Praveena Sridhar

Praveena Sridhar
Technological options and mechanisms for water harvesting, storage and conservation - WHSC 2009
Description of the conference -2009 Water – Harvesting, Storage and Conservation Conference (WHSC)
Posted on 20 Nov, 2009 04:30 AM

Policy – Technology – Planning – Implementation has seldom been one straight highway in developmental issues like infrastructure, poverty, education or water! An all-encompassing approach to address these issues requires effective conversations.

River Ganga- Facts and figures
A collection of important facts and figures concerning our holy river- Ganga
Posted on 17 Nov, 2009 03:53 AM

 Famous quote on Ganges:

"The Ganga, especially, is the river of India, beloved of her people, round which are intertwined her memories, her hopes and fears, her songs of triumph, her victories and her defeats. She has been a symbol of India's age-long culture and civilization, ever changing, ever flowing, and yet ever the same Ganga."

Need for a case study and concised factual information on the rivers of India
An article that brings forth the importance of having an exhaustive data base on the rivers in the country
Posted on 16 Nov, 2009 09:38 PM

The complete title reads as “The Pilgrim’s Progress from This World to That Which Is to Come”. I see the version two of this epic work by John Bunyan being written in our times, for the journey which the modern world has undertaken to achieve “development” at all costs. It won’t be an allegory this time. It would be a factual story of how we plundered the planet of its resources, to realize a life which could no longer be sustained within the replenishing levels of the natural processes.

Pilgrims approaching Gomukh

William Pollard of the

Pilgrims making their way to the source of Ganges known as Gomukh (a glacier high up in the Himalayas named Gangotri). Photo Credit: Vineeta Rajput

Water footprint : Accounting for the water used to produce goods and services implemented by Jain Irrigation
Jain Irrigation recently became the first company in India to measure its environmental and sustainability benefits and identify ways to reduce its water consumption.
Posted on 13 Nov, 2009 06:23 AM

Jain Irrigation plan to do it with IFC, a member of World Bank Group.

Drinking water from a fresh pit everyday - The life of people in the fishing settlements in Dhanuskodi
In spite of non existent water and sanitation facilities, people from the fishing settlements manage to live here.
Posted on 12 Nov, 2009 11:59 PM

In an earlier post Microfinance for Water - How would it Work? I had put up a picture of a woman drawing water out from a pit.

A shift in thinking: Prioritise financial resources before working towards climate change
An analysis on the upcoming Copenhagen for the UN Climate Change Conference
Posted on 12 Nov, 2009 04:34 AM

UP India

Microfinance for water: How will it work?
An analysis on how micro finance could change the landscape of water based problems that the Indian towns and villages face, at the level of access and distribution.
Posted on 04 Nov, 2009 09:09 PM

Lately there have been some conversations about water sector and microfinance, about bringing in microfinance to address water issues like access to clean drinking water, household water distribution and supply, associated problems of sanitation like underground drainage, and utilities.

 

 

Shodh Yatra in Orissa and UP : Lessons in understanding the communities in different geographies and environment
“Shodh Yatra”- The walk to find knowledge that Prof. Anil Gupta along with several other free willing participants undertake, twice a year.
Posted on 04 Nov, 2009 06:20 AM


“Few people know how to take a walk. The qualifications are endurance, plain clothes, old shoes, an eye for nature, good humor, vast curiosity, good speech, good silence and nothing too much.”


What kind of a walk must have Ralph Waldo Emerson had, to pen down these lines?

Bad hydrology and water resources interventions
The Dublin Principles outline the importance of several critical aspects, to be considered while implementing action programs.
Posted on 04 Nov, 2009 05:29 AM

Let me describe a scenario which has become typical of my life in the development sector. "They never finish what they start", is the answer that I hear for most of my questions about public water supply projects (also for many other infrastructure projects), in most parts of India.

Photo essay on water loss due to leaks in Mulbagal, Karnataka
A photo essay on 'lost waters'
Posted on 25 Oct, 2009 07:58 PM

As I had been waking up to the leaky tap in my new house for quite some time; I thought it would be interesting to look at the different ways water gets wasted. In this post I attempt to do a photo blog from my past photo collections on this subject from different parts of the country.

Leaking pipe from a Municipal tanker