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New Delhi: Experts from India and Japan discussed possibilities of collaboration for promotion of hydrogen-based technologies as well as related innovations, trends, concerns, and solutions at a webinar on De-carbonisation: Exploring the Hydrogen Prospects and Innovative Technologies.
“Challenges for India-Japan hydrogen research is cost reduction and improved performance for fuel cells, hydrogen storage, challenges for viable green hydrogen process routes, significant investments required for research infrastructure and support for commercialisation,” Rangan Banerjee, Forbes Marshall Chair Professor, Department of Energy Science and Engineering, IIT Bombay pointed out.
Distinguished Professor Kojima Yoshitsugu, National Science Centre for Basic Research and Development, Hiroshima University, said that ammonia could be a potential hydrogen carrier because of its high hydrogen densities. “Direct combustion of ammonia is also possible without emission of carbon dioxide
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Recently in the budget speech delivered by the Finance Minister
for 2021-22, the Government announced a new policy on Disinvestment
which marked a significant shift from the position that has
prevailed thus far. The policy statement made a distinction
between sectors that are “strategic” and
“non-strategic” from the Government s
perspective.
The following sectors were identified in the policy statement as
“strategic” sectors: (a) atomic energy, space and
defense, (b) transport and telecommunications, (c) power,
petroleum, coal and other minerals, and (d) banking, insurance and
Williams Babalola
Officials have said that nine more bodies have been discovered at the site of a flash flood in Uttarakhand’s Chamoli district on Sunday, raising the death toll to 50.
According to reports from officials, over 150 people are still missing after the flash flood which scientists said was triggered by what could have been a large avalanche of glacier ice which sent water, rocks and debris down the Dhauliganga river valley.
Rescuers were using heavy digging machinery in race to free dozens of dam construction workers trapped in an underground tunnel connected to a hydroelectric project being built by the government-owned National Thermal Power Corporation.
Rescuers pulled out nine more bodies from the site of a flash flood in a Himalayan region of northern India on Sunday, a week after the disaster struck, bringing the death toll to 50 with more than 150 people still missing, officials said.
By Saurabh Sharma LUCKNOW, India (Reuters) - Rescuers pulled out nine more bodies from the site of a flash flood in a Himalayan region of northern India on Sunday, a week after the disaster struck, bringing the death toll to 50 with more than 150 people still missing, officials said. The flash flood in Uttarakhand state, triggered by what scientists said could have been a large avalanche of glacier ice, sent water, rocks and debris surging down the Dhauliganga river valley, destroying dams and bridges. Rescuers are using heavy digging machinery in race to free dozens of dam construction workers trapped in an underground tunnel connected to a hydroelectric project being built by the government-owned National Thermal Power Corporation. We have not lost all hope yet. We hope to find more survivors, the top government official in the region, Swati Bhadoriya told Reuters. Authorities said 154 people were still missing. Experts have cautioned there could be still be huge amounts of rock, deb