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June 7, 2025
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Smart Cities Don’t Work If They Don’t Work For Everyone

By 2030, 70% of the GDP and 70% of new jobs in India will come from cities. The Modi government’s ambitious “100 Smart Cities” plan is making urban planning sexy in a country challenged by rapid and chaotic urbanisation. Yet there is no single, universally accepted definition of a “smart city”. With massive investment expected to pour in, it is time to understand what will make India’s urban centres truly smart. With one in six city dwellers living in a slum, inclusive growth is a critical principle that India cannot ignore. Whether you argue for a liveable city or a smart city, at the core a city does not work if it does not work for everyone.

India will add over 400 million urban inhabitants by 2050, more than any other country. Managing such growth will require unprecedented levels of planning and investment in housing, infrastructure and public services. This is where “smart” can be a game-changer.

disclosure

Technology has fundamentally changed the way cities operate and grow. Innovations in data collection, integration and analytics are improving the way citizens, businesses and governments operate on a daily basis. Globally, Cisco estimates that smart cities’ development opportunity is a potential US $3 trillion market. India’s 100 Smart Cities plan will be funded by a public investment of USD $1.2 billion in the first year alone, and additional private investment is expected to dwarf this number. CISCO’s Deputy Chief Globalisation Officer and President Smart+Connected Communities, Dr. Anil Menon, makes a pertinent point when he asks us, “What if you had unlimited computing, storage, and bandwidth at a reasonable price – would you do healthcare the same way again? Would you do education the same way again? Would you build a city the same way again?”

But what really defines a smart city? It is not just data and technology. We believe this rests on four key levers.

1. Fundamentally, a smart city is one that unifies data from a wide range of sources–embedded sensors, public services, citizen reports, telecom companies and more–to inform decision-making by policy makers, businesses and citizens.

2. Smart cities adapt in real time as the city’s fabric shifts and changes, be it due to everyday events such as power outages or road closures, long-term changes like the development of new neighbourhoods or flyovers or one-off events like a natural disaster.

3. Smart cities’ systems are essentially built around the needs of citizens, providing the essential infrastructure and services they need to thrive and prosper. They are designed to intuit and respond to the wide array of demands that a diverse and densely concentrated user base expresses.

4. A smart city forms a platform for innovation, providing the tools and environment for all citizens to develop their full potential.

Public and private players are already leveraging new technologies to advance this concept of a citizen-centric smart city. Microsoft’s Citizen Next App, developed in collaboration with the Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation, allows citizens to photograph, geo-locate and report issues like uncollected waste and potholes to local authorities in three simple steps. Citizens can even track their complaints through the app and ensure they are resolved. In Agra participatory planning is being used to improve the way affordable housing is designed and developed. The Centre for Urban and Regional Excellence (CURE) is preparing slum upgrading plans through community consultations, household surveys, and mapping of land use and housing footprints. CURE applies an approach where housing and infrastructure improvements occur when and how people need them and not the other way around.MIT’s Senseable City Lab experiments with technological feedback loops to understand and shape citizen behaviour. Saaf India was inspired by the Lab’s work mapping the route of Seattle’s garbage to understand patterns and costs as it moved through the city’s sanitation system, and hopes to test a similar approach in India to increase awareness and change citizen behavior around waste.

In the end, people hold the key to success. A city is “smart” when those who live in it are at the heart of its design.

This article is written by Kira Intrator and Sanchali Pal of Dalberg Global Development Advisors and originally appeared in Huffington Post India.

Dalberg_RGBsmall Dalberg Global Development Advisors is a strategic consulting firm that works exclusively to raise living standards in developing countries and address global issues like climate change and public health.

Parle Products’ ‘Litter Free’ Campaign gets Boost from OOH

Parle Products has extended its countrywide ‘Litter Free’ project and launched an out-of-home campaign in Delhi-NCR on the back of its nationwide TV campaign, which was rolled out in January 2015. The initiative, developed by Havas Media Group’s OOH and activation brand Havas Media Active, seeks to take forward Parle’s anti-littering message in an outdoor setting. The outdoor push seeks to amplify the powerful messaging by creating a live, interactive, community experience, increasing the chances of its successful adoption as a day-to-day habit. It aims to encourage citizens, namely the youth, to dispose garbage in the correct manner – in the dustbin.

