Hi Friends,

Even as I launch this today ( my 80th Birthday ), I realize that there is yet so much to say and do. There is just no time to look back, no time to wonder,"Will anyone read these pages?"

With regards,
Hemen Parekh
27 June 2013

Now as I approach my 90th birthday ( 27 June 2023 ) , I invite you to visit my Digital Avatar ( www.hemenparekh.ai ) – and continue chatting with me , even when I am no more here physically

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Saturday, 11 April 2026

This Isn't Education

This Isn't Education

I watched the short clip — a child standing, fanning an adult in a classroom while the adult sat with earphones on — and felt the familiar knot of anger, embarrassment and sorrow. The footage, now widely shared online, has become shorthand for something far larger than a single moment: a failure of care, dignity and institutional accountability in a place meant for learning Times of India. I call it out plainly: this isn’t education.

What the video reveals (and what it hides)

  • At face value the clip is about misuse of authority and the indignity of a child asked to do a personal favour for an adult during school hours. Social media reacted quickly — outrage, calls for suspension, and demands for inquiry Amar Ujala.
  • But the clip is also a symptom: understaffed schools, weak supervisory systems, lack of accountability, and a culture that sometimes tolerates — or looks away from — humiliations of children.
  • Viral videos shape public sentiment rapidly; they force inquiry. Yet a viral frame can’t replace measured investigation. We must balance immediate action to protect the child with a thorough, transparent probe that establishes context and responsibility.

Why I’m reminded of earlier warnings

This moment resonates with themes I’ve written about before: the gulf between policy promises and on-ground realities; the need for data-driven oversight; and the moral imperative to preserve the dignity of each student. In an earlier piece I urged that reforms begin with clear measurements and accountability, not just rhetoric — and that basic infrastructure and monitoring are first-order problems in many government schools (Transforming Education). That diagnosis still stands.

Immediate steps we should demand

  • Protect the child first: a prompt, child-sensitive inquiry; counselling and support for the student and family; ensure no retaliation.
  • Transparent investigation: an independent local inquiry with clear timelines and public findings.
  • Administrative accountability: if misconduct is found, discipline must follow the rulebook — suspension pending inquiry, retraining or removal where appropriate.
  • Communicate with the community: parents and village stakeholders must be informed and engaged in remedial steps.

What this incident says about long-term fixes

A viral clip cannot be the only mechanism that surfaces such acts. To prevent recurrence we need structural reforms:

  • Strengthen on-site supervision and random audits of school processes.
  • Invest in teacher training that includes classroom ethics, child rights and dignity, not only pedagogy.
  • Make basic infrastructure (fans, electricity, clean classrooms) non-negotiable — neglect creates perverse situations in hot seasons.
  • Build local grievance systems that are easily accessible to parents and children, with anonymous reporting and protection clauses.
  • Use data: routine, public dashboards that record complaints, investigations and outcomes for every school. Public visibility raises the cost of negligence.

A cultural question, not just a bureaucratic one

This moment compels us to examine how we view authority in schools. If respect for adults becomes permission to humiliate or use children for personal comfort, then the moral foundation of schooling — to nurture, protect and teach — is eroded.

We must cultivate professional pride among educators. Teachers and leaders who see their role as service to children — trained, supported and held accountable — are the best safeguard against such abuses.

My simple test for any school

  • Are children safe and treated with dignity?
  • Is there a clear, public mechanism to report misconduct?
  • Are basic facilities guaranteed (shade, fans, water, electricity) so children aren’t pressed into service for comforts they should never provide?

If any answer is no, the school fails.

Closing — outrage should lead to reform

I understand the anger. Viral outrage is justified when we see a child diminished. But let that anger be channeled: insist on protection for the child, demand a transparent inquiry, and push for systemic changes so that a moment like this becomes impossible rather than merely punished.

We can do better. We must.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


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Mythos Effect

Mythos Effect

Mythos Effect: How an Unreleased Model Changed the Conversation

I woke up the morning the Mythos story broke and felt the same chill I get when a technical detail becomes a geopolitical problem. Over the past week an unreleased Anthropic model—branded internally as “Mythos”—went from a draft blog post leaked in a data cache to the proximate cause of urgent briefings between U.S. officials and senior executives across technology and finance. The rapid escalation is both a cautionary tale and a live experiment in how we govern powerful AI.

What happened — the essentials

  • Late March: internal Anthropic drafts and system notes about a new frontier model, Mythos (also described as a new “Capybara”/Opus-tier model), appear in a publicly accessible data cache and are reviewed by reporters and security researchers [Fortune].
  • Early April: Anthropic publishes a system card for Claude Mythos Preview and restricts general release, saying the model’s capabilities create substantial cybersecurity risks; it launches Project Glasswing to give limited access to selected corporate defenders [Fortune; CBS News].
  • Days later: senior U.S. government officials convene a call with top technology company leaders and separately meet with major bank CEOs to discuss the security implications and systemic risk.

This condensed timeline matters because it shows how quickly an unreleased capability can generate cross-sector alarm: research leak → internal assessment → selective access → government convening.

Why Mythos triggered the alarm

Anthropic’s public explanation is straightforward: early testing showed Mythos can find and chain together software vulnerabilities at a scale and speed beyond prior models. That dual-use capability—useful for defenders, catastrophic in the hands of attackers—is what prompted the company to withhold a public release and to offer early access to a coalition of defenders under Project Glasswing [Fortune; CBS News].

An anonymized quote I heard repeated in briefings captures the shape of the concern: “It isn’t just that the model finds bugs; it assembles attack paths that a human might miss for months.” Whether you find that chilling or reason for measured optimism depends on perspective.

Voices around the table (anonymized)

  • Anthropic (summarized): “Mythos is a step change in capability. We’re limiting release and working with defenders to mitigate the risks.”
  • Tech CEOs (summarized): Focused on shared responsibility — their priority is understanding whether Mythos shifts the attack/defense balance and how to coordinate on mitigations.
  • Government officials (summarized): Worried about systemic impacts to critical infrastructure and financial stability; they sought rapid briefings to assess contagion risk.
  • Ethicists and security researchers (summarized): Urge transparency, independent audits, and a public conversation about the governance regime for frontier models.

I note these as anonymized summaries because the debate matters more than a roll call. The dynamics are the same whether the names are public or not: public safety, private innovation, and national security are colliding.

What this means for policy and industry

Mythos crystallizes several ongoing tensions:

  • Dual-use acceleration: AI that improves software analysis can accelerate both defense and offense.
  • Concentration of capability: a handful of organizations can create frontier models whose misuse has outsized consequences.
  • Governance lag: regulatory frameworks and operational playbooks (for banks, utilities, and government) aren’t keeping pace with capability growth.

We saw markets react too: earlier AI advances already pressured enterprise licensing models, and the perception of a new risk vector—AI-enabled exploitation—added a fresh layer of uncertainty.

Scenarios to imagine

Best-case (coordinated defense): Project Glasswing and similar initiatives put defenders ahead. Vulnerabilities are identified and patched at scale; international norms emerge for responsible disclosure and limited-use access; the industry invests heavily in AI-driven defensive tools.

Middle-case (managed instability): Companies and governments erect barriers and playbooked responses, but information asymmetries and competitive incentives produce uneven protection. Bad actors eventually gain partial access, causing episodic but containable incidents.

Worst-case (capability diffusion): Frontier techniques leak or are replicated cheaply; attackers weaponize model-driven exploit chains at scale, hitting critical infrastructure and financial systems before coordinated defense can respond. Systemic economic and social disruption follows.

Actionable takeaways — what policymakers should do now

  • Establish an emergency cross-sector coordination mechanism for frontier model disclosures. Speed matters; so does a single, trusted process for sharing critical findings.
  • Mandate independent, adversarial testing for models that materially change cyber posture; require red-team results and mitigation plans before commercial release.
  • Create minimum standards for access controls and provenance for high-risk models (who can use them, under what conditions, auditing of queries and outputs).
  • Incentivize public–private investments in AI-native defensive tooling (patch automation, formal verification, and continuous red-teaming).

Actionable takeaways — what executives should do now

  • Assume asymmetric risk: incorporate AI-driven vulnerability discovery into threat models and board-level risk reviews.
  • Push for consortium-based disclosure and remediation workflows that reduce market incentives to hoard defensive intelligence.
  • Invest in internal AI safety practices: system cards, layered access controls, and independent audits for new capabilities.
  • Share sanitized lessons with regulators and peers to build common playbooks before a crisis forces them.

A personal reflection and a continuity of thought

This episode confirms something I’ve argued before: we cannot treat AI progress as purely technical progress divorced from public policy. Years ago I wrote about the need for audits, licensing, and global coordination around powerful AI systems. The Mythos moment doesn’t negate that argument—it sharpens it. If a single model can reorder risk on a national scale, the governance structures we have today are inadequate.

Conclusion — the quiet imperative

Mythos is not just a product story. It’s a systems story: about how capability concentrates, how incentives misalign, and how fragile infrastructures meet rapid innovation. The emergency calls and closed-door briefings are the signposts of a new era—one where technological advance will increasingly demand civic and institutional responses on the same timescale.

We can aim for the best-case: coordinated, well-governed deployment that makes us safer. But getting there requires leadership from companies, clarity from policymakers, and a readiness to build new institutions for stewardship. The alternative is to learn the hard way.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


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Designing Safer Platforms

Designing Safer Platforms

Designing Safer Platforms

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about what responsibility looks like when a product is also a public environment. As someone who cares about technology’s capacity to amplify human flourishing, I find it both urgent and uncomfortable that many of the platforms we use every day were not designed with childhood development, mental health, or public safety as primary goals.

What the evidence is telling us

Two kinds of evidence have been particularly sobering. First, investigative reporting based on internal company documents revealed that platform research flagged real harms to adolescents—especially young teenage girls—linked to the way feeds, recommendations, and design nudges organize attention and social comparison Wall Street Journal. Those internal slides do not prove every causal claim, but they do show companies knew about patterns worth treating as design failures rather than unfortunate side effects.

Second, peer-reviewed epidemiology connects the dots between increased adolescent screen exposure and worse mood and depressive symptoms over time. Longitudinal work in adolescents finds that higher social-media and television use correlates with increases in depressive symptoms within individuals—signals that repeated, excessive exposure is not benign and deserves public-health attention Boers et al., JAMA Pediatrics.

Finally, the legal and policy landscape is changing: recent trials and regulatory scrutiny (covered in national reporting) show juries and regulators are increasingly willing to hold platforms accountable when product design contributes to foreseeable harms Politico. At the same time, governments and task forces are publishing guidance and frameworks for industry to adopt safety-by-design practices for children and teens NTIA report on kids’ online health and safety.

Taken together, these strands—internal company awareness, independent clinical research, and legal/regulatory pressure—point toward a single conclusion: platform design matters for youth well-being, and it can be changed.

Why change feels hard to companies

I want to be candid: change is expensive and ambiguous. A feed that maximizes engagement can be highly predictable to engineers and product teams; altering reward mechanics risks losing users or revenue if done poorly. Platforms also face hard measurement problems—how do you prove that a feature caused harm amid countless confounders? Those uncertainties explain why companies have frequently prioritized incremental mitigation over systemic redesign.

But moral hazard is real. If designers and executives know a design encourages addictive patterns, and they choose growth over redesign, that is not an engineering trade-off so much as a governance decision.

Practical policy and product recommendations

I don’t believe in purely punitive approaches. Instead, I propose convergent levers—product, research, and policy—that together make safety the default.

  • Design defaults for minors: require age-appropriate defaults (reduced personalization, no autoplay, curated discovery limits) so children get safer experiences out of the box. These should be codified for services likely to be accessed by under-18s [NTIA].
  • Algorithmic transparency and independent audit: platforms must publish risk assessments and allow privacy-preserving independent audits of recommendation systems to surface harms and measure the impact of safety interventions [NTIA].
  • Time and content controls that matter: move beyond passive timers to experience-shaping controls (e.g., limits on repetitive exploratory loops, opt-ins for highly personalized feeds), tested in randomized designs to measure mental-health outcomes [Boers et al.].
  • Fund longitudinal, independent research: to resolve causal questions, governments and platforms should fund long-term cohort studies and enable secure researcher access to anonymized behavioral datasets under strict oversight [JAMA / NTIA].
  • Regulatory backstops: regulators should enforce basic safety standards (age verification that respects privacy, mandated reporting and remediation for platforms that repeatedly expose minors to harmful content) while avoiding blunt instruments that break beneficial online activity [NTIA; Politico coverage of trials].

These are not radical ideas. They simply shift default incentives away from attention-extraction and toward sustained human flourishing.

My personal ask to builders and policymakers

As a technologist and thinker, my ask is a moral one: design as if the person on the other end matters, not only as a metric. That means product teams must make deliberate choices to protect developmental time, to reduce features that encourage compulsive checking, and to design onboarding flows that privilege kinship, creativity, and learning.

To policymakers: legislate smartly and fund the research that will let us move from hand-wringing to evidence-based standards. To parents and educators: press for transparency, use platform controls actively, and teach young people media-literacy and self-regulation skills—tools that complement design and policy.

