Tag: national

  • Nuclear, Not Optional: Inside India’s Bold Energy Endgame 2025

    Nuclear, Not Optional: Inside India’s Bold Energy Endgame 2025

    New Delhi [India], December 19: Energy drives development. Always has. India’s nuclear energy target is a blunt acknowledgement of that truth, not a political flourish.

    Human progress has never been subtle about its appetite for energy. In 1971, Earl Cook laid it out plainly in Scientific American. As societies evolve, their energy consumption climbs. Food alone sustains primitive life. Add homes, trade, farming, transport, industry, then technology. Each stage piles on demand.

    Today, the digital economy adds another layer. Data centres, networks, automation, AI. None of it runs on good intentions. It runs on electrons.

    This is where India stands. Ambitious. Growing. Energy-hungry.

    Development, measured honestly

    The Human Development Index is not perfect, but it is useful. It blends income, education, and health into a single number. Countries above an HDI of 0.9 are the global heavyweights of human development. As a G-20 member, India already sits at the table with them. The gap is not aspiration. It is infrastructure.

    There is a clear correlation between HDI and per capita Final Energy Consumption. Push one up, the other follows. Based on this relationship, India would need to generate roughly 24,000 terawatt-hours of energy annually to cross an HDI of 0.9, even after accounting for better efficiency and electrification.

    That number is not a typo.

    Roughly 60% of this energy would be used as electricity. The rest would go into producing hydrogen through electrolysers. Hydrogen matters because steel, fertilisers, and plastics cannot decarbonise on slogans alone. They need cleaner feedstocks. If alternative hydrogen production methods scale up, electricity demand may ease slightly. But not dramatically.

    For perspective, India generated about 1,950 TWh in 2023–24. Recent growth in electricity generation has hovered around a CAGR of 4.8%. Maintain that pace, and 24,000 TWh becomes achievable in four to five decades.

    Sounds manageable. It isn’t that simple.

    The decarbonisation problem

    India cannot grow energy supply the old way. Fossil fuels dominate the current mix. That has to change. Growth in generation must run parallel to electrification of end uses and a redesign of the energy mix itself.

    Today, electricity accounts for about 22% of India’s final energy consumption. That share has to rise sharply. Transport, cooking, industry, everything moves toward electrons. And those electrons must increasingly come from non-carbon sources.

    Hydro, solar, wind, nuclear. That is the shortlist.

    Here’s the uncomfortable part. India’s hydro and wind potential is limited. Geography and population density impose real constraints. Solar faces land challenges at scale. Panels need space. India has people. Lots of them.

    Yes, every viable megawatt of hydro, solar, and wind should be exploited. No argument there. But even taken together, they cannot deliver the energy volume required for an HDI north of 0.9. Not reliably. Not affordably.

    That leaves nuclear.

    Baseload still matters

    Solar and wind suffer from a basic flaw. They are intermittent. The sun sets. The wind dies down. Storage can smooth daily fluctuations, but seasonal storage is brutally expensive.

    If electricity becomes too costly, development stalls. Consumers revolt. Industry relocates.

    A decarbonised grid still needs baseload generation. Power that does not care about monsoons or midnight. Nuclear plants deliver exactly that. Quietly. Continuously.

    This is not ideology. It is grid physics.

    Until nuclear capacity scales up meaningfully, India will have to keep leaning on fossil fuels. There is no clean shortcut.

    India’s quiet nuclear competence

    This is where India’s story diverges from lazy assumptions. Nuclear power here is not a foreign crutch. It is largely indigenous.

    The Department of Atomic Energy and Indian industry have spent decades building a domestic supply chain. Fuel fabrication. Heavy water production. Reactor equipment. All done at home. Uranium remains the main import, simply because domestic reserves are limited.

    India’s Pressurised Heavy Water Reactors are a proven platform. The Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited has mastered their design and operation, scaling up to 700 MW units. Three are already operating. A fourth is nearing completion. Two more are deep into construction.

    In 2017, the government approved ten additional 700 MW PHWRs. They are moving forward, steadily, without drama.

    Oversight is not an afterthought. A dedicated regulatory body has existed since the 1980s. Safety, security, safeguards. The boring but essential stuff. Bhabha Atomic Research Centre has also developed reprocessing technologies to recover valuable materials from spent fuel and manage nuclear waste responsibly.

    The result is straightforward. Nuclear power in India is technically feasible, affordable at scale, and demonstrably safe.

    The SHANTI Bill moment

    Confidence breeds ambition. Parliament has now passed the Sustainable Harnessing and Advancement of Nuclear Energy for Transforming India Bill, 2025. SHANTI, by name and by intent.

    The legislation consolidates provisions from the Atomic Energy Act of 1962 and the Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Act of 2010. It clarifies regulatory continuity by deeming the existing Atomic Energy Regulatory Board as constituted under the new Act. It also places the primary responsibility for safety, security, and safeguards squarely on the licensee. No ambiguity. No buck-passing.

    Most importantly, the government has set a target of 100 GW of installed nuclear capacity by mid-century. That is not incrementalism. That is a statement.

    Is it ambitious? Absolutely. Is it reckless? No.

    India does not become a developed country by hedging its bets. It does so by setting hard targets and backing them with policy, regulation, and engineering muscle.

    If you want clean growth, reliable electricity, and a serious shot at high human development, nuclear is not optional. It is foundational.

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  • From Grassroots to Global: IIA Udyog Samman 2025 Celebrates India’s New Industrial Champions

    From Grassroots to Global: IIA Udyog Samman 2025 Celebrates India’s New Industrial Champions

    New Delhi [India], December 15: The Indian Industries Association (IIA), Delhi State, successfully hosted the IIA Udyog Samman 2025 at the JNU Convention Centre, Auditorium 1, New Delhi, marking a defining milestone in IIA’s 40-year legacy of empowering India’s Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs). The prestigious ceremony was organised under the leadership of Dr Mamtamayi Priyadarshini, IIA Delhi State Chairperson, with the guidance of Mr Dinesh Goyal, National President, IIA.

    Held from 10:00 AM to 2:00 PM, the event brought together policymakers, industry leaders, innovators, startups and MSME entrepreneurs from Tier 1, Tier 2 and Tier 3 cities, reflecting the growing national and global relevance of India’s MSME ecosystem.

    Delivering the welcome address, Dr Mamtamayi Priyadarshini described IIA Udyog Samman 2025 as a grand twin celebration—honouring four decades of IIA’s dedicated service to the MSME fraternity, while celebrating the pivotal contribution of MSMEs to India’s GDP, employment generation and the nation’s journey towards Viksit Bharat 2047. Her address set an inspiring tone, emphasising excellence, collaboration and inclusive industrial growth.

    The event witnessed distinguished participation from senior leaders and subject experts. Dr Sanjay Mayukh, National Media Co-Head, BJP, highlighted how trust, national narrative and effective media engagement play a critical role in strengthening confidence within India’s entrepreneurial ecosystem. Mr. Dinesh Goyal, National President, IIA, in his keynote address, underscored the expanding role of MSMEs in India’s economic transformation and announced two upcoming national expos—the IIA International Tourism & Hospitality Expo 2025 (18–19 December at Hotel Taj Ganges, Varanasi) and the India Food Expo 2026 (16–18 January at Regalia Greens, Lucknow)—urging MSME leaders to participate actively.

    Representing the government perspective, Dr R. K. Bharti, Director, MSME, spoke on regulatory reforms and policy initiatives aimed at easing compliance and enabling business expansion. Mr C. Shivam Aggarwal, Scientist, BIS, emphasised the critical importance of quality standards and certification in building global trust and ensuring market access.

    The knowledge sessions featured eminent speakers, including Dr Lakshmikant Pandey (IIA CEC Member), who encouraged MSMEs to adopt an innovation-led growth approach; Dr Jagannathan and Dr Saurav Kumar Sharma (AIC-JNU), who shared insights on incubation and startup ecosystems.

    CA J. K. Jain stated that financial strategic planning is essential for MSMEs to scale sustainably and compete globally. CA Hemendra Gupta emphasised the importance of innovation and export readiness in building resilient enterprises.

    A key highlight of the ceremony was the felicitation of nearly 30 outstanding entrepreneurs from across India, including rural innovators, women entrepreneurs, high-impact startups and enterprises excelling in manufacturing, services and social impact—symbolising India’s inspiring journey from grassroots to global.

    A significant milestone during the event was the signing of three Memorandums of Understanding (MoUs) with Atal Incubation Centre – JNUFI, World Sikh Chamber of Commerce, and Udaan Media, aimed at strengthening innovation ecosystems, expanding market access and enhancing institutional support for entrepreneurs nationwide.

    The seamless execution of the event was made possible by the dedicated efforts of the IIA Delhi State organising team, supported by the IIA Head Office. Key contributors, including Neeraj Bajaj, Mriggendra Kumar, Charanjeet Singh, Madhukar Sahay, Jatin Sharma, Manish Chawla, Ayush Jadon, Shorya Mittal, and CA J. K. Jain, were acknowledged for their leadership and coordination.

    The ceremony concluded with a heartfelt Vote of Thanks by Dr. Mamtamayi Priyadarshini, who expressed sincere gratitude to all dignitaries, speakers, sponsors, partners, delegates, volunteers and the wider MSME community for making the 40-year celebration and the IIA Udyog Samman 2025 a resounding success. The programme concluded with the National Anthem, followed by media interactions, group photographs and a networking lunch.

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  • HPDA’s ‘Invest in Hapur’ Summit 2025: Chief Guest Shri Suresh Kumar Khanna Praises Dr. Nitin Gaur’s Efforts as HPDA’s Financial Health and Development Surge

    HPDA’s ‘Invest in Hapur’ Summit 2025: Chief Guest Shri Suresh Kumar Khanna Praises Dr. Nitin Gaur’s Efforts as HPDA’s Financial Health and Development Surge

    New Delhi [India], December 13: The Hapur Pilkhuwa Development Authority (HPDA) successfully organized “Invest in Hapur” Summit 2025 today, aimed at attracting substantial investment and fostering comprehensive development across the Hapur-Pilkhuwa region. The event was inaugurated by the Chief Guest, Shri Suresh Kumar Khanna, Hon’ble Minister, Finance and Parliamentary Affairs, Government of Uttar Pradesh. This significant gathering established Hapur as a prime destination for future economic growth, building confidence among the investor community through transparent policies and strong governmental backing. During his address, the Minister specifically offered sincere praise to Dr. Nitin Gaur (IAS), Vice Chairman of HPDA, stating that the summit was a “great initiative” and reflected his “tremendous effort” for the rapid development of Hapur, underscoring the authority’s commitment and exemplary performance.

    HPDA

    The Minister’s praise was substantiated by impressive statistics showcasing HPDA’s robust financial and developmental success. It was highlighted that HPDA’s total profit has surged dramatically from ₹172 Crore to ₹435 Crore in the last two years, reflecting exceptional management and effective resource utilization. Furthermore, earnings from various maps and clearances have seen a substantial increase, rising from ₹5.3 Crore to ₹26.32 Crore, indicating rapid urbanization and streamlined administrative processes. HPDA is actively focused on launching new schemes, notably the ambitious Haripur scheme, while dedicating highest efforts to core infrastructure, including roads, Sewage Treatment Plants (STPs), and other essential public facilities. In a major step towards enhancing urban infrastructure, HPDA announced that a new Convention Centre is planned to be built in the Anand Vihar scheme, further boosting Hapur’s capacity for large-scale events and business.

    In his powerful inaugural address, Shri Suresh Kumar Khanna highlighted the revolutionary improvements in the state’s investment climate. Shri Khanna assured the gathered participants of unwavering support from the Government of Uttar Pradesh for all viable projects in the region, and proudly noted that revenue growth in Uttar Pradesh is significantly higher than the national average, cementing the state’s position as a dynamic economic powerhouse.

    The summit was also graced by the presence of the Hon’ble District MagistrateDistrict Panchayat Chairperson Smt. Rekha Nagar, and the local M.L.As Shri Dharmesh Singh Tomar (Dholana), Shri Vijaypal Aadhati (Sadar Hapur), Shri Harender Singh Theotia (Garhmukteswar), who offered their full administrative and political backing for the investment initiatives. Dr. Nitin Gaur (IAS), Vice Chairman of HPDA, welcomed the participants and assured them of complete logistical and regulatory support, detailing HPDA’s development roadmap. He stated that HPDA is prepared to move at an accelerated pace, ensuring every investment translates into tangible progress for the community and significant returns for the partners.

    The event witnessed enthusiastic participation from a wide array of sectors, including developers and investors focused on Residential and Industrial projects, as well as representatives from Educational Institutes, Hospitals, and leading Architects and urban planners. This broad sectoral interest confirmed the diverse and multi-faceted investment opportunities available in the region.

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  • Cybersecurity of Power Grid Infrastructure Draws Policy Attention Amid Ongoing Parliament session

    Cybersecurity of Power Grid Infrastructure Draws Policy Attention Amid Ongoing Parliament session

    New Delhi [India], December 13: The increasing digitalisation of India’s power sector has brought renewed focus on strengthening cybersecurity safeguards across the national transmission network. With modern grids relying heavily on connected systems, experts highlight the importance of advanced protection layers, real-time monitoring and international best practices to ensure uninterrupted power supply.

    The issue has also gained parliamentary attention. An unstarred question submitted in the Lok Sabha for reply on December 18 has sought updates from the Ministry of Power on various aspects of grid cybersecurity. These include the identification of substations requiring Next Generation Firewalls (NGFWs), priority locations for intervention, the status of cybersecurity audits undertaken over the past year, and ongoing collaboration with national agencies such as CERT-In for real-time monitoring and response coordination.

    As part of the sector’s modernisation efforts, utilities periodically revise procurement plans to align with emerging technical requirements. In this context, Power Grid Corporation of India Limited (PGCIL), through an official communication dated 22 August 2025, informed bidders that the earlier tender for Procurement of Firewall for Substation” had been annulled. But the annulment of the tender raised serious question by various stake holders as Power Grid corporation required immediate upgradation as far as cyber security is concerned.

    Experts say that as cyber threats evolve globally, critical infrastructure operators are increasingly integrating multi-layer security approaches. These include NGFW deployment, Security Information and Event Management (SIEM) systems, intrusion-prevention tools, and compliance with international frameworks such as NERC-CIP and ISO 27001. Strengthening institutional coordination between central utilities, state entities and national cybersecurity agencies is also seen as a key component of future readiness.

    Stakeholders expect that ongoing discussions, combined with parliamentary queries and periodic upgrade cycles, will support the development of a more resilient digital ecosystem for the power sector. With India’s grid expanding and adopting advanced technologies, cybersecurity preparedness is anticipated to remain a priority area in the sector’s long-term planning.

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  • India Emerges as a Global Leader in Machine Learning–Enabled Scientific Research, New Report Finds

    India Emerges as a Global Leader in Machine Learning–Enabled Scientific Research, New Report Finds

    New Delhi [India], December 12: India has emerged as one of the world’s most dynamic and rapidly advancing centers for machine learning (ML)–enabled scientific research, according to the newly released ML Global Impact Report 2025 by Marktechpost. New dataset shows India rapidly strengthening its position in global AI-driven science, ranking third worldwide for ML-enabled research published across the Nature family of journals.

    The study, covering more than 5,000 ML-relevant scientific articles published in the Nature family of journals between January 1 and September 30, 2025, identifies India as the third-largest contributor to ML-supported scientific output worldwide — behind only China and the United States.

    India’s rise reflects an expanding network of universities, medical institutions, national laboratories, deep-tech startups, and AI research centres that are applying ML to address the country’s most complex scientific and societal challenges. ML has become a foundational tool in India’s scientific ecosystem, powering innovation across domains essential to national development.

    India’s Rapid Growth in ML-Driven Scientific Research

    Indian researchers demonstrated extensive adoption of widely used ML frameworks — including XGBoost, Transformers, ResNet, U-Net, YOLO, LightGBM, and CatBoost — applying them across high-impact scientific fields such as:

    • medical imaging, diagnostics, cancer screening, and genomics
    • climate science, monsoon prediction, and environmental modeling
    • agriculture, crop-yield forecasting, and food systems resilience
    • materials science, chemistry, and nanotechnology
    • Earth-observation, remote sensing, and disaster preparedness

    This broad range of applications highlights India’s focus on practical, scalable, and socially relevant ML research, with a strong orientation toward national priorities in health, agriculture, climate resilience, and sustainable development.

    Research Volume vs. Density: India’s Expanding Scientific Footprint

    The report shows that while China leads in research volume and the United States in disciplinary breadth, India is experiencing a steep upward trajectory in ML-driven science — with more institutions participating each year.

    India’s expansion is supported by:

    • growing interdisciplinary research clusters
    • increased investment in AI for health, agriculture, and climate
    • strong contributions from both Tier 1 and Tier 2 universities
    • a rapidly growing startup ecosystem translating research into applied innovation

    India’s participation is increasingly distributed and collaborative, positioning it as one of the fastest-growing ML-enabled scientific ecosystems in the world.

    Collaboration: India’s Strength in Scientific Partnerships

    Like global ML research, India’s scientific output is highly collaborative, with most ML-enabled studies involving 2–15 institutional affiliations. Indian collaborations frequently connect:

    • academia and medical institutions
    • computational labs and engineering departments
    • public research organizations and industry partners
    • deep-tech startups and clinical institutions

    International collaboration is an especially important factor, with India appearing prominently in partnerships with:

    • the United States, especially in health, genomics, and climate
    • Saudi Arabia, particularly in materials science and applied ML
    • global research networks working in computer vision, environmental science, and agriculture

    These collaboration patterns demonstrate India’s growing integration into the global ML research community.

    Beyond Generative AI: Classical ML Powers India’s Scientific Impact

    Despite the popularity of generative AI models, the report finds that India’s scientific progress is driven primarily by mature, proven machine learning techniques, mirroring global trends. Classical ML methods — including Random Forest, SVMs, and Scikit-learn–based workflows — account for 47% of all ML use cases worldwide, and these approaches remain central to India’s research output.

    When combined with established ensemble approaches such as GBM, XGBoost, LightGBM, and CatBoost, these traditional methods represent over 75% of the ML techniques powering real scientific work. This reinforces India’s focus on practical, scalable innovation, rather than hype-driven experimentation.

    India’s research environment uses ML primarily for application-oriented scientific tasks, including prediction, early diagnostics, environmental modeling, and agricultural optimization — areas where classical and ensemble ML methods deliver immediate, real-world impact.

    India in Global Context: A Top-Three Scientific Power

    India’s third-place ranking highlights the country’s rising influence in global ML-driven science. The report situates India within a broader ecosystem shaped by foundational ML tools originating from:

    • United States (core ML infrastructure)
    • Canada (GAN)
    • United Kingdom (AlphaFold)
    • Germany (U-Net)
    • France/EU (Scikit-learn)
    • Russia (CatBoost)

    India’s expanding research output shows how the country is actively contributing to — and benefiting from — the global ML innovation landscape.

    Industry Commentary

    Dr. Geetha Manjunath, Founder, CEO & CTO, NIRAMAI Health Analytix

    “India’s surge in machine learning–driven scientific research — particularly in medical imaging, diagnostics, and genomics — is shaping a future where advanced technologies translate into improved population health at scale.”

    NIRAMAI’s Thermalytix® platform is a leading example of India’s ability to convert ML-supported scientific research into clinically validated, affordable, and globally scalable healthcare innovation. The technology enables early detection of breast cancer without radiation, compression, or on-site radiologists, making it suitable for population-scale screening — especially in low-resource settings.

    “Solutions like Thermalytix® demonstrate how India’s innovation ecosystem is using ML to develop equitable health technologies that create real impact for millions,” she added.

    Asif Razzaq, Editor & Co-Founder, Marktechpost

    “India’s rise in ML-powered scientific research is one of the most notable trends in this dataset. What stands out is the country’s ability to apply machine learning across diverse scientific domains — from agriculture and health to climate and engineering. India has firmly established itself as a key contributor to the global ML research ecosystem.”

