Report: „Germany-based NRI scientist Amal Mukhopadhyay to bring solar-powered health centres to Indian villages“

Excerpted from: The Economic Times, 06.11.2011:

HAMBURG (Germany): A Germany-based NRI scientist plans to introduce solar-powered health centres in remote Indian villages, aimed at helping rural people meet their immediate medical needs and popularising the use of renewable energy.

Amal Mukhopadhyay, chief of Hanseatic India Forum e.V. based in Hamburg, has initially planned to set up three such centres in Sunderbans in West Bengal with an estimated cost of 45,000 euros. [continue reading]

Similar reports also appeared in:

http://www.pravasitoday.com/germany-based-nri-to-bring-solar-powered-health-centres-to-indian-villages

http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2011-11-06/other-news/30366753_1_health-centres-three-such-centres-villages

http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/industry-and-economy/economy/article2604184.ece

Report: „Indians 2nd largest foreign student population in US“

According to a news item by Nida Najar of NYT News Service appearing in the Times of India (15.10.2011):

Indians are now the second-largest foreign student population in America, after the Chinese, with almost 105,000 students in the US in the 2009-10 academic year, the last for which comprehensive figures were available. Student visa applications from India increased 20% in the past year, according to the American Embassy.

Although a majority of Indian students in the US are graduate students, undergraduate enrolment has grown by more than 20% in the past few years.

The most interesting, and probably a worrying part of the whole story for the national innovation system is that those school students passing out with marks well over 90% are unable to get an admission in top-leauge colleges and universities in India. It cites the example of a Delhi girl who has „received scholarship offers of $20,000 from Dartmouth and $15,000 from Smith. Her pile of acceptance letters would have made any teenager smile: Cornell, Bryn Mawr, Duke, Wesleyan, Barnard and the University of Virginia“. The same girl was however denied admission by the top Delhi colleges for having scored „only“ 93.5% in her final board exams (12th standard), according to the report.

The report continues:

American universities and colleges have been more than happy to pick up the slack. Faced with shrinking returns from endowment funds, a decline in the number of high school graduates in the US and growing economic hardship among American families, they have stepped up their efforts to woo Indian students thousands of miles away.

Representatives from many of the Ivy League institutions have begun making trips to India to recruit students and explore partnerships with Indian schools. Some have set up offices in India, partly aimed at attracting a wider base of students.

The report, mercifully, also takes on the ills ailing the Indian education system without mincing words:

American universities have now become „safety schools“ for increasingly stressed and traumatized Indian students and parents, who complain that one fateful event – the final high school examination – can make or break a teenager’s future career. […]

But for some students, it is not merely the competition that drives them to apply to study in the US. It is also the greater intellectual freedom of an American liberal arts education. India’s educational system is rigid, locking students into an area of study and affording them little opportunity to take courses outside their major beyond the 11th grade. […]

Also see similar reports or slightly varying versions of the same report in other publications:

NDTV: Squeezed out in India, students turn to US

Hindustan Times: Exodus of Indian student to America continues

Economic Times: As Indian students rejected at home are lapped up by Ivy League institutions; HRD Minister Kapil Sibal says India doesn’t have quality institutions

 

Press Release: Grassroot Innovations Open New Avenues for Indo-German Collaboration

GIRT sees the fourth India Week Hamburg as an ideal platform to further boost bilateral relations

Hamburg (11.10.2011): India has emerged as a hotbed for low-cost, frugal innovations. Buoyed by the entrepreneurial spirit of India’s large private sector and a growing middle class, firms of all sizes and nationalities with a base in India have churned out several affordable and innovative products. “Aakash”, the latest tablet PC priced at about € 35, which has been recently launched in India is an excellent example of such ideas and business model innovations emanating from the Subcontinent.

Many local users in India’s rural areas come up with inventions that are not only innovative and useful but also less expensive than the usual solutions available in the market. Another important feature of grassroot innovations is that they are generally environment friendly and in sync with the given infrastructural conditions. Examples of such innovations include water-based cooling systems that do not require electricity, or non-sticky frying pans made of earth.

Interestingly, India’s emergence as “innovation hub” for low-cost, frugal innovations, often directed at the bottom of the economic pyramid have gone hand-in-hand with increasing exports of engineering goods made in India. The volume of India’s export of engineering goods has increased more than 10-fold in the past 15 years, reaching nearly $ 70 billion. Germany alone imported engineering goods worth $ 11 billion from India in the last fiscal year.

“We see India rapidly emerging as a lead market for frugal innovations”, says Rajnish Tiwari, Head of German-Indian Round Table (GIRT) in Hamburg. Tiwari, who in his capacity as leader of “Research Project Global Innovation” at the Hamburg University of Technology (TUHH) has done extensive studies on India’s innovative capacities and Indo-German business relations, sees the suitability of India’s frugal technologies extending especially to markets in South Asia, Africa and Latin America, where many countries have similar socio- economic and geographical structures. He advocates German firms’ participation to realize what his colleague Dr. Stephan Buse from TUHH calls is a “win-win proposition”.