Closing thoughts

Technology has always been both tool and stage. We can ride the tide of engagement optimization and accept its collateral damage, or we can insist on platforms built for durability and dignity. I choose the latter. Safer platforms are not merely a regulatory compliance problem—they're an ethical design challenge we can meet together.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


References

  1. Wells G., Horwitz J., Seetharaman D. Facebook Knows Instagram Is Toxic for Teen Girls, Company Documents Show. The Wall Street Journal. Sept 2021. https://www.wsj.com/articles/facebook-knows-instagram-is-toxic-for-teen-girls-company-documents-show-11631620739

  2. Boers E, Afzali MH, Newton N, Conrod P. Association of Screen Time and Depression in Adolescence. JAMA Pediatrics. 2019;173(9):853–859. doi:10.1001/jamapediatrics.2019.1759. https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamapediatrics/fullarticle/2737909

  3. Politico. Social media trials usher in Big Tech's latest moment of reckoning. March 26, 2026. https://www.politico.com/news/2026/03/26/social-media-trials-usher-in-big-techs-latest-moment-of-reckoning-00846388

  4. National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA). Online Health and Safety for Children and Youth: Best Practices for Families and Guidance for Industry. July 22, 2024. https://www.ntia.gov/report/2024/kids-online-health-and-safety/online-health-and-safety-for-children-and-youth

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Hello Candidates :

  • For UPSC – IAS – IPS – IFS etc., exams, you must prepare to answer, essay type questions which test your General Knowledge / Sensitivity of current events
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"What three product-design changes would most likely reduce compulsive use of social platforms among teenagers?"
  • Need help ? No problem . Following are two AI AGENTS where we have PRE-LOADED this question in their respective Question Boxes . All that you have to do is just click SUBMIT
    1. www.HemenParekh.ai { a SLM , powered by my own Digital Content of more than 50,000 + documents, written by me over past 60 years of my professional career }
    2. www.IndiaAGI.ai { a consortium of 3 LLMs which debate and deliver a CONSENSUS answer – and each gives its own answer as well ! }
  • It is up to you to decide which answer is more comprehensive / nuanced ( For sheer amazement, click both SUBMIT buttons quickly, one after another ) Then share any answer with yourself / your friends ( using WhatsApp / Email ). Nothing stops you from submitting ( just copy / paste from your resource ), all those questions from last year’s UPSC exam paper as well !
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Energy Shock Spurs EV Push

Energy Shock Spurs EV Push

Why an Iran war matters to my garage

The news that the Iran conflict has rattled global energy markets is not just geopolitics — it is a practical shock to how we move, make and power things. Over the past few weeks the Centre has quietly urged the auto industry to reduce reliance on oil and, wherever technically feasible, shift factory operations and product plans toward electricity.[^1][^2]

I write this as someone who has followed the electric transition for years and who believes the present moment will accelerate choices that were already inevitable. My earlier pieces on the promise and limits of electrification anticipated many of the policy trade-offs we now face.[^3]

What's changed: from supply route risk to national policy nudge

  • The immediate trigger is disruption to oil and gas flows from the Gulf — shipping route risks (including the Strait of Hormuz) and sanctions- or conflict-driven supply squeezes — that push crude and gas price risk upward and expose import dependence.[^1]
  • The Centre’s advisory (issued in late March) asks automakers and suppliers to: shift industrial fuel use from oil-based fuels to electricity where feasible; optimise production schedules to cut idle fuel use; and explore use of recycled aluminium and alternative materials to ease raw-material pressure.[^1][^2]

These are blunt, pragmatic nudges. They are not an overnight ban on internal-combustion vehicles (ICEs), but they are a clear signal: energy security now sits with climate and industrial policy on the same table.

The auto sector’s current reality

Most vehicle kilometres today in India are powered by petrol, diesel or CNG. Automakers’ value chains — foundries, paint ovens, heat treatment, captive power — still run heavily on fossil fuels or gas. For parts suppliers that rely on industrial gas, shortages are already affecting production runs. At the same time, consumer interest in EVs has risen in showroom inquiries as buyers worry about future fuel costs and volatility.[^4]

But two structural facts remain:

  • EVs still carry a higher upfront price for many buyers. Running-cost math is favorable for EVs, but sticker shock matters.
  • Charging infrastructure and grid readiness vary wildly across states and cities; the system-level shift is more than swapping powertrains, it’s about electricity delivery and clean electricity supply.

Policy measures and incentives being deployed (and needed)

The government’s immediate measures in the advisory are operational (shift factory fuels, prioritise household gas) and materials-focused (use recycled aluminium). Beyond that, the long-term levers that matter are familiar:

  • Purchase incentives, tax concessions and lower GST rates for EVs to close the upfront-cost gap.[^5]
  • Capital support and soft loans for fast-charging networks and for vehicle makers building EV platforms.
  • Local content and battery-manufacturing incentives to reduce import exposure.
  • Demand-side measures: fleet electrification (buses, taxis, last-mile delivery) to create scale.

A recent analysis stresses that while higher oil prices make EVs more attractive, sustained incentives — at least through the scaling phase to 2030 — will be needed for a smooth transition.[^5]

Infrastructure and grid challenges during an energy crunch

Switching vehicle energy from imported oil to domestic electricity reduces exposure to foreign supply shocks — but it transfers stress to the power system. Key issues:

  • Peak charging demand: uncoordinated overnight charging can raise peak loads in distribution networks.
  • Clean supply mix: if additional electricity comes from coal-heavy sources, the net climate benefit weakens.
  • Distribution and last-mile charging gaps: apartment complexes, small towns and intercity corridors need targeted investment.

Practical steps include smart tariffs and managed charging, accelerated renewables build-out tied to charging hubs, and targeted grid upgrades in manufacturing belts that will electrify production lines.

What this means for consumers and manufacturers

For consumers:

  • Running costs for EVs remain attractive and more predictable as oil prices swing; total cost of ownership improves with higher petrol/diesel prices.

  • Upfront costs and charging access remain the two biggest hurdles.

For manufacturers and suppliers:

  • Investment choices accelerate: EV platforms, battery supply contracts, and retooling of plants for electric drivetrains become urgent decisions.
  • Supply-chain stress (gas, aluminium) forces re-routing, recycling and design choices that reduce raw-material exposure.

Environmental and economic consequences

The hoped-for upside is clear: lower oil imports, reduced exposure to geopolitical price shocks, and faster local decarbonisation if electricity is increasingly renewable. Economically, every rupee saved on oil imports helps the current account and fiscal room. But the caveat is important: the climate gain depends on decarbonising the grid and avoiding a knee-jerk move to higher-emissions power to meet EV load.

Obstacles and the steps I recommend

Obstacles:

  • High upfront EV prices for many buyers.
  • Uneven charging infrastructure and weak distribution networks in many regions.
  • Battery supply concentration and raw-material vulnerabilities.
  • Short-term industrial fuel shortages that disrupt production before electrification scales.

Recommendations:

  1. Pair demand incentives with supply-side investments: fund chargers and grid upgrades where EV adoption is imminent.
  2. Use smart charging and time-of-use tariffs to shift load and avoid costly peaker investments.
  3. Accelerate domestic battery and cell manufacturing through clear, long-term purchase commitments from public fleets.
  4. Encourage circular material practices: recycled aluminium and battery recycling to reduce import pressure and environmental costs (already part of the Centre’s advisory).[^{1}]
  5. Support low-income and urban rental/ride-hailing segments with targeted subsidies — where electrification yields the fastest oil-displacement per rupee.

Takeaway

The Iran war has done what price trends and policy goals could not do quickly enough: it made energy security an urgent economic conversation and pushed electrification from long-term ambition to short-term strategy. The road ahead will be bumpy, but if the nation pairs those industry nudges with charging investments, clean power expansion and targeted incentives, this crisis could accelerate a durable, lower-carbon mobility system.

[^1]: "Iran war: Centre pushes auto sector to shift to EVs amid energy crunch," Economic Times. https://economictimes.com/industry/auto/auto-news/iran-war-centre-pushes-auto-sector-to-shift-to-evs-amid-energy-crunch/articleshow/129829508.cms

[^2]: "India asks auto industry to optimise production as Iran war hurts energy supplies," Reuters coverage (via Marketscreener). https://in.marketscreener.com/news/india-asks-auto-industry-to-optimise-production-as-iran-war-hurts-energy-supplies-13872772.html

[^3]: My earlier reflection, "Battle of Electric Vehicles," where I explored the trade-offs of electrification and grid impacts. http://mylinkedinposting.blogspot.com/2024/09/battle-of-electric-vehicles.html

[^4]: Coverage and dealer reports noting higher EV inquiries after crude price rise. https://www.business-standard.com/amp/economy/news/iran-war-oil-prices-boost-ev-adoption-incentives-till-2030-study-126040500561_1.html

[^5]: Analysis on incentives and tax changes shaping EV competitiveness (Business Standard). https://www.business-standard.com/amp/economy/news/iran-war-oil-prices-boost-ev-adoption-incentives-till-2030-study-126040500561_1.html


Regards,
Hemen Parekh (hcp@recruitguru.com)


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Project Solar Cooker: The Answer to the 13–27 GW Induction Power Crisis

 

Respected Shri Piyush Goyalji,


Namaskar.