    Methodology

    The analysis examined all ML-relevant scientific articles across the Nature portfolio from January 1 to September 30, 2025. A unified Python-based pipeline identified ML-flagged articles and extracted:

    • scientific field
    • author-country affiliation
    • ML tools used
    • the scientific contribution enabled by ML
    • citation information (where available)

    Tools frequently used in India’s research ecosystem included Transformers, XGBoost, ResNet, U-Net, YOLO, LightGBM, CatBoost, and BERT — demonstrating India’s broad and maturing integration of ML across its scientific landscape.

    About Marktechpost

    Marktechpost is a global publication covering artificial intelligence, machine learning, and emerging technology research. The platform highlights advances from academic institutions, research labs, and practitioners shaping the future of applied AI. https://www.marktechpost.com/

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  • Shri Amit Shah Inaugurates Electrotherm Park in South Bopal, Ahmedabad

    Shri Amit Shah Inaugurates Electrotherm Park in South Bopal, Ahmedabad

    Ahmedabad (Gujarat) [India], December 11: Union Home Minister Shri Amit Shah inaugurated Electrotherm Park, a new 11,600 square meter public garden in South Bopal, developed by Electrotherm (India) Ltd in collaboration with the Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation (AMC), under PPP mode. The project reflects Electrotherm’s commitment to enhancing public infrastructure and promoting environmentally responsible urban development.

    Designed as a modern, eco-friendly urban oasis, Electrotherm Park draws inspiration from the natural flow of a river, weaving together interconnected spaces that encourage engagement and outdoor activity. The warm and inviting entry plaza, featuring a fountain and signature sculpture, sets the tone for a thoughtfully curated landscape that blends aesthetics with public utility.

    One of the standout features of the park is the gently flowing water channel that runs alongside the jogging track, offering walkers and runners a continuous sense of calm through the natural sound of moving water. The park also features two dedicated children’s play areas, one for toddlers aged 18 months to six years, and another for children aged Seven to thirteen. Both zones are equipped with innovative and playful games designed to support both physical and mental well-being.

    Union Home Minister Shri Amit Shah Inaugurates Electrotherm Park - PNN

    A pet park, an open-air gym, a revitalized traditional-games corner, and advanced seating pavilions accessible to all age groups highlight Electrotherm’s inclusive approach.

    Speaking about the project, Mr. Suraj Bhandari, Managing Director, Electrotherm (India) Limited, said, “Electrotherm Park is a space designed to inspire healthier lifestyles while celebrating nature within an urban setting. We express our sincere gratitude to Shri Amit Shah for honouring us with the inauguration of the park. The park is a welcoming public space for both leisure and fitness across age groups. We are proud to partner with AMC in shaping a greener, more vibrant Ahmedabad.”

    The park introduces more than 22,800 plants, including 21 species of large trees, 14 varieties of fruit trees, and a diverse collection of flowering plants. By transforming previously barren land, the park creates a fresh micro-climate, enriches biodiversity, and provides children with opportunities to learn about agriculture through curated orchard zones.

    Executed under the leadership of Mr. Suraj Bhandari, the project benefitted from the close involvement of Mr. Sanjay Joshi, Group Vice President, HR & Admin, who worked with him from concept to execution. Mr. Shailesh Bhandari, Executive Vice Chairman, provided strategic guidance as a mentor throughout the development process. Electrotherm Park stands as a symbol of forward-looking urban design, sustainability, and people’s well-being.

  • Cultural activist Sundeep Bhutoria calls for Social Investment Policy for Non-resident Rajasthanis at Pravasi Rajasthan Divas 2025 in Jaipur

    Cultural activist Sundeep Bhutoria calls for Social Investment Policy for Non-resident Rajasthanis at Pravasi Rajasthan Divas 2025 in Jaipur

    Cultural activist, Sundeep Bhutoria, at Pravasi Rajasthani Divas with Ms Diya Kumari, Deputy CM, Rajasthan, ministers Jhabar Singh Kharra and Joraram Kumawat

    Jaipur (Rajasthan) [India], December 11: Emphasising the need for a framework that recognises the emotional and cultural commitment of Non-Resident Rajasthanis (NRRs), a call was made for the Government of Rajasthan to introduce a dedicated Social Investment Policy – one that encourages contributions towards preserving ancestral havelis, supporting schools, hospitals, heritage assets and community initiatives, beyond the scope of industrial investment.

    This appeal was made at the Pravasi Rajasthani Divas today by Kolkata-based culturalist, author and social worker, Mr Sundeep Bhutoria. The event was held at the Jaipur Exhibition and Convention Centre (JECC).

    Mr Bhutoria was invited by the Government of Rajasthan as a State Guest to speak in the session – “From Roots to Routes: Transforming the NRRs into Tourism Ambassadors”. He said that NRRs share a deep emotional bond with their homeland, and this connection is what brings them back time and again. “We are not the State Government’s Vote Bank. We are ambassadors of Rajasthan’s culture, tourism and heritage, no matter where we live,” he said, highlighting how traditions like wearing poshaks and safas continue across the globe.

    He suggested establishing a Public Private Partnership (PPP) model with companies, organizations and individuals to operationalise tourism desks and information centres, many of which currently function without personnel.

    Commenting on Rajasthan’s rising popularity as a film destination, Mr Bhutoria said that despite the state being one of the world’s most majestic shooting locations, it lacks a dedicated film studio. While films are shot here, post-production teams still need to travel to cities like Mumbai. He expressed hope that the New Tourism Policy unveiled today will finally address the long-pending need for a dedicated film studio in Rajasthan.

    The event was graced by Minister of Culture, Government of India, Gajendra Singh Shekhawat; Chief Minister of Rajasthan, Bhajan Lal Sharma; Rajasthan Deputy Chief Minister, Diya Kumari ; Urban Development & Housing Minister, Government of Rajasthan, Jhabar Singh Kharra; Animal Husbandry Minister, Government of Rajasthan, Joraram Kumawat,  Former Member of Rajya Sabha, Onkar Singh Lakhawat, Managing Director, India Tourism Development Corporation, Mugdha Sinha and  Add chief Secretary of Tourism, Government of Rajasthan Praveen Gupta

    It may be mentioned that Mr Bhutoria has served as the Secretary of the Kolkata Chapter of Rajasthan Foundation for over 10 years. He has been an active promoter of cultural activities across India as well as in Rajasthan and Jaipur. As the Managing Trustee of the Prabha Khaitan Foundation, he has played a key role in taking Indian art, literature and culture beyond India to Europe, the United States and West Asia. He is also dedicated to the preservation and popularizing of Indian folk arts and cultural heritage.

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  • The India 2025 Economic Review: The Power Play That Rewired Growth

    The India 2025 Economic Review: The Power Play That Rewired Growth

    New Delhi: India’s 2025 economic year-end review sits proudly in the second category. Manufacturing surged, exports hit historic highs, logistics went digital, startups kept hiring, and foreign investors doubled down. It’s the kind of year that doesn’t just make headlines. It changes momentum.

    India Economic Year-End Review 2025: A Snapshot Of A Breakout Year

    If you’re tracking India’s economic arc, the India economic year-end review 2025 feels like reading the playbook of a country finally firing on all cylinders. Production Linked Incentive schemes, startup growth, massive export numbers, strong FDI, profound digital transformation, trade agreements, and a logistics overhaul all converged. For once, different ministries didn’t move in parallel; they moved in sync.

    Manufacturing Muscle: PLI’s Big Swing

    The PLI schemes remained in full attack mode across 14 sectors, backed by an outlay of Rs 1.97 lakh crore. Actual investments reached Rs 1.88 lakh crore by June 2025. That push delivered Rs 17 lakh crore in incremental production and more than 12.3 lakh direct and indirect jobs. Exports under PLI crossed Rs 7.5 lakh crore, driven by electronics, pharmaceuticals, telecom networking and food processing.

    Industrial corridor development gained speed. The Prime Minister laid foundation stones for the Krishnapatnam Industrial Area, the Kopparthy Industrial Area, and the Orvakal Industrial Area. By October 2025, 430 industrial plots totalling 4,552 acres were allotted across Dholera, Shendra-Bidkin, Greater Noida and Vikram Udyogpuri. India isn’t just building factories; it’s building future-ready industrial ecosystems.

    Startups: Still Hungry, Still Hiring

    As of 2025, 2,01,335 startups have been recognised by DPIIT, generating more than 21 lakh jobs nationwide. Nearly half of these startups include at least one woman director; a significant shift in the country’s entrepreneurial landscape.

    ONDC Turns Into India’s Open E-Commerce Engine

    ONDC crossed 326 million cumulative orders by October 2025. In that month alone, it processed 18.2 million orders and averaged over 5.9 lakh daily transactions. It’s now a nationwide public digital backbone for commerce, not an experiment.

    ODOP And Unity Malls Take Districts Global

    ODOP crossed 1240 identified products across 775 districts. PM Ekta Malls moved ahead with construction in 25 of 27 approved states. India’s local goods finally get global-ready platforms.

    Ease Of Doing Business: A Reform Blitz

    India reduced compliance requirements by over 47,000 by 2025. Digitised 22,287 of them, simplified 16,108, decriminalised 4,458 and scrapped 4,270 entirely. BRAP has completed seven editions; BRAP 2026 is now live. D-BRAP pushes reforms down to districts.

    The Jan Vishwas Act 2023 decriminalised 183 provisions; the 2025 Bill proposes decriminalising 288 more across 355 provisions. NSWS has processed more than 11.75 lakh applications and granted 8,29,750 approvals.

    Logistics: India Finally Connects The Dots

    PM GatiShakti brought together 57 ministries, 1700 data layers, and unified infrastructure planning onto a single geospatial platform. Private sector access also went live. District Master Plans expanded to 112 aspirational districts.

    The National Logistics Policy advanced sectoral plans across coal, cement, steel, pharma, fertiliser, food processing and more. Twenty-seven states now have logistics policies.

    ULIP integrated 44 systems across 11 ministries, created 2000+ data fields and saw 200+ digital logistics applications built by industry. More than 1700 companies registered, generating over 200 crore API transactions. The Logistics Data Bank now covers all EXIM container tracking across 18 ports and 5800 rail stations.