TUHH and GIRT have therefore decided to hold a symposium on the theme of “Grassroot Innovations: New Opportunities for Indo-German Cooperation?” to explore the possibility of joint commercialization of innovations coming from India’s both formal and non-formal sectors. Grassroot innovations in India have been supported and popularized by untiring and inspiring efforts of Prof. Anil Gupta of Honey Bee Network. Several renowned experts, including Prof. Gupta, will participate in a symposium on 20th October 2011 at the Hamburg Chamber of Commerce. The symposium is being held as a part of the fourth “India Week Hamburg”. GIRT, along with its partners, is co-organizing the following events during the India Week:

We invite all interested persons and firms to participate in these events. The participation is free of charge but requires a prior registration for organizational reasons. All further information can be accessed via:

www.girt-hamburg.de

www.global-innovation.net

Download this press release as PDF

About German-Indian Round Table (GIRT)

The German-Indian Round Table (GIRT) was founded by Rudolf Weiler in 2001 and forms a loose federation of businessmen and entrepreneurs with strong ties and interests in India. GIRT’s objective is to inform about India and to strengthen Indo-German business relations. GIRT’s local chapters are organised regularly in Aachen, Berlin, Düsseldorf, Frankfurt, Hamburg, Hanover, Leipzig/Halle, Munich, Nuremberg, Stuttgart in Germany and New Delhi/Gurgaon, Pune and Coimbatore in India. GIRT connects about 3,000 people from the Indo-German business community. The Chairman, as well as the respective heads of local sections, of GIRT work on an honorary basis. Since February 2010 Dr. Andreas Waldraff from Berlin is the chairman of GIRT.

The Hamburg Chapter of GIRT is headed by Mr. Rajnish Tiwari from Hamburg University of Technology (TU Hamburg-Harburg). Mr. Tiwari works there as a Research Associate at the Institute for Technology and Innovation Management and leads the Research Project “Global Innovation” (www.global-innovation.net). He has done extensive research on Indo-German business relations and is a co-initiator of the India Week in Hamburg (www.indiaweek.hamburg.de). Further information about GIRT in Hamburg can be accessed at: www.girt-hamburg.de.

India Week in Hamburg (www.indiaweek.hamburg.de)

Kontakt GIRT Hamburg:

Rajnish Tiwari
GIRT Hamburg
c/o TU Hamburg-Harburg
Institut TIM (W-7)
Schwarzenbergstr. 95
D-21073 Hamburg

Tel. +49 (0)40-42878 3776
Fax +49 (0)40-42878 2869
E-Mail: tiwari@tuhh.de

Pressekontakt GIRT:

Sven Andressen
Redaktion GIRT-Blatt
c/o Indien Aktuell Business Düsseldorf/Bremen
Post: Kaiserswerther Markt 51
D-40489 Düsseldorf, Germany

Tel. +49 (0)421-51660465
Fax +49 (0)421-51660466
Mobile +49 (0)179-60811602
E-Mail: sa@indienaktuell.de

Pressekontakt India Week:

Johannes Freudewald
Büro für Medienarbeit
Post: Osterstr. 58
D-20259 Hamburg, Germany

Tel. +49 (0)40-37420352
Fax +49 (0)40-37420353
Mobile +49 (0)176-43005016
E-Mail: johannes@freudewald.de

India Week Hamburg: Bharatnatyam and Indian Cultural Dance Programme by artists from India

As part of India Week Celebrations in Hamburg Indian Festival Committee Hamburg eV., Presents Bharatnatyam and Indian Cultural Dance Programme by artists from India:

Venue: Brakula, Bramfelder Chaussee 265, Hamburg

On 15th October 2011 @ 18:30

Tickets

Adult 10 € / Kids 8 € (13 bis 18 jahre)

incl. Indian Food

Tickets purchased on the day of the function will cost 12 € / kids 10 €

Tickets can be reserved under :

040 37420890

0172 422 7309

bratinsaha@yahoo.com

Further Information: Cultural_Event_15_October_2011

Note: This event is not related to German-Indian Round Table.

 

„GIRT Hamburg goes Bremen“: Einladung zur nächsten Veranstaltung am 1.11.2011

Der German-Indian Round Table (GIRT) Hamburg lädt recht herzlich zu seinem nächsten Treffen ein, das wie jedes Jahr im November gemeinsam mit dem Ländernetzwerk Indien in Bremen stattfindet und zwar

am Dienstag, den 1. November 2011 um 18.00 Uhr,

im Club zu Bremen, Haus Schütting, Am Markt 13 in 28195 Bremen.

An diesem Abend wird uns zunächst Frau Cornelia Kunze, Geschäftsführerin von Edelman Deutschland, über „PR Strategien für die Einführung internationaler Marken in Indien: Erfahrungen eines deutsch-indischen Managementaustausches“ informieren.

Anschließend berichtet das Career Center der Universität Bremen, Frau Richter (angefragt), über deren Aktivitäten und Veranstaltungen auch mit Blick auf den indischen Markt.

Aus organisatorischen Gründen bitte ich um eine Anmeldung bis zum 25. Oktober 2011. Sende Sie Ihre Anmeldungen bitte direkt an Frau Reinkensmeier (Reinkensmeier@handelskammer-bremen.de).

Beste Grüße und vielleicht bis bald auf der India Week Hamburg
Rajnish Tiwari