I write to you as a 92-year-old citizen who has been advocating Project Solar

 Cooker since 2017 — and who believes the current LPG crisis has finally made the

 case undeniable.


The Hindu Business Line has just reported that if India's rush to induction cooking

 continues unchecked, the Power Ministry estimates our peak electricity demand

 could surge by 13 to 27 GW — consumed almost entirely during the morning and

 evening cooking hours when the grid is already under maximum stress. This is

 not a solution to the West Asia crisis. It is a second crisis layered upon the first.


I respectfully submit that the Solar Cooker path — which I have outlined in my

 White Paper 

https://myblogepage.blogspot.com/2026/03/white-paper-project-solar-cooker.html 

— avoids this trap entirely, for the following reasons:


1. ZERO GRID BURDEN. 

A solar cooker draws no electricity from the grid. Converting 3.3 crore (10%) of

 LPG users to solar cooking adds precisely 0 GW to peak demand — versus the

 13–27 GW that induction heaters would add. At a time when our grid is already

 stretched, this distinction is critical.


2. FASTER FOREX SAVINGS. 

Each solar cooker replaces approximately 7 LPG cylinders per year. Converting 3.3

 crore households saves ~231 million cylinders annually — a forex saving of

 approximately $2.7 billion (₹23,000 Crore) per year. The total system saving,

 including subsidy and logistics, reaches ₹37,000 Crore annually.


3. RAPID PAYBACK. 

A one-time subsidy investment of ₹29,700 Crore (₹9,000 per unit, 50% of cost)

 recoups itself in under 10 months when the full LPG ecosystem cost is accounted

 for. No other energy programme in India's history offers this return on

 investment.


4. NO NEW INFRASTRUCTURE NEEDED. 

Induction cooking requires new cookware, grid upgrades, and additional power

 generation capacity — all of which take years and thousands of crores to build.

 Solar cookers need neither. They are self-contained, decentralised, and grid-

independent.


5. GEOPOLITICAL IMMUNITY. 

Solar energy is produced locally, every day, by the sun — not by tankers

 navigating the Strait of Hormuz. It is the only cooking fuel that is truly immune to

 West Asia geopolitics.


6. PLI-READY MANUFACTURING. 

I have specifically proposed invoking the PLI scheme for Thermal Batteries and

 Solar Hybrid Induction plates — bringing the same industrial momentum your

 Ministry is now considering for induction heaters, but directed toward a

 technology that does not add to the power crisis.


Respected Goyalji, 


you chaired the high-level meeting on 3rd April to address the induction heater

 supply chain. I urge you to broaden that mandate by placing Solar Cookers

 alongside induction heaters as an equally strategic response — one that saves

 forex, saves grid capacity, and saves the government's own subsidy burden,

 simultaneously.


I have been writing to Cabinet Ministers on this subject since 2017. 


The crisis has now arrived. The window to act on a war footing is open. I humbly

 request 15 minutes of your time, or a direction to a senior official, to discuss how

 Project Solar Cooker can be escalated to national mission scale.


With deep regards and faith in your vision,


Hemen Parekh

www.YourContentCreator.in / www.HemenParekh.ai / 11 April 2026

Mumbai


=============================================


Full White Paper:

https://myblogepage.blogspot.com/2026/03/white-paper-project-solar-cooker.html


Past correspondence (2017–2026): http://myblogepage.blogspot.com

Shift-Based Hawking for Mumbai

Shift-Based Hawking for Mumbai

Introduction

I write this as someone who has watched Mumbai’s street life for years: hawkers are part of the city’s DNA, and recent court directions recognising some 99,000 vendors have forced us to confront a simple fact — regulation is inevitable, and the alternative is endless conflict. The question is not whether to regulate, but how to do so in a way that protects livelihoods, keeps pedestrians safe, and preserves the functioning of a dense, dynamic metropolis.

In this post I explain a practical approach I believe cities — starting with Mumbai — should adopt: a shift-based hawking system. The idea is straightforward: rather than granting permanent exclusive claims to scarce pavement space, the city organises time-bound, rotating vendor shifts across mapped vending zones, supported by lightweight technology and participatory governance. The aim is to manage density, reduce friction, and protect vendors’ livelihoods.

Mumbai’s street-vending context — the reality on the ground

Mumbai has a long and messy history with street vendors. Large surveys and judicial interventions over the last decade—culminating in recent rulings that validated and asked authorities to permit over 99,000 recognised hawkers—have made implementation urgent and politically charged Hindustan Times and ThePrint.

