are not just communities that share a resource but entire countries and continents. With support from TED, Silvia launched Mission Blue, for setting up marine protected "hope spots" across the globe. In 2014, less than 3 percent of the oceans were protected, and Mission Blue aimed to bring this to 20 percent by 2020.
Has it worked?
I have not been able to find data on this from the one institution that is supposed to be tracking this issue - the United Nations Conference to Support the Implementation of Sustainable Development Goal 14 (conserve and sustainably use the oceans). Under "Deliverables" it simply states - 'Designation of 30 new Hope Spots by 2020'. The Mission-Blue website however claims that over 44 percent (40 million sq.km) of the Global Ocean is under Hope Spot designation.
It is not clear if the designation of a zone as a Hot Spot leads to its protection under international covenants. There is also no sign of reduction in the quantum of marine products consumed, which stood at 174.6 million tonnes in 2020.
Silvia has spent a lifetime trying to convince the world about the importance of conserving the oceans. If the UN reports are anything to go by, it seems much work remains to be done.
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LINKS & REFERENCES
https://www.iucn.org/theme/marine-and-polar/our-work/marine-protected-area
https://www.greenfacts.org/en/fisheries/l-2/06-fish-consumption.htm#0
Mission Blue - https://mission-blue.org/
TED Video - My Wish - Protect Our Oceans - https://www.ted.com/talks/sylvia_earle_my_wish_protect_our_oceans?language=en
4 Ways to Get People to Care - https://ideas.ted.com/4-ways-to-get-people-to-care-about-the-ocean/
Sunday, March 13, 2022
Enterprising Enterprises
I am not fluent in Oriya language, and yet, last week, I found myself tuned in to a series of bilingual interviews titled "Startup Story".
The key to my interest in these interviews was one person - Subroto Bagchi. For the past 20 odd years, I have been keeping track of this remarkable entrepreneur and public-spirited leader, who is perhaps best known as one of the founders of Mindtree.
In the mid 2000s he had made a commencement speech titled, "Go Kiss the World", at IIMB which had become something of a phenomenon, and one of the first 'viral' forwards I had seen on the internet. It describes his own humble beginnings in Khoraput, a remote district in Odisha where his father served as a government employee. A quote from this speech that stayed with me was this - “You should leave your newspaper and your toilet, the way you expect to find it”. A simple lesson he had learnt from his father about showing consideration to others.
Over the years Bagchi moved on from Mindtree to become the Chairperson of the Odisha Skill Development Authority (OSDA), an organisation focussed on the issue of livelihoods - providing skill training to children who are unable to continue their schooling due to various socio-economics reasons.
This series of interviews seems to be part of that effort, to showcase success stories emerging from Odisha, to inspire a generation of youngsters to become job-creators instead of job-seekers:
1. Amarendra Sahu, NestAway Co-founder & CEO Amarendra Sahu - https://youtu.be/O4M_3e7lvEQ
2. Amiya Samantaray , Phoenix Robotix Founder & CEO - https://youtu.be/ESFPsZPz65Y
3. Arvind Pani, Co-Founder & CEO of Reverie - https://youtu.be/ESFPsZPz65Y
4. Nusrat Sanghamitra, CyGenica CEO & CSO - https://youtu.be/vg2xtJ8KOsM
5. Gautam Kumar, Co-Founder & COO FarEye - https://youtu.be/dJ8kl3NR_-4
6. Asish Mohapatra, Co-Founder and CEO of Business Unicorn - https://youtu.be/Z5u89fn4eJQ
7. Amit Acharya, Co-Founder and CEO of Zetwork, a Global Unicorn - https://youtu.be/JQ1ac5-hmZQ
8. Soumendra and Samarendra Mishra - Co-Founders of OVO Farms - the largest producers of eggs in Eastern India - https://youtu.be/w3NP6q8UQh0
Among the ones I have seen so far, the one I liked best is Episode 7, the interview with Amit Acharya, the founder of Zetwer, a global company that offers design and production services for manufacturing of consumer goods and precision parts.
Each interview could be considered a masterclass on how such interviews ought to be conducted - gentle, engaging, gradually drawing out the thoughts and experiences of the interviewee, rather than the agenda-driven, aggressive interviews that seem to have become the norm on news channels and the social media.
Most of the episodes are about an hour long and in each of them the language is constantly switching between Odiya and English. While Odiya is not much of a problem for those who are familiar with Bengali. The producers of this series, OdishaLIVE could certainly improve the reach of this series by adding the option of subtitles in multiple languages.
This is one series that needs just a little nudge to transcend the language barriers.
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Saturday, March 05, 2022
Thucydides in Ukraine
It seems nobody actually thought the cornered bear would attack, but last week, it did.
Perhaps it was assumed that all the snarling and swiping was nothing more than political and military posturing, that the 200,000 troops amassed by Russia along Ukraine's borders would just complete their 'exercises' and go home...but nothing of that sort happened. Instead, what we have now is a full blown war - an invasion that has already turned a million people into refugees, thousands have been killed, buildings blown to bits, and countries struggling to prevent a nuclear war.
These developments have also been a revelation, and an unravelling of myths, at many levels.
First of all there is this myth about "rules based global order". When a big country invades a smaller, weaker country, the only rule that works is the Thucydides dictum - "The strong do what they can, and the weak suffer what they must". When USA invades other countries - Serbia, Iraq, Afghanistan - it is packaged as a noble venture, to promote democracy, to usher in a free market economy, as a saviour to the uncivilised, and so on. Turns out that this is a game other bullies can play as well.
Then there is this myth of "free speech". The Western media seems to have convinced itself that they alone know the difference between propaganda and news. BBC, CNN, and DW can barely hide their glee when news channels from other other side of the fence are banned or expelled.
'Experts' from the western media hold forth on why blonde fair-skinned European deserve to be treated more humanely than the hapless people fleeing wars - initiated by their own governments - in Africa and Asia. The levels of hypocrisy and racism has been just breathtaking!
It was also amazing to learn that over 20,000 students were trapped in the war-zone. While the government has managed to evacuate most of them, a few hundred still remain trapped in the war-zone. It seems a vast majority of them were studying medicine, revealing shortcomings in our own education system which seems to be better equipped at churning out engineers.
Then there is geography. Until last week I was aware of only a few cities - Kiev from Odgen Nash's famous poem - "The Muddlehead" from Petushkee, Odessa from Alister Maclain's files and novels, and, of course Chernobyl. The humanitarian crisis currently unfolding has made us aware of places far away, on the frozen steppes of Eurasia - Kharkiv, Zaporizhzhia, Donetsk, Mariupol, Kheson...
As the father of political realism, Thycydides may have been right about the fact that relations between countries are dictated by just two factors - fear and self-interest. It seems not much has changed since 450 BCE.
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