The high decibel awareness campaign is currently underway in Gurgaon’s Cyber City and Cyber Hub areas. Key components include OOH TV screens in buildings playing the three variations of the Parle Litter Free TVCs with the Corporate Boss, the Class Monitor, and Lady in the Shopping Mall looking for Mr Clean. Backlit scrollers, a series of snap posters and digital pods urge Delhites to stop littering. They chide and explain at the same time with captivating messages like – “Apne ghar ko saaf rakhna sabko ata hai. Toh sadkon ko kyo nahin?” (Everyone knows how to keep one’s hone clean. Then why not the roads?) and “Yeh kachrewala ka kaam hai. It’s everyone’s responsibility”, making it impossible to simply walk past.

Commenting on the campaign, Pravin Kulkarni, GM – Marketing, Parle Products, said, “Indians are habituated to consuming products and thoughtlessly pitching wrappers, adding to the volume of litter in public places. Our Parle products have disposable wrappers, so we wanted to talk to people, to our youth – to educate and create awareness about this irresponsible behaviour. The OOH campaign is aimed at capturing our youth’s attention, in their environment, with peers and passers-by; prompting conversations and driving them to take responsibility and stop littering. We are already seeing that littering has reduced in targeted locations.”

Anita Nayyar, CEO, Havas Media Group India, explained, “We are glad to take on and execute this ‘meaningful’ initiative with Parle Products. Dirty surroundings are unhealthy, unsafe to society, and allowing littering to continue is akin to saying, it’s acceptable. Parle has taken a stand to go Litter Free and wanted to talk to the youth in their everyday surroundings. We decided to take the OOH route and zeroed in on Delhi-NCR to catch en-mass this audience. To give a sense of scale, Cyber City alone has 4 lakh working professionals and 50,000 visitors every day, which this campaign is addressing.”

Portfolio Management Has Little Consideration For Sustainability Issues

Portfolio Management Has Little Consideration For Sustainability Issues

Sustainability is often discussed with reference to a single entity. For example, one would either talk about the sustainability performance of a corporation in terms of its water management strategies, supply chain practices and carbon emissions reduction among other things or the sustainability of a building in terms of its rating achievement (i.e. LEED- Gold, Platinum, Bronze).  The application of portfolio management is vital be it in the context of selecting which stocks to invest in or in the case of contractors where they need to select which set of projects to bid for. Yet, the link between sustainability and the concept of portfolio management is unclear and has not received much attention.

Portfolio management, in principle, is defined as the process of selecting entities (this could be projects or stocks) which do not violate constraints or exceed resources.  Although existing studies have demonstrated the positive influence of portfolio management on business results, in reality, implementing such a framework can be very challenging.  Le and Nguyen (2007) outline three reasons for this. Firstly, it may be difficult to compare between entities because of their different characteristics. For a building project, not all listed criteria in the LEED rating system is applicable to all projects. Secondly, uncertainties may exist in the criteria used for assessment.   As an example, there might be differences in opinion between practitioners when it comes to subjective criteria such as the level of innovation.  Thirdly, interdependency may exist between a set of entities to the others which is difficult to quantify. In the case of stock selection, the price movement between stocks may be correlated due to the fact that they belong in either a similar industry sector or market.

A review of the extant literature reveals that much of the discussion in portfolio management has taken a narrow focus on financial objectives (Meskendahl, 2010), resource constraints (Gutjahr et al., 2008; Gutjahr et al., 2010; Stummer et al., 2009) and refinement of portfolio analysis methods (see Doerner et al., 2006; Carlsson et al., 2007; Hu et al., 2008; Carazo et al., 2010) with little or no consideration for sustainability issues.  This is problematic because it goes to show that the emphasis is still very much on a single bottom line (economic) as opposed to a triple bottom line (economic, social and environmental).

To address this gap, through one of my seminal works, ‘Integrating Sustainability into Construction Project Portfolio Management’, I have proposed a framework linking both sustainability and portfolio management in the context of project selection.  This framework deals with the afore-mentioned challenges. It acknowledges uncertainty and interdependency in sustainability assessments as well as leverages on the famous efficient frontier to find the optimal point by which sustainability can be achieved without affecting the bottom line. It is hoped that this new line of thought of examining sustainability from a portfolio management perspective would spark more debates and meaningful discussions in this area.

Renard Dr Renard Siew is a researcher based at the Centre for Energy and Environmental Markets (CEEM). His research interest lies in sustainability, integrated reporting, ESG research, socially responsible investment (across different asset classes: equities, infrastructure and property, real estate), climate change, sustainability strategy and green construction for the building/infrastructure sector. Renard did his PhD at UNSW with the support of the Australian Postgraduate Award (APA) Scholarship. He has published in international refereed journals on various sustainability issues in Asia.

Vedanta Recycles 34MN Cubic Meters Of Water in FY2015

MUMBAI: The water conservation efforts of Vedanta, the global diversified natural resources company, and its subsidiaries, led to recycling of nearly 34 MCM (34 billion liters) which is 22% of water used, during April 2014 – January 2015. “Water Conservation and its management is one of our top priorities and is considered pivotal in the decision-making process of new and existing projects. I am happy to share that we are committed towards achieving zero discharge in all our operations through 100% recirculation and reuse to ensure that none of the natural water sources are affected by our operations,” commented Tom Albanese, Group Chief Executive of Vedanta.

The Vedanta group has echoed Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s clarion call for a ‘Swachh Bharat’ with a commitment to a cleaner environment, by signing and promising to implement the pledge for access to safe Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) at the work place. The WASH pledge is initiated by the World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD) which brings businesses together to build a sustainable future. By signing this pledge, Vedanta, along with its group companies, is committed to ensure appropriate access to safe water, sanitation and hygiene at the workplace for all employees, in all premises under its control.

Key highlights of water management and conservation across the group include:

  • Vedanta’s Aluminium refinery in Lanjigarh, Odisha, in India, is the first aluminium refinery in India with a zero discharge system which helps reduce usage of external water by over 60%.
  • Bharat Aluminium Company (BALCO), Vedanta’s subsidiary in Chhattisgarh, India, has reduced the fresh water consumption by 13 % by improving the reliability of the dyke water recirculation pumps, in its business operations.
  • Hindustan Zinc Limited (HZL), the Vedanta group company in Rajasthan, India, has built Udaipur’s first domestic ‘Sewage Treatment Plant (STP)’, in association with the Government of Rajasthan and reuses the treated municipal wastewater for its plant operations. Further, HZL has also installed its first adiabatic cooling towers (ACTs), which reduce water usage by almost 80% to the normal cooling tower requirement.

178 Million Smiles By IKEA Foundation

More than 178 million children are enjoying a better start in life, thanks to IKEA Foundation-funded programmes. The majority of the children are in India, where the Foundation has been working for 15 years. The announcement came on the International Day of Happiness (March 20), as the Foundation published its 2014 annual review, 178 million smiles, which also revealed that last year alone it gave €104 million in grants and in-kind donations to 40 partners operating in 46 countries. “Achieving this goal hasn’t been easy,” said Per Heggenes, Chief Executive Officer of the IKEA Foundation, “but over the years we’ve grown steadily and developed innovative partnerships with organisations helping millions of vulnerable children in some of the world’s poorest communities.”
The Foundation’s work has ranged from simple but important initiatives, such as providing immunisations or vitamin supplements, to comprehensive programmes supporting entire communities.

Other highlights from the report show that the Foundation:

  • gave €10 million in grants for disaster and emergency relief in 2014, including its biggest-ever emergency donation of €5 million to Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) to fight Ebola in West Africa
  • had helped 1.2 million babies get much-needed specialist care through UNICEF in India by the end of 2014
  • supplied 6,000 IKEA toys for UNICEF’s Early Childhood Development kits, which were sent to 11 countries in 2014, including Syria, Sierra Leone, Iraq and Afghanistan
  • donated a total of 150,000 IKEA mattresses, quilts and quilt covers to the UN refugee agency (UNHCR) for Syrian refugees living in Iraq.

About the IKEA Foundation

The IKEA Foundation aims to improve opportunities for children and youth in some of the world’s poorest communities by funding holistic, long-term programmes that can create substantial, lasting change. The IKEA Foundation works with strong strategic partners applying innovative approaches to achieve large-scale results in four fundamental areas of a child’s life: a place to call home; a healthy start in life; a quality education; and a sustainable family income.

MetLife Foundation & Grameen Foundation Bring Microfinance to UP’s Women

Grameen Foundation and MetLife Foundation are partnering to advance financial inclusion in India. This new initiative is designed to leverage the combined strengths of commercial banks and local, trusted field-based organizations to create sustainable and viable banking services for the poor. The programme will be executed over the next two years by Grameen Foundation India (GFI), a wholly-owned subsidiary of Grameen Foundation. GFI will help an Indian microfinance institution, Margdarshak, transform itself from an organization focused on credit alone into a sustainable and scalable business correspondent (BC) of a commercial bank. Margdarshak will act as an agent for the bank, enabling it to provide savings and other services to at least 40,000 poor, women clients in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh.
Last August, the new government launched the Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana scheme, signaling its focus on financial inclusion. The program has already provided bank accounts to 110 million households that previously had no access to formal financial services. A recent directive to integrate this scheme with India’s biometric identity platform, Aadhar, will significantly enhance the scale and efficiency of this initiative.
“Given the evolution of the business correspondent space in India and concurrent developments in the microfinance industry post the Andhra Pradesh crisis, we believe that it is an opportune time for microfinance institutions to adopt this channel for their growth and sustainability,”said Tarun Chug, Managing Director & CEO of MetLife India. “We are excited to partner with Grameen Foundation to further this agenda by showcasing a viable, sustainable and replicable business model based on the business correspondent delivery channel. We expect that such a business model will provide a wide array of appropriate and affordable financial services to low-income households, and contribute to the larger financial inclusion goals of MetLife Foundation,” he said.
“MetLife Foundation has demonstrated its firm commitment to strengthening financial inclusion in India by supporting several financial inclusion initiatives since 2013. We are pleased that it is now supporting our goal to strengthen the business correspondent model, which can play a huge role in addressing challenges in access to financial services and facilitate the success of India’s ambitious financial inclusion agenda,” said Chandni Ohri, CEO of Grameen Foundation India.
Drawing on its extensive experience in launching and scaling similar channel innovations, GFI will work with Margdarshak to strengthen their institutional capacity specifically around change leadership, business process management as well as IT solutions and generating client level insights.
Through this project, Grameen Foundation and MetLife Foundation aim to encourage more commercial banks and microfinance institutions to partner through the business correspondent channel, and ultimately deliver on its promise.

15 Insights From The Smarter Sustainability Reporting Conference

15 Insights From The Smarter Sustainability Reporting Conference

wp Consultant & author of ‘Understanding G4: the Concise Guide to Next Generation Sustainability Reporting’, Elaine Coehn shares the finer points of what makes reporting smarter, post the annual edition of the Smarter Sustainability Reporting Conference in London.

The fourth annual Smarter Sustainability Reporting Conference organized recently in London was by all accounts a great success. We heard from a range of experts, raised several challenges and discussed the finer points of what makes reporting smarter. Here is a selection from my opening comments to the conference as everyone braced themselves for an action-packed day:

“G4 has emerged as the leading reporting framework with close to 1,000 reporters now having started their reporting journey with G4 or transitioned to G4. Has G4 made a difference? We do see a new relationship emerging with materiality but many reports are still written with a shopping list mindset – a list of ‘everything good that we did’. The G4 transition is still working itself out, but it’s a positive development. GRI has even introduced the G4 EXAM – to prove that people who write reports really can.
The European Directive for non-financial reporting came into force in December 2014 with around 6,000 organizations expected to get on the train by 2018. Will they just show up or will they use the reporting process to add value? In other countries, such as Taiwan and Singapore, reporting has become mandatory. Sustainability reporting is apparently not going to disappear. But what will make it smarter?
In 2014, more companies than ever reported to the Carbon Disclosure Project. CDP now reports impacts across a range of topics – climate change, water, sustainable cities, forests, and supply chains on the basis of data submitted by 4,500 of companies representing over a third of the world’s invested capital. This is a database too large to ignore.
The IIRC continued its journey and its search for identity as more companies start to pilot the framework to explain how they create value for investors. The UN Global Compact launched a program for Boards of Directors so that Directors can actually learn what’s going on. SASB has published more and more standards, but when you get beyond the hype, you realize that in some cases, you need to be a rocket scientist to understand the actual performance measures. The jury is still out on whether companies will adopt these standards and if they do, and how they will influence materiality processes.
And talking of materiality, there is still no agreement across the board on what it actually means for sustainability and despite even more declarations of harmonization and collaboration talks, all we are seeing is more and more declarations of harmonization and collaboration talks.”

Photo courtesy of edie.net, the conference organizer

Here are some of the things that others said throughout the conference (and a short reaction from me).
Mardi McBrien, Managing Director, Climate Disclosure Standards Board (CDSB) : “In 2007, at the World Economic Forum, companies were saying there are too many ways to report climate change. Investors were saying, “well, we don’t use it anyway”.”
Err. What’s changed?
Nelmara Arbex, Chief Advisor on Innovation in Reporting, Global Reporting Initiative (GRI): “Personally, I believe that reporting promotes change and innovation. Reports used to talk about the past. Now they should be talking about the future.”
I agree. But when exactly does the future start?
Sarah Grey Markets Director, International Integrated Reporting Council (IIRC): “Smarter Sustainability Reporting is a pretty big issue for business. Sustainability is about having a strategic impact in the market. Hopefully some of the integrated reporting thinking will help sustainability reporting having that strategic impact.”
Hopefully.
Verity Lawson, Sustainability Reporting Manager, British American Tobacco: “I think especially for an organization like us that is operating in a very controversial sector, it is particularly important that stakeholders can place trust in what we report. So the robust frameworks and processes such as independent assurance and GRI are particularly helpful. But while it is encouraging to see all the developments – G4′s focus on materiality, the IR framework, the harmonization talks – frankly it is very overwhelming for reporting companies.”
Harmonization is great in theory. The problem is, it’s always theory. 
Neil Barrett, Vice-President, Sustainable Development, Sodexo: “It’s really about using sustainability reporting to create actions that will be of value to our clients. Increasingly our clients want to understand how we are helping them in their own sustainability journey”.
It is great when reports are useful as part of regular business processes. And when clients know what to do with them!
Shaun Davis, Group Director – Safety, Health, Wellbeing & Sustainability, Royal Mail: “Reporting is all about engagement and taking people with you. We shouldn’t forget how powerful it is as an engagement tool to talk to people about sustainability environment, safety well being etc.”
Tried it lately?
Louise Tyson, Head of Reporting, BP: “A lot of work goes into preparing information for reports and this is wasteful if it’s mot material. Less is more. In the last three years we have cut our reporting by 30%. We are hoping that more concise reporting targeted to what our stakeholders want to know will help us answer their questions better.”
100 page reports – a thing of the past?
Irene Jakobi, Sustainability Manager, Telekom Austria: “Now we have taken a more creative approach. Our first reports were more classic with hands and people and green trees. In 2008, we started to make a shift to more communicative content.”
If you want creative, look at Telekom Austria’s reports!
telekom austria reporting
Megan Mitrevski-Dale, Associate Director, Corporate Responsibility and Sustainability Communications, Coca-Cola Enterprises: “Starting in 2005 we set ourselves a target to reduce our operational carbon footprint by 15% by 2020. OK, we said, operations means our manufacturing facilities and field sales offices. But as we started to go through it, we realized that that’s only part of the story. If our product gets to a store and its not in a cooler, no-one will buy it.  Then we realized that our main carbon footprint isn’t in our operations. It is actually in our vending and cooling facilities.”
How many companies think they are doing fantastically by reporting internal operational footprints when, all the time, their true impact is beyond the factory walls?
coca cola (1)
Christoph Wilfert, Chief Executive Officer, PE International: “We think the software side of sustainability management is going to change dramatically. How do you get past email and excel spreadsheet management to support our sustainability reporting efforts? To us, reporting is not a journey of harmonization that frankly will take a very long time to come together to make your lives easier. We think its an app.”
Down with harmonization. Up with apps.
Simon Howard, Chief Executive Officer, UK Sustainable Investment & Finance Association (UKSIF): “Thirty percent of assets worldwide are run with sustainability as an aim and it’s growing very fast. Can a fund manager have too much sustainability information? Overwhelmingly yes. The information they want needs to be material, relevant and timely.”
G4 to the rescue.
Paul Toyne, Group Head of Sustainability, Balfour Beatty: “We have an integrated report that has sustainability sections in it, and we use our website to disclose a lot of information. What’s interesting is that when we start to get into disclosure, we spend so much time and effort to get to group level data and aggregating up to global level, but the investment we have taken here doesn’t really drive performance. If we invested more time and energy into the source data and dealing with the impacts, then we would actually improve performance.”
The old story of the chicken and the egg. Data to drive performance or performance to drive data?
Crystal Crawford, Corporate Responsibility Manager, Liberty Global:  “If we manage internal reporting requirements well, then it will drive reputation and recognition. We have 45,000 data points in our data collection process.”
Data to drive performance.
lgi
Katie Buchanan, Head of Sustainability and Reporting, Virgin Media: “At a market level its about having a real responsibility to try to bring to life the material issues for our key audiences which are our staff and our customers.”
Materiality in practice and not only in a matrix.
All in all, a packed conference with a packed agenda and many insights for reporters, future reporters and reporting partners. We addressed the tools used for reporting, the frameworks and the practice. We plan to do the same thing next year. Same but different. In a year’s time, the world will have changed and the Smarter Sustainability Reporting goalposts will have moved once again.
————————————————————————————————————————

Elaine Cohen Elaine Cohen is a wp consultant, Sustainability Reporter, HR Professional an Ice Cream Addict! Author of Understanding G4: the Concise guide to Next Generation Sustainability Reporting AND Sustainability Reporting for SMEs: Competitive Advantage Through Transparency AND wp for HR: A necessary Partnership for Advancing Responsible Business Practices. You can follow her on Twitter @elainecohen

Conscious Capitalism Grows as a Movement

Laura Roberts wants to change the world and do no harm. The co-founder and CEO of Pantheon Chemicals, a green manufacturer of industrial chemicals is an avid proponent of Conscious Capitalism, a movement characterized by businesses with a higher purpose beyond making money. Conscious Capitalists like Roberts constantly seek the soul of a business, and often look beyond quarterly earnings and fast growth trajectories. Her company, Pantheon, develops chemicals that do no harm. Roberts wants to leave a “shareable environment” for future generations. She works with benign molecules and believes in chemistry that does no harm. Most chemicals wreak havoc on the human body and every year the human race adds 10,000 new molecules. Industrial chemistry pays no respect for the planet and its inhabitants.

“We wait until people are sick and argue for decades to consider a ban on a particular chemical,” Roberts said addressing a Conscious Capitalism meeting in Phoenix.  Nobody talks about the multigenerational impact of these harmful concoctions. “Our mission is to change the conversation about chemistry,” she said. “We want the human race to change the conversation by designing chemicals that are harmless.”

Over the years, she built her business in a model that “had to be more than designing a molecule.” Normal businesses begin with an idea, develop a prototype, make money, commercialize and go for wide-scale adoption. According to her, capitalism should create transformational change with a conscience. Capitalism definitely creates jobs, however, there should be a robust, evolving conversation about Conscious Capitalism.

“If we went back to look at the supply chains of most companies we would be horrified,” she said. All we can do is measure change and do better. “Every day, I wake up to the four tenets of Conscious Capitalism,” she said.Conscious Capitalism builds on the foundations of capitalism – voluntary exchange, entrepreneurship, competition, freedom to trade and the rule of law.  It has four tenets, namely purpose, stakeholder, leadership and culture.

Businesses that follow Conscious Capitalism have a higher purpose than just make money. They want to leave a legacy of good. According to Roberts, all stakeholders in these businesses will have a benefit, not just investors. For Pantheon, the environment is an important stakeholder. Businesses embracing Conscious Capitalism also focus on culture. They are deeply committed to developing employees. They give them the ability to become a leader in their own right and allow them to make intelligent decisions on their own. A deep-rooted culture aligned to a higher purpose also separates these businesses and a classic example is the US-based Whole Foods.

According to Laura, Conscious Capitalism provides a foundation for her business. I asked her how she felt after adopting a model where everyone, including her and other employees are treated equally. What does it take for the CEO to be considered an equal? Liberating, she said.

Makeover By CSR: Village to Eco Village

Alstom’s philanthropic arm Alstom Foundation recently adopted Moldanga village in association with Swami Vivekananda Vani Prachar Samiti. An extension of Alstom’s CSR activities the initiative is in line with the company’s focus on sustainable development for transforming villages intEcovillageses. Moldanga has a population of around 47 families, which belong to the Santhal tribe and is located close to Alstom’s Durgapur manufacturing unit. As part of this endeavour, Alstom Foundation addressed the primary needs of 24X7 electricity and clean water in the village by setting up solar powered lamps and providing water filters. Following the Prime Minister’s vision of developing Model Villages in each Indian district by 2019 and the government’s ‘Clean India’ initiative, individual sanitation units have also been provided to each of the households and a set of sanitation units have been constructed in the village school. A livelihood and child education centre has been constructed to cater to the various socio-economic and cultural development needs of the village, which is mainly focused on tailoring and animal farming, and help villagers step up their incomes.

SEE Photo-Gallery below for a glimpse of the Eco Village

Speaking about the initiative, Rathin Basu, Country President, Alstom India & South Asia said, ‘The adoption of Moldanga is another step towards strengthening Alstom commitment to India and work towards the socio-economic upliftment of its people by creating self-sustaining models that are aligned to the work culture of that area. Our wp policy reflects our corporate philosophy of living and working together for the common good and we aim to adopt other villages in different parts of the country. We believe that we should create pride in the minds of all those who associate with us in this noble cause. Alstom encourages employees to actively participate in the wp activities. In the success of Moldanga project too, our employees at Durgapur have shown commendable dedication and commitment.”

Alstom Foundation has been involved in various community welfare programs in the past including setting up of a BioOrja plant for Akshaya Patra kitchen in Vadodara, Green Orphanage for disadvantaged children in Karnataka to name a few. The Eco Village is an endeavor to offer healthy society and environment to the villagers while addressing to their immediate needs and improving their lifestyle.

About Alstom Foundation

Alstom has been actively involved in campaigning with local partners around the world to improve the quality of life in the local communities neighboring its plants, sites and corporate offices. Alstom’s philanthropic arm, Alstom Foundation which was set up in November 2007 embodies environmental protection as a crucial commitment to the future of the planet.

The Makeover: From Village to Eco Village Eco Village Community Development Center Facility for clean drinking water

Market Opportunity for Off-Grid Renewable Energy

NEW DELHI – A new report from The Climate Group, produced in partnership with Goldman Sachs Center for Environmental Markets, was launched at RE INVEST 2015, showing both how businesses can invest and support the renewable energy sector in India, and the added environmental and social benefits that this can bring. The report, The Business Case for Off-Grid Energy in India, unveiled in New Delhi, looks at innovative business models in the off -grid energy sector that have the greatest potential to achieve scale. By identifying models that can meet future capacity demands and providing recommendations on how to address key challenges to scalability, the report aims to facilitate greater private sector engagement and investments.

Krishnan Pallassana, India Executive Director at The Climate Group, said, “India has embarked on an ambitious low carbon growth path wherein energy access forms the crux of equitable socio – economic development. Harnessing solar power gives people the unique opportunity to enhance their productivity and thus living standards. This report aims to inform investors on the viable and scalable business models in the off -grid solar energy sector whilst showing that India can achieve the energy revolution it’s aiming for – and crucially that the use of decentralized energy solutions can do so affordably.”

Today in India, around 360 million people – about 77 million households – lack adequate access to grid-electricity. The report shows that decentralized renewable energy businesses already serve close to 100,000 households, with an expected rapid growth of 60-70% annually to 900,000 by 2018. The decentralized renewable energy market segment alone is projected to be worth at least US$150 million by 2018. Speaking on the need for the report, Kyung-Ah Park, head of the Environmental Markets Group at Goldman Sachs, said, “This report highlights the market opportunity for off-grid renewable energy in India to complement on-grid solutions in making clean and equitable energy access a reality. By working together with the public sector, the private sector can play an important role in deploying innovative financing mechanisms to expand decentralized renewable energy solutions to underserved rural communities in India.”

The Business Case for Off-Grid Energy in India offers several recommendations on the types of investments that are needed, championing them as the potential catalyst for this sustainable growth; all of which encourages and supports entrepreneurial and innovative activity in off-grid energy. The report is expected to help inform key barriers for investment and ways for potentially innovative financing mechanisms to catalyze private sector capital to off-grid renewable energy and to support the Indian Government’s goals of 100 gigawatts of solar energy by 2022. While off-grid technologies, such as solar lanterns, are affordable and address customer needs of today, the report suggests they cannot meet those evolving and ever growing demands of rural consumers beyond basic lighting.

You can read the report in full at The Climate Group

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