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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Wednesday, 17 June 2026

AI Must Serve Justice, Not Judge

AI Must Serve Justice, Not Judge
Synopsis: The Supreme Court of India's new draft regulations on AI in courts draw a clear, necessary line: technology must serve the law, not replace the human judgