Posts Tagged ‘ India ’

Go Jairam, Go Jairam, Go Jairam – India’s Environmental Minister Saves the Places We Love

Monday, September 6th, 2010
The Indian government passed a landmark ruling last week in favor of preserving the Niyamgiri Hills, home of the Dongria Kondh – blocking Vedanta Resources from moving ahead with plans to mine bauxite in the area, considered sacred.  In this post we take a moment to celebrate this ruling and recognize a key figure in this action – Jairam Ramesh, Minister of State, Ministry of Environment and Forests.
 
India Rules Against Strip Mining and in Favor of Preserving a Sacred Forest
Optimistic environmentalists lifted their heads a little higher last week when the Indian government ruled against Vedanta Resources’ plans to mine for bauxite in Orissa’s Niyamgiri Hills – saving the sacred and traditional area in which the Dongria Kondh have lived for longer than, well, longer than anyone seems to be able to say.  The Dongria Kondh are an integral part of the Niyamgiri Hills.  Revered by others in the area as protectors of the Hills’ streams, hills and jungles, protectors they are.  New foes, new challenges, but still protecting the sacred hills. 

Many worked hard for this success.  First, the Dongria Kondh themselves, who were recently visited by Rahul Gandhi and who persisted and protested for years against the expansion of Vedanta’s activities in their area.   Second, a global network of environmental non-profits, most notably Survival International, and celebrities (Bianca Jagger, Michael Palin, Joanna Lumley) who didn’t hesitate to show strong, determined support and gain wide access to the media.  But in the end the real authority protecting the Dongria Kohndh and their streams and forest was the Indian government in the form of Jairam Ramesh, Environmental Minister. 

 

India’s Green Champion
In this decision Minister Ramesh ushers in a new era of environmental activity for India, known more for criticism than praise when it comes to saving the environment and preserving India’s special places.  Played as an emotional issue in the media – with the Dongria Kondh even compared to the Na’vi of Avatar – Minister Ramesh emphasized that legal, not emotional, matters prevailed in the government’s decision.  “There’s no emotion, no politics, no prejudice.  I have taken this decision purely on a legal approach – laws are being violated,” says Jairam Ramesh.  Done and done, and a special place – and people – are saved.

In his position as Environmental Minister for just over a year, Minister Ramesh is a mechanical engineer by training and a career official.  A graduate of the Indian Institute of Technology-Mumbai and MIT, in his brief time as Environmental Minister he is proving to be a champion of green causes for India and serious about significant progress on environmental issues.  This is a new era for this Ministry, and even his Ministry’s contact page shows a friendliness not usually seen on government web sites.  It’s a pleasure to see. 

India  Sets An Example for Developing and Developed Countries
Minister Ramesh is the right man at the right time, and an inspiration to developing and developed nations alike.  At a time when India is focused on growth, on infrastructure and on the future the challenges are enormous for judgments in favor of the environment – and harder still under today’s international glare of the media, the internet, and world environmental organizations.  Decisions made in this glare are very telling of the country that India wants to be and of the determination of Minister Ramesh, and what we all see is very positive.

Minister Ramesh’s decision reminds me of remarks made by Theodore Roosevelt when he visited the Grand Canyon in 1903.  Looking at the vastness and beauty of the Grand Canyon he said, “I want to ask you to do one thing in connection with (the Grand Canyon) in your own interest and in the interest of the country – to keep this great wonder of nature as it now is….We have gotten past the stage, my fellow-citizens, when we are to be pardoned if we treat any part of our country as something to be skinned for two or three years for the use of the present generation, whether it is the forest, the water, the scenery.  Whatever it is, handle it so that your children’s children will get the benefit of it.” 

Whether you’re in the US in the early 1900s, or in India or elsewhere today it’s really all the same – saving the places you love not only for yourself but for the future.  So thank you , Minister Ramesh, for taking this stand.  You’ve given us a lot of hope for India, for developing countries facing similar choices between development and conservation, for all countries with tribal groups and tribal lands to preserve against change.  You’ve given us hope for developed nations, too.  Many of us still have far to go and can only ask developing countries to please learn from our mistakes.  Can’t wait to see what you do and show us next.

Excellent articles in the Wall Street Journal, the UK Guardian, the Hindustan Times, Change.org and Wikipedia contributed to this blog post.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

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Asian Festival DC 2010, See You There!

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

This Saturday and Sunday, July 31 and August 1, we’ll have a booth at the 7th Annual Asian Festival located in Reston, VA

The event celebrates the people and cultures of Asia and draws from 60,000 to 70,000 attendees each year. This year’s highlight country is The Philippines. So all you Pinoys out there come represent!  We’ll have shirts for several Asian countries in our booth which is located near the Tennis Park (home to the concerts and Thai Tennis Tournament).  For more details on all the great events and exhibitors at the festival, check out the website: http://www.asianfestivaldc.com/

See you there and look for our banner!

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Patrick Govang, e2e Materials – A CEO Saving the Planet

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

“I wanted to make better products that have a significant impact.  The developing world aspires to our lifestyle which the planet cannot sustain, and America needs to step up with innovation to lead the way forward.” 
- Patrick Govang 

Photo by Michael Hall

KissMyCountry had the chance to talk with Patrick Govang, CEO of e2eMaterials based in Ithaca, New York for our continuing series on ‘CEOs Saving the Planet’.   A Green building company, e2e Materials creates a soy-based grass fiber composite  that can be used in place of wood or other building materials, and is strong, Green, and fire retardant – truly an amazing breakthrough.  The company is a spin-off from Cornell University, based on the discoveries of the Netravali Research Group at Cornell, and is providing an exciting alternative to traditional building materials.   Patrick Govang is enthusiastic about e2e Materials and Green building, and is using his experience in the US and internationally to save our planet.  Enjoy!

 

Lexy: Tell us a little bit about e2e Materials – how you got started by spinning off from Cornell University to become a private company and the plans you have for e2e Materials in the future.

Patrick:  Research was going on at Cornell from the early 90’s to develop high performance ‘Green’ materials – something as strong as Kevlar® or carbon fiber.  Kevlar® and carbon fiber are strong but not earth friendly, and there was interest in developing high performance products that were Greener.  Researchers wondered how could nature duplicate that strength, and the result was a material with similar strengths that was Green.   The technology is a true material platform giving us a very broad palate of properties that can go in many applications.

Lexy: When did you first become interested in Green and how did you become involved with e2e Materials?  What made you decide to be the CEO?

Patrick:  I guess I’ve always had a bit of Green in me.  I built a house that’s off the grid with an alternative water supply as a hobby.  It was more of a technical challenge and for my curiosity than anything else, but I was interested in Green.  While working in the automotive industry, I built several manufacturing facilities in India to California emission standards in the 90’s because it was the right thing to do.  With e2e, I was the Director of the Cornell Center for Materials Research at the time, helping researchers bring their discoveries to market.  The invention of this material personally resonated with me, and I knew I wanted to bring it to market.  I saw that I could use a lot of my experience from the automotive industry, and saw this as a real opportunity to do something great for the environment and build an exciting company.   I wanted to make better products that have a significant impact.  The developing world aspires to our lifestyle which the planet cannot sustain, and America needs to step up with innovation to lead the way forward.  Our responsibility is to show the world new technologies that save the planet and offer an unparalleled quality of life.  It’s exciting, and our mission easily infects everyone in the company.  It’s a true cradle-to-cradle concept that leverages a business model that’s inherently competitive.  By locating our agricultural feedstocks near the production facility and shipping within a 500 mile radius we enable a regional business model that creates sustainable, Green collar jobs spanning agriculture, manufacturing and high-technology.

Lexy:  One of your customers is Comet Skateboards, which is a great example of how the products you create can save our planet.   How did you come to work with Comet Skateboards?  Can you tell us a little bit about why your materials are an improvement on how skateboards are generally made?

Patrick: Our technology is broad, but we started with skateboards.  A Cornell graduate, Jason Salfi, co-founded Comet Skateboards, and was looking for ways to make his boards Greener.  He came to us.  With Comet we worked to eliminate epoxy and fiberglass from the boards.  The new boards have both high-performance and are earth-friendly.  Before, when the company used epoxy and fiberglass to make their boards Jason did not bring his daughter to the shop.  Now with our materials used for the boards he lets her crawl around the floor – pretty unusual for a manufacturing environment. 

Lexy: What do people always ask you about Green building, and what do you wish people asked?

Patrick:  When it comes to building materials, the materials and the processes we use today have had as much cost taken out of them through years of competition.  So, anything new – new materials, new processes – usually means higher cost, initially.    The resulting perception is that Green means higher costs.  The first question we always hear is ‘That’s great, how much more does it cost?’.  The reality is that we can take out 50% of the cost of the products we replace.  We can make a product that truly reduces our reliance on petroleum, and we can make our shareholders happy because the cost benefits translate to higher margins.  We focus on higher performing and more cost effective products that just happen to deliver unparalleled sustainability.

Lexy: We’re all thinking about the earthquake in Haiti right now, and the need to rebuild in that country.  As an expert on Green building, do you have any thoughts about rebuilding Port au Prince?  For instance, what can Green building materials do for Haiti that traditional building materials can’t?

Photo by UN Development Programme

Patrick:  We’re all very saddened by what’s happened in Haiti.  Our entire company is saddened by what’s happened.   Haiti has a sad but unique opportunity to rebuild the country to be efficient in terms of energy consumption.  Thinking about our own technology for Haiti, someday our materials will offer rapid deployment of materials that are strong and cost effective – and are safe as well.  We’re aware that many of the trailers sent after Katrina contained toxins and are working to provide a better product that will provide immediate shelter that is not laden with formaldehyde.  We have the opportunity to be more forward looking for Haiti.

 

 

Lexy: Also, in a few weeks the Vancouver Olympics will begin.  Vancouver is calling this Olympics the Greenest ever.   Any comments on the Olympic Village for Vancouver, which will achieve Gold LEED status?

Patrick:  What they’re doing is fantastic.  We couldn’t be happier to see more projects like this emerging with a global presence.  It’s a chance to show the world what can really be done with Green technology, and there’s a very elegant role for materials like ours to play.  The LEED process requires a lot of up front planning, so it’s impressive they received LEED status.

Lexy:  At KissMyCountry we talk about saving the planet, but we also talk about enjoying the planet.  What are your favorite places and why?

Patrick:  My favorite place is Ithaca, New York, where the company is headquartered and where I live.  I love the cultural and geographic diversity.  The campuses are a great meeting place for different viewpoints coming together, and the city is forward looking.  It’s an idyllic, beautiful area with waterfalls everywhere.   There’s a tremendous entrepreneurial community with a great vibe – lots of startups.  We’re all friends, we support each other and we’re excited about changing the world.

Lexy:  As a CEO you travel on business.  Do you have a favorite city for business travel?  What’s great about that city?

Patrick:  San Francisco.   I travel here quite a bit, and what I really enjoy is the ability to fly in, walk over to the train, and take the train to my hotel.  I feel like I’m reducing my footprint, and I feel great about that.  Like Ithaca, it’s a very forward looking city.

 
 
 

Photo by Bluerasberry

Lexy:  Have you ever been to a place that surprised you – either positively or negatively?  What surprised you?

Patrick:  I spent part of my career in the automotive industry in India.  In India I saw the impact of such a large population on the lifestyle and resources in the country.   It made me think about population and how so many people living together affects everything.  I lived there for three years developing manufacturing facilities for the automotive industry in India.  To be a success there we had to focus on coming up with solutions.   People there really are committed to creating a better quality of life.  

 
 

Photo by NASA

Lexy:  Have you been on a vacation within the past few months, or are you planning a vacation in the next few months? 

Patrick:  My whole life is a vacation.  When you love what you’re doing that’s how you feel.  I have no current plans for a vacation.  But my wife and I visited New Zealand several years ago for our honeymoon.  I was really impressed seeing such a self supportive lifestyle.  There’s a tremendous national feeling there to be self sufficient.

Patrick, we greatly appreciate the time you took to talk with KissMyCountry – and look forward to checking back with you as e2e Materials grows.  All the best to you and your entire group at e2e Materials as you help save our planet and build a great company!

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Bridget Brennan, CEO of The Female Factor and the Places She Loves

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

Grand Tetons Public Domain Photo

KissMyCountry continues their interview with Bridget Brennan, CEO of Female Factor and author of Why She Buys as Bridget talks about the places she loves.

Places That Bridget Loves
Lexy: Bridget, what are your favorite places?  What places in the world do you love?  Why?
Bridget:  One of my favorite places in the whole world is Grand Teton National Park in Jackson Hole, Wyoming.  The Tetons are such a striking mountain range.  There are no foothills, and so they seem to rise straight out of the ground with their spiky, craggy peaks.  When you arrive by plane to Jackson Hole, you land right in the middle of Grand Teton National Park, and it is the most dramatic and beautiful airport landing imaginable. You step off the plane onto an old-fashioned staircase, and you’re suddenly surrounded by the Tetons.  Sometimes you can see bison in the distance and you haven’t even picked up your bags yet.  You are instantly away from whatever piece of civilization you live in.

Tai Chi by Anita Ritenour

Lexy: You travel a lot for business.  Is there a city you like best for a business trip? Why?
Bridget:  One of my favorite cities for a business trip is San Francisco.  It’s so nice to get up early in the morning and walk up and down the streets.  So many times you reach the crest of a hill and have a beautiful view of the Golden Gate Bridge, the blue Pacific and Alcatraz.   I also enjoy seeing people out in the parks doing Tai Chi.  There’s a park in front of the Fairmont Hotel where people do Tai Chi every morning.  When the sun is coming up and you’re watching so many people silently and slowly doing Tai Chi, it’s an amazing way to start a business day in a different city.   I also love New York for all the obvious reasons – you feel the adrenaline surge the minute you land.  New York never fails to inspire me.  I have family in both San Francisco and New York so that’s a plus too.  Both cities are physically striking and have a different effect on me in equally powerful ways – even though they could not be more different.

Mr. K: Where was your last vacation and what were some of the highlights?
My husband and I went to the South of France recently with two of my sisters, and we all shared an apartment there.  It was so much fun to stay in an apartment instead of a hotel.  I found it more relaxing – we had a little kitchen and could make our own coffee in the morning and have it with a baguette and jam on the balcony, not having to go anywhere and just taking our sweet time.  It added an element of relaxation that I really enjoyed.  We were in a tiny little town near the Italian border which was full of Italian tourists, and we hardly ran into any other Americans.  It was fun to see the Italians on holiday because there were so many multi-generational families.  They’d be out at the beach – grandma, grandpa, the parents, the kids, grandkids. It was fun watching so many Italian multi-generational families being on vacation together.

Indian Saris by Renault

Mr. K: Has there been a place in all your travels that surprised you – whether it be positive or negative?  Maybe you had preconceived ideas about what you were going to experience, and somehow the place just shocked you and it wasn’t what you expected.
Bridget:  I would have to say India.  I loved India so much more than I had expected to love it.  I knew I would find it fascinating, but I fell head over heels in love with that country.   I loved the Bollywood movies, I loved the food, I loved the people, the colors, the saris, the sunshine and the hospitality.  I think that anyone who loves adventure would love India.  It’s a wonderful place.  And there are so many direct flights to India now that make it even more accessible to Americans.

Lexy:  Bridget, where’s your next trip?  What’s your next vacation?
Bridget:  I’m not sure.  I’m working on that right now and figuring out where to go.  It might be somewhere in Southeast Asia – I don’t know that part of the world very well.   I’m seriously thinking about Vietnam and Cambodia.  I think they’d be fascinating.

Lexy: Bridget, it sounds like you have a lot of exciting stuff planned.  We have only one more question – will you talk to us again later this year about what you’re doing and where you’re traveling – maybe about your next vacation when you return?  We want to stay in touch!
Bridget:  I’d love to!

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