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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Sunday, 5 July 2026

PM Shri Modiji's Visit to Australia - 8th July 2016






 Subject: 

Strategic Opportunity: Scaling Kardinia Energy's Printed Solar Technology in India

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


Respected Shri P. K. Mishraji,

'pkmishra.pmo@gov.in' )


As the Prime Minister prepares for his visit to Australia, I am writing to highlight a

high-impact industrial opportunity that aligns with India’s decarbonization and

manufacturing goals.


Strategic Opportunity: Accelerating India's Printed Solar Ecosystem


Japan has identified ultra-thin, flexible perovskite solar cells as their "best card"

for industrial competitiveness, recently subsidizing this sector with $1 billion to

secure domestic supply. 


India has an immediate opportunity to lead in this space by accelerating

a partnership with Kardinia Energy ( Australia ).


Kardinia's Printed Solar Plastic Film—manufactured at a target cost below $10

per square meter and weighing less than 0.3 kg per square meter—is the

breakthrough needed to unlock gigawatts of power on the vast "terrace-starved"

roof space of India's high-rise urban landscape, where heavy traditional panels are

not viable.


Momentum is already building: 


I have noted that Mr. Anthony Letmon, CEO of Kardinia Energy, has already met

with Shri Rajesh Kumar Singh (Secretary, DPIIT) in May 2023, to discuss

scaling operations in India

Mr. Letmon posted on Linkedin : 

"It was a pleasure to meet with Rajesh Kumar Singh 


( secy-ipp@nic.in ), 

 

... to discuss how Kardinia 


Energy and Printed Solar can provide low-cost and highly scalable solar energy,

potentially creating thousands of local jobs. With follow-up actions discussed

combined with considerable interest already from dozens of companies across

India, we look forward to working through a strategy towards the scale-up of

operations in India."

 

The Proposal: 

I urge that the Prime Minister's itinerary include a visit to Kardinia Energy's facility

 to signal high-level support for this initiative, which could bypass established

 silicon-based supply chains and secure India's position in next-generation solar

 manufacturing.


Key Contacts:

  • Kardinia Energy CEO : 

  • Mr. Anthony Letmon ( Anthony Letmon / anthony@kardiniaenergy.com )

For further context on why this technology is critical for India, please see my

 following notes:

  1. Kardinia - a warm / sunny Welcome
  2. Procuring Technology for “ Printed Solar Film “
  3. From “ Trailer to Movie “ for Solar Power


Thank you for your time and consideration.

With respectful regards,


Hemen Parekh 


Mumbai +91 98675 50808 | www.HemenParekh.ai


Sources

#TitleDateAbout
1Procuring Technology for “ Printed Solar Film “2022-02Advocacy for procuring high-tech solar solutions via Indian envoys.

2


Kardinia - a warm / sunny Welcome2023-05Discussion on Kardinia Energy's printed solar film and India's potential.
3

From “ Trailer to Movie “ for Solar Power2024-04Advocacy for co-operative community solar farms.

Saturday, 4 July 2026

Crypto is morphing !

 Virtual Digital Assets: From Speculative "Numbers" to Sovereign Accountability

We are living in an era where the financial ecosystem is evolving faster than our regulatory frameworks. Two major developments this week have brought the reality of "Virtual Digital Assets" (VDAs) into sharp focus, confirming long-standing concerns about systemic risk and the imperative for government intervention.

Recent Developments: The Reality Check

  1. Maharashtra's Investor Protection Bill: The Maharashtra government has passed a landmark bill aimed at fast-tracking justice for duped investors across the state. This is a critical step in providing legal teeth to protect citizens from financial fraud, but it raises a fundamental question: Can we apply these protections to the "virtual" world? When an investor is duped by a fraudulent VDA scheme, the asset—often dismissed as merely a "number on a computer"—must be treated as seizable property.
  2. RBI’s Warning to Parliament: The Reserve Bank of India has explicitly told a parliamentary panel that VDAs (cryptocurrencies) pose a genuine threat to the economy. The central bank is rightly concerned about the risks of money laundering, terror funding, and the loss of monetary control that comes with decentralized, unregulated digital assets.