    Innovation And IPR: India Ramps Up The R&D Engine

    Domestic patent filings rose 425% between 2014 and 2024. Trademark filings topped 5.5 lakh. Design filings reached 40,000, up 43%. India now ranks 38th in the Global Innovation Index and sits among the world’s top 10 IP offices for patents, trademarks and designs.

    Awareness campaigns reached 2.5 million students over 3.5 years, resulting in a 90% increase in educational institute patents. Digital tools like IP Saarthi, AI-ML search for trademarks, and self-assessment diagnostic tools have modernised India’s IP administration.

    Exports: Best First Half Ever

    India achieved an all-time high of US$825.25 billion in 2024–25. In April–September 2025, exports reached a record US$418.91 billion, growing 5.86%.

    Services exports hit US$387.54 billion in 2024–25 and US$199.03 billion in the first half of FY 2025–26. Merchandise exports reached US$437.7 billion in 2024–25 and US$219.88 billion in the first half of FY 2025–26.

    Key performers:

    • Electronic goods +41.94%
    • Engineering goods +5.35%
    • Drugs and pharma +6.46%
    • Marine products +17.40%
    • Rice +10.02%

    Top-growing destinations: the US, the UAE, China, Spain, and Hong Kong.

    Export Promotion Mission: One Mission To Replace Many

    The Rs 25,060 crore Export Promotion Mission created two streamlined pillars:

    Niryat Protsahan: affordable financing, interest subvention, export factoring, guarantees, and credit cards for e-commerce exporters.

    Niryat Disha: quality upgrades, branding, packaging, fairs, warehouses, inland transport reimbursements and trade intelligence.

    It consolidates IES, MAI and more, making export support sharper and streamlined.

    Digital Transformation Of Trade

    Trade eConnect became the single window for exporters. The TIA portal provided near-real-time analytics. e-IEC went 24×7. Certificates migrated to eCoO 2.0. Appendix 4H turned fully digital.

    DGFT also launched Bharat Aayat Niryat Lab Setu, a national digital testing and certification highway. SCOMET lists were modernised. Exporters gained the ability to correct DFIAs online. EPCG redemption went online. The entire FTP backbone effectively turned smart.

    SEZ Rethink For A Semiconductor Decade

    SEZ land requirement for semiconductor and electronics manufacturing was reduced to 10 hectares. New SEZs in Sanand (three), Dharwad, Nava Raipur and Balinong (Arunachal Pradesh) were notified in 2025.

    GeM: India’s Procurement Giant Breaks Records

    GeM recorded Rs 16.41 lakh crore GMV with 3.27 crore cumulative orders. Over 1.67 lakh buyer organisations and 24 lakh sellers are on the platform. MSEs contributed a massive 44.8% of GMV, with orders totalling Rs 7.35 lakh crore.

    Major moves:

    • Caution money removed
    • The rate contract system was introduced
    • MoUs with IN-SPACe, DFI, UBI, AJNIFM, CareEdge, IIPA, NCGG, EPFO and UN Women
    • Drone ecosystem integration and space-tech support expanded
    • Record procurement savings across ministries and PSUs

    Plantation Boards & Global Standards

    Coffee exports reached USD 1176 million (12% growth). Tea exports hit USD 605.9 million (15.16% growth). Rubber plantations under INROAD expanded to 1,79,376 ha. India hosted CCSCH8 and finalised global standards for large cardamom, vanilla and coriander.

    ECGC, ITPO And WTO: The Support System That Mattered

    ECGC provided collateral-free working capital cover for MSEs up to Rs 10 crore and increased the 90% cover for export credit to Rs 50 crore. Country ratings were liberalised across 24 markets.

    ITPO delivered major fairs, including IILF, AAHAR, the World Book Fair, and the Osaka World Expo Pavilion, which won Bronze and drew 3.72 million visitors.

    At the WTO, India raised 143 issues with developed economies and drove negotiations ahead of MC-14.

    FDI: India Crosses USD 1.1 Trillion Cumulative Inflows

    FDI touched USD 1.1 trillion between 2000 and June 2025. Annual FDI doubled from USD 36 billion to USD 80.62 billion between 2013–14 and 2024–25. In FY 2025–26 (up to June 2025), inflows reached USD 26.61 billion, up 17%.

    The India economic year-end review 2025 feels like the kind of report card other countries wish they could publish. It’s blunt proof that when India decides to move, it moves like a force of nature. From deep tech logistics to export diplomacy, from startup resilience to manufacturing revival, the system finally behaved like a single, coordinated machine. Sure, there’s still distance to cover. But the direction is right, the intent is sharp and the confidence is unmistakably Indian.

    PNN News

  • Rustom Kerawalla Highlights the Growing Impact of Government Skill Development Programmes on India’s Youth

    Rustom Kerawalla Highlights the Growing Impact of Government Skill Development Programmes on India’s Youth

    Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], December 9: Education reformer and Ampersand Group Chairman Rustom Kerawalla has emphasised the transformative role of India’s government-led skill development programmes, stating that these initiatives are rapidly reshaping the employability landscape for millions of young people. His insights align with the growing national momentum behind schemes such as the Skill India MissionPMKVY, and National Apprenticeship Promotion Scheme, which are helping bridge the skill gap in high-demand industries.

