Opinion

Energy: a new arena in Indian diplomacy

07 Aug 2005 |
Dr R K Pachauri
| The Indian Express

The past few weeks have been a hectic period for Indian diplomacy, with forays into territory not traversed so intensely in previous years.

Mumbai deluge: lessons for the future

06 Aug 2005 |
Dr R K Pachauri
| The Indian Express

The city of Mumbai has been through a frightening trauma with the cloudburst that took place on July 26 and incessant rains on several days since. The population of the city is understandably angry with the breakdown of services and drainage systems and failure of power supply in large areas in and around the city. Two questions arise from this unfortunate experience.

Securing India's Energy Future

05 Aug 2005 |
Dr R K Pachauri
| The Indian Express

The Iran-India pipeline has been in the news. As one of the two co-authors of this project way back in 1989, I feel gratified by the movement forward, even though impediments continue to dog its prospects. The risks attached to the project have been highlighted in these columns, but the fact is that our energy future is itself fraught with risks that need careful evaluation.

Irony of (in)dependent regulation

04 Aug 2005 |
Ms Manisha Gulati
,
Ms Anjali Garg
| Business Line

We create institutions. Then we develop a deep intolerance for them. Further we make demands for those very institutions in different areas. That sums up the story of independent regulation in India. When the economy was liberalized and reforms introduced in the early 1990s, the power and telecom sectors were gradually thrown open to private investment and competition.

How best can we arrive at optimal energy solutions? Back up government role with competing think tanks

22 Jul 2005 |
Dr R K Pachauri
| The Financial Express

The need for an integrated energy policy has been highlighted and acknowledged by successive governments. It is heartening that the Prime Minister has now established an Energy Coordination Committee, including several ministers in the government and the deputy chairman and member responsible for energy in the Planning Commission. It is hoped that the coal minister will also be added to this group, because India's dependence on coal would remain paramount, as indeed the Prime Minister emphasised in his address to the US Congress.

From Non-Proliferation to Civilian Energy Cooperation

21 Jul 2005 |
Ms Veena Aggarwal
| The Indian Express

This is the right time for India to look again at nuclear power as an important source of energy in the future. Energy security is a hot topic today, and so is sustainable development. Environmental concerns relating to carbon emissions are also increasingly centre-stage. The role of nuclear power has to be appraised in this context.

Synergy in energy

14 Jul 2005 |
Dr Leena Srivastava
| The Financial Express

Oil prices are increasing rapidly while we have been debating dismantling of the administered pricing mechanism ad nauseum. Paradoxically, even a private company like Reliance has been asked to share in meeting the subsidy burden! On closer analysis, however, this may not be completely unjustified given that the petroleum product pricing regime, based on a flawed import parity pricing formula, allows refiners huge margins.

What do gas finds mean for energy economics?

06 Jul 2005 |
Mr R K Batra
| The Economic Times

The last few months have been one of the most exciting times for the development of the natural gas market in India. The petroleum minister had lengthy and fruitful discussions with his counterparts in Iran and Azerbaijan for gas supplies by pipeline; Shell commissioned their LNG terminal at Hazira; a five-million tonne per annum contract for supply of LNG from Iran was signed; after several false starts, a firm plan to revive the LNG fired Dhabol Plant in Maharashtra was agreed to and the icing on the cake has been the announcement by GSPC of a bonanza discovery in the KG Basin.

Firm prices will boost the viability of renewable energy alternatives: Our country is a repository of several kinds of resources that can be tapped

22 Jun 2005 |
Dr Leena Srivastava
| The Financial Express

While India has been significantly dependent on oil imports for several years, the government followed a system of pooling the prices of domestically produced crude (highly subsidised) with imported crude, thereby providing a significant price protection to consumers. Combined with further product subsidies, the final oil price to consumers was significantly lower than equivalent border prices.

The long view

17 Jun 2005 |
Mr Vikram Dayal
| TERI Newswire 11(12)

The events reported in newspapers and weeklies reflect the complexity of our world. Although newspapers do report forecasts, most notably, of the weather and the economy, analyses of the long term are neglected. Scenario analysis can help us go beyond the events of today to explore the future.