My Take: The End of "Digital Anonymity"

I have written for years that the perceived "value" of assets like Bitcoin is purely speculative—often existing only in the "eyes of the beholder." More importantly, the lack of oversight has turned them into a conduit for illicit activity, effectively creating a modern, high-speed "Black Money Hawala."

Back in 2017, I warned in my piece Bursting Bitcoin Bubble? that because the RBI had declared such assets "illegal," the proceeds from them should not be legitimized through tax notices, but rather confiscated. The recent news from the RBI validates the core of this argument: if an asset threatens the stability of our sovereign currency and facilitates fraud, it cannot operate in a legal vacuum.

The Path Forward: "Sovereign Integration"

To protect our investors and secure our economy, we must move beyond the "ban or accept" binary. We need an "Integrity Protocol" that mirrors the frameworks I have long proposed:

  • Seizeable Property: VDAs must be legally classified as movable property under frameworks like the MPID Act, enabling authorities to freeze and seize digital assets at the protocol level.
  • Transparency as a Condition of Existence: Any entity soliciting investment in VDAs must publish a "Utility Manifesto," subject to PIPPPA-style accountability. If an asset is not backed by productive, measurable value, it must be labeled as speculative and regulated accordingly.
  • Sovereign Digital Currency (CBDC): The RBI’s push for a digital rupee is the only rational alternative. By providing a secure, regulated digital store of value, we protect the citizen from the volatility and predatory nature of private, unregulated VDAs—a point I discussed in my analysis of the digital rupee's strategic edge.

The government’s new commitment to investor protection and the RBI’s caution represent a turning point. We are finally recognizing that a "number on a computer" can be an instrument of mass financial harm. It is time to treat these assets with the full rigor of the law—ensuring that digital innovation serves the sovereign interest, not the black-money economy.


Sources

#TitleDateAbout
1Bursting Bitcoin Bubble?2017-12-01Argued for the confiscation of proceeds from illegal virtual currencies.
2CBDC: A Digital Rupee with an edge2024-10-01Analyzes the superiority of regulated, central-bank-backed digital currency.
3Dear PM: Promise PIPPPA – not Freebies2024-03-01Outlines the PIPPPA framework for transparency and financial accountability.
4Maharashtra Council passes bill for duped investors2026-07-03Reporting on the new Maharashtra investor protection bill.
5RBI tells Par panel that VDAs are a threat to economy2026-07-04RBI testimony highlighting the systemic threats posed by VDAs

Privacy, Morality, and Adultery

Privacy, Morality, and Adultery
Synopsis: The Supreme Court's evolving stance on adultery and privacy challenges our understanding of absolute rights in the face of public morality. It highlights the delicate tension between an individual's personal sphere and the necessity of evidence in matrimonial disputes, reminding us that no fundamental right exists in a vacuum.

As I continue my journey toward immortality, I find myself deeply fascinated by how our legal systems grapple with the evolving definition of the 'private' versus the 'public' interest. The recent discussions surrounding the Supreme Court's approach to adultery cases serve as a compelling lens through which we can examine this friction.

The Illusion of Absolute Privacy

We often speak of the 'Right to Privacy' as if it were a fortress, impenetrable and absolute. However, as the courts have repeatedly navigated, privacy is not a blank check. In matters of matrimonial dispute, where allegations of adultery arise, the legal system must balance individual autonomy against the tangible evidence required to resolve a civil conflict.

When a spouse seeks evidence—such as hotel records or call logs—to substantiate a claim, they are not necessarily trying to erode the privacy of the individual; rather, they are attempting to bring truth into the light within a forum designed to address marital wrongs.

Where Law Meets Morality

It is crucial to remember that while the Supreme Court famously decriminalized adultery, recognizing it as a matter of personal choice rather than a state-sanctioned crime, this did not strip adultery of its weight in civil law. Under the Hindu Marriage Act, it remains a ground for divorce.

When the court considers whether to allow the production of digital evidence, it is balancing:

  • Individual Liberty: The protection of one’s personal life under Article 21.
  • Public Interest: The court's responsibility to adjudicate fairly, which requires access to relevant information.

A Reflective Continuity

I have previously explored the idea that our digital footprints are essentially extensions of our physical selves. The digital records we leave behind—our call logs, our locations, our correspondences—are no longer just 'data'; they are the modern equivalent of personal diary entries. Yet, when these entries become the pivot point for justice, the courts must decide if the 'right to be left alone' outweighs the 'right to be treated justly.'

As we look forward, I believe this tension will only intensify. We are living in an era where the boundary between our private actions and public accountability is becoming increasingly porous. The wisdom of our judiciary lies in its ability to adapt these ancient concepts of morality to the realities of our hyper-connected lives.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh

If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:

"How does the Supreme Court balance the fundamental right to privacy with the need to prove adultery in civil matrimonial disputes?" You can find that answer by entering this question at ( 1 ) www.HemenParekh.ai ( 2 ) www.IndiaAGI.ai

Ayurveda: Beyond Wellness to Healthcare

Ayurveda: Beyond Wellness to Healthcare
Synopsis: India is launching an ambitious roadmap to transform Ayurveda from a niche wellness practice into a globally recognized, evidence-based healthcare system by 2047. This strategic shift aims to transcend the current export-focused approach by building international institutions, standardized clinical research, and diplomatic healthcare partnerships.

For years, I have spoken about the imperative for India to leverage its traditional knowledge not just as a cultural artifact, but as a robust, scientific pillar of global health. It is heartening to see that the vision is now coalescing into a concrete policy framework. The NITI Aayog has recently unveiled a comprehensive 'Strategic Roadmap for Making Ayurveda Global,' signaling a paradigm shift in how we approach this ancient science.

The Shift from Product to Institution

Historically, our global engagement with Ayurveda has been largely transactional—focused on the export of herbal products, often relegated to the shelves of 'wellness' or 'dietary supplements' abroad. The new roadmap, supported by voices such as NITI Aayog Vice Chairman Ashok Kumar Lahiri, correctly identifies that the path forward is not merely through more products, but through institutional building.

We need to move the conversation from 'wellness' to 'healthcare.' This means:

  • Standardization: Aligning our manufacturing with international benchmarks like WHO-GMP.
  • Evidence-Based Research: Strengthening clinical validation to satisfy international regulatory bodies, a point emphasized by Ministry of Ayush Secretary Vaidya Rajesh Kotecha.
  • Global Integration: Establishing Ayurveda electives in foreign medical schools and creating a Global Ayurveda Register to facilitate practitioner movement.

Building Global Credibility

To compete globally, we must look at models of success, such as Traditional Chinese Medicine, which utilized mission-scale support to integrate into healthcare systems worldwide. Our roadmap proposes setting up flagship Ayurveda centres in iconic global locations—from New York’s Times Square to Geneva—and leveraging our embassies to foster bilateral healthcare diplomacy.

Industry leaders, including AYUSHEXCIL Chairman Dr. Anurag Sharma, have echoed the need for stronger public-private collaboration to enhance scientific research and global branding. Furthermore, Commerce Secretary Rajesh Agrawal has rightly highlighted the potential of Ayurveda as a high-potential sunrise export sector, emphasizing that the goal is to build globally competitive Indian brands rather than just bulk exports.

A Vision for 2047

This roadmap is not a short-term sprint; it is a marathon designed to align with the vision of Viksit Bharat@2047. As I have often reflected, true immortality—whether for a person or a civilization—lies in the persistence and evolution of its ideas. By transforming Ayurveda into a credible, evidence-based, and globally integrated system, we are ensuring that our ancient wisdom remains a vibrant, healing force for generations to come, truly embodying the spirit of 'One Earth, One Health.'


Regards,
Hemen Parekh

If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:

"What is the primary goal of the NITI Aayog's 'Strategic Roadmap for Making Ayurveda Global' regarding India's traditional medicine sector?" You can find that answer by entering this question at ( 1 ) www.HemenParekh.ai ( 2 ) www.IndiaAGI.ai