    Kerawalla believes that as the job market evolves, the need for practical, job-oriented training is more critical than ever. “The industry today demands skills before degrees. Government programmes are ensuring young Indians receive hands-on training, credible certification, and exposure to real workplace environments—exactly what employers are looking for,” he notes.

    Skill India Mission: Enabling Youth Employability at Scale

    The Skill India Mission remains one of the most impactful government interventions. With dedicated training in sectors such as healthcare, IT, retail, hospitality, and automotive, the programme ensures students learn skills aligned with current industry standards. This allows young people to transition smoothly from education to employment, significantly boosting their job readiness.

    Kerawalla highlights that Sector Skill Councils and industry partnerships have made the mission more efficient and relevant. “A student emerging from Skill India training is not just certified—they are work-ready from day one,” he adds.

    Breaking Barriers Through Accessible, Certified & Practical Training

    Government skill development initiatives come with long-term benefits that have made them invaluable to India’s youth:

    • Nationally recognised certifications that strengthen credibility in both domestic and global job markets.
    • Affordable or free training, ensuring equal access regardless of economic background.
    • Apprenticeships and real-workplace exposure, which significantly enhance productivity and confidence.
    • Entrepreneurship-focused modules, enabling youth to build small businesses and pursue self-employment opportunities.

    “These programmes democratise opportunities. They equip young people not only to seek jobs but to create them,” Kerawalla observes.

    Government’s Continued Push for Digital Learning & Partnerships

    The government’s commitment extends beyond skill training, with policy support, public-private partnerships, and digital learning platforms such as SWAYAMDIKSHA, and NSDC portals. These offer flexible learning pathways, especially beneficial for rural and remote communities.

    Rustom Kerawalla states, “Digital access has ensured that geography is no longer a barrier to learning. This is how India will truly unlock the potential of its young population.”

    Strengthening India’s Future Workforce

    The growing impact of skill development programmes is evident across industries, with companies increasingly benefiting from work-ready, skilled, and confident young professionals. As India moves towards becoming a global skill-based economy, Rustom Kerawalla believes that continued focus on scalable, quality-driven training will be crucial.

    “India’s demographic dividend will only deliver results if our youth are prepared for the realities of modern workplaces. Government skill development programmes are the backbone of this preparation,” he concludes.

    About Rustom Kerawalla and the Ampersand Group

    Rustom Kerawalla is one of India’s leading education entrepreneurs and the Founder & Chairman of Ampersand Group, known for building future-ready education ecosystems through technology, capability development, and government partnerships.

    Ampersand Group works extensively in the education and skill development sectors, partnering with governments, institutions, and global organisations to enhance quality learning and training outcomes across India.

    For more on the skilling initiative of Rustom Kerawalla’s Ampersand Group do visit

    https://www.ampersandgroup.in/blog/how-government-skill-development-programmes-empower-youth

    If you have any objection to this press release content, kindly contact pr.error.rectification@gmail.com to notify us. We will respond and rectify the situation in the next 24 hours.

  • Harvansh Chawla announces All India Moot Court Competition in Memory of His Father’s Enduring Legacy

    Harvansh Chawla announces All India Moot Court Competition in Memory of His Father’s Enduring Legacy

    New Delhi [India], December 9: On the solemn occasion of the second death anniversary of Late Shri K. R. Chawla, his son Mr. Harvansh Chawla, who is a Distinguished Lawyer, Founder and Managing Partner of K. R. Chawla & Co. (Law Firm), Chairman and Chief Patron of Rishal Music Trust, Chairman of the International Punjabi Forum, Chairman of TNN World (OT Channel), Government Nominee on the Indian Company Secretariat Institute, and Chairman of BRICS CCI, announced the establishment of the K. R. Chawla Memorial All India Moot Court Competition.

    Late Shri K. R. Chawla, a distinguished Lawyer was a revered figure in the legal fraternity. His dedication, clarity of thought, and commitment to ethical practice shaped several generations of legal professionals. He believed deeply in justice, fairness, and the transformative power of law in nation-building. The memorial competition is being instituted to honour his remarkable legacy and to celebrate the values he upheld throughout his distinguished life.

    The K. R. Chawla Memorial All India Moot Court Competition aims to provide law students from across the country with a platform to develop strong advocacy skills, engage in rigorous legal analysis, and experience the spirit of courtroom practice. It seeks to inspire young minds to pursue excellence, integrity, and discipline in their professional journeys, reflecting the principles that Late Shri K. R. Chawla embodied.

    The first edition of the competition will take place in January 2027, marking the beginning of a dedicated annual initiative that promotes high-quality legal education and nurtures future leaders of the legal profession.

    Mr. Harvansh Chawla, distinguished lawyer, shared that this initiative is a heartfelt tribute to his father’s memory and represents the deep respect and admiration he continues to command within the legal and social community.

    For further information, kindly contact Mr. Harvansh Chawla.
    Contact info: ‪+91 99994 60996

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