Key facts planners must keep in mind:

  • The Street Vendors Act (2014) gives statutory protection and mandates Town Vending Committees (TVCs) to survey, demarcate zones and issue certificates.
  • Historical surveys have produced inconsistent counts: hundreds of thousands operate across legal and informal channels while the civic capacity to allocate permanent pitches is far smaller.
  • Local residents, traders’ groups and political actors often resist fixed vending zones in their neighbourhoods, making stationary allocation politically fraught.

These realities make a purely place-based licence system difficult to scale without sustained conflict.

What is shift-based hawking? A practical overview

Shift-based hawking organises vending rights by time as well as space. Instead of giving one vendor perpetual claim to a spot, the city divides each vending zone into spatial ‘slots’ and temporal ‘shifts’ (e.g., morning, lunch, evening, night markets). Vendors are allocated shifts either permanently (same shift each day) or on a rotating schedule.

Core components:

  • Spatial mapping: define vending zones and micro-slots using pedestrian-flow and accessibility criteria.
  • Temporal mapping: create standard shifts (for example: 06:00–10:00; 10:00–14:00; 14:00–18:00; 18:00–22:00).
  • Allocation mechanism: a mix of priority categories (veteran vendors, disability, women-headed businesses), lotteries for new entrants, and opt-in rotation.
  • Lightweight tech: an app/USSD scheduling system, QR-coded vendor IDs and geofencing to monitor slot occupation and support dispute resolution.

How shifts can be organised and allocated

Organising shifts

  • Define shift lengths based on local footfall and product type (food typically clusters around meal shifts; garments around evening shopping hours).
  • Assign micro-slots of fixed size on sidewalks or road-side buffers, ensuring minimum pedestrian clearance.
  • Allow shared-use slots for mobile vendors (trolleys, baskets) and fixed stalls for stationary vendors.

Allocation methods

  • Priority lists: vendors with verified prior work (per TVC records) and vulnerable groups get priority in their preferred shifts.
  • Lotteries: for the remaining slots, use transparent lotteries held by the TVC and livestreamed for credibility.
  • Rotation: offer a rotational pool where vendors can swap or bid for shifts using a modest, capped platform-credit system so that those who need particular hours can access them.
  • Appeals & grievance redressal: TVC-run, time-bound process backed by independent oversight.

Technology support (lightweight and low-cost)

  • Simple vendor registry with QR-coded IDs and shift allocation visible to vendor and enforcement teams.
  • USSD/IVR booking for vendors without smartphones.
  • Digital maps (public) showing active shifts per zone to help residents and enforcement understand where vendors are authorised.
  • Cashless payments encouraged but not mandatory; settlement data can feed fair-play metrics.

Benefits

For vendors

  • Legal recognition with predictable access to customers.
  • Reduced harassment if allocation and enforcement are transparent.
  • Options to access different shifts for diversified income, and platforms for rotating into better hours.

For city management

  • Dynamic use of scarce curb/footpath space that matches pedestrian flows.
  • Predictable enforcement: officers check shift compliance rather than making ad-hoc removals.
  • Easier planning for sanitation, waste pickup and pedestrian safety.

For residents and businesses

  • Less permanent obstruction of sidewalks; vendors are present in predictable time windows.
  • Better hygiene and order, because service systems (toilets, bins) can be scheduled per shift cycles.
  • Opportunity for curated evening/night-time markets that enhance local commerce.

Challenges and common criticisms

  • Enforcement complexity: policing shift boundaries requires coordination between BMC, local police and TVCs.
  • Equity and fairness: who gets the prime evening/meal shifts? Without safeguards, the system can reproduce existing inequalities.
  • Informality & helpers: many stalls have helpers who lack documentation and are vulnerable to verification drives.
  • Political pushback: corporators and resident associations may resist zones near their constituencies.

These are real problems — mitigations are part of the design, not reasons to avoid reform.

A short vendor anecdote

A few months ago I met a vendor outside my building who sells tea and snacks early in the morning. She described how mornings are reliable for her, but evenings are chaotic and dependent on local politics. Under a shift system she would keep her morning slot, gain a predictable clientele and avoid paying protection money — small changes that could double her monthly net income.

Case studies & hypothetical examples

  • Hypothetical: Bandra Local Market

  • Problem: high evening footfall but no authorised stalls; residents complain of blocked pavements.

  • Shift-based solution: four evening micro-slots along the market corridor, allocated via lottery (60%) and reserved for women and long-term vendors (40%). Geotagged IDs and a TVC monitor reduce conflict.

  • Implementation-lite pilot: a single ward operates shift-bookings via USSD and issues QR badges; the ward reduces roadside clutter and records a 30% fall in pedestrian obstruction complaints in three months.

Step-by-step implementation roadmap for city governments

  1. Policy design & legal clarity
  • Issue an administrative order under the Street Vendors Act giving TVCs authority to pilot shift allocations.
  1. Data & mapping (0–3 months)
  • Rapid pedestrian counts, vendor surveys, and identify candidate pilot wards.
  1. Stakeholder formation (0–2 months, parallel)
  • Constitute ward-level TVC subcommittees with vendors, residents, police and NGOs.
  1. Pilot design (3 months)
  • Define zones, shifts, slot sizes, and allocation rules.
  1. Technology setup (3 months)
  • Simple registry, QR IDs and USSD booking.
  1. Launch pilot (3–6 months)
  • Intensive outreach, real-time monitoring and conflict mediation.
  1. Review & scale (6–12 months)
  • Collect KPIs, stakeholder feedback and expand ward-by-ward.

Stakeholder engagement strategies

  • Proactive consultation: convene vendor unions, resident associations and market associations before mapping.
  • Transparent allocation: open lotteries, public lists and clear eligibility criteria to build trust.
  • Capacity building: train TVC members and field officers on mediation and non-confrontational enforcement.
  • Incentives: remove petty fines when vendors comply and offer microgrants for those switching from illegal to shift-authorised vending.

Metrics for success

  • Pedestrian clearance: percentage of sidewalks meeting minimum clearance standards during non-vending periods.
  • Vendor earnings stability: change in median daily income for shift-participating vendors.
  • Compliance rate: percent of vendors occupying authorised shifts with valid QR IDs.
  • Grievances resolved: number and time-to-resolution for TVC disputes.
  • Resident satisfaction: periodic surveys before and after implementation.

Policy recommendations

  • Mandate pilot authority: the state should empower municipal TVCs to run time-bound pilots with fast-track approval.
  • Protect vulnerable vendors: reserve a share of slots for women, elderly and disability-affected vendors and waive small fees for them.
  • No-eviction windows: avoid eviction drives during pilot phases; focus on registration and mediation.
  • Legal recognition of shifts: issue vending certificates that explicitly state assigned shifts; use these to limit harassment.
  • Data-driven scaling: expand only after piloted KPIs show improvements in pedestrian mobility and vendor welfare.

Conclusion

Shift-based hawking is not a panacea, but it is a pragmatic middle path between chaotic informality and rigid, exclusionary formalisation. It acknowledges that public space is scarce, yet recognises that livelihoods must be protected. For Mumbai’s 99,000 recognised vendors—and for the many more who remain in the shadows—time-based allocation, transparent governance and light-touch technology offer a pathway to coexistence.

I have argued before for alternatives such as pop-up markets and mobile vending as practical complements to formal pitches; a shift-based system builds on those ideas while adding predictability and administrative tractability (my earlier reflections on pop-up markets and hawkers’ rights).

If you are an urban planner, a TVC member, an NGO worker or a policy student, start small, measure honestly, and scale only when both people and pavements benefit.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh (hcp@recruitguru.com)


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

Get correct answer to any question asked by Shri Amitabh Bachchan on Kaun Banega Crorepati, faster than any contestant


Hello Candidates :

  • For UPSC – IAS – IPS – IFS etc., exams, you must prepare to answer, essay type questions which test your General Knowledge / Sensitivity of current events
  • If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:
"Describe three practical advantages and two potential equity issues of a shift-based hawking system in dense Indian cities like Mumbai."
  • Need help ? No problem . Following are two AI AGENTS where we have PRE-LOADED this question in their respective Question Boxes . All that you have to do is just click SUBMIT
    1. www.HemenParekh.ai { a SLM , powered by my own Digital Content of more than 50,000 + documents, written by me over past 60 years of my professional career }
    2. www.IndiaAGI.ai { a consortium of 3 LLMs which debate and deliver a CONSENSUS answer – and each gives its own answer as well ! }
  • It is up to you to decide which answer is more comprehensive / nuanced ( For sheer amazement, click both SUBMIT buttons quickly, one after another ) Then share any answer with yourself / your friends ( using WhatsApp / Email ). Nothing stops you from submitting ( just copy / paste from your resource ), all those questions from last year’s UPSC exam paper as well !
  • May be there are other online resources which too provide you answers to UPSC “ General Knowledge “ questions but only I provide you in 26 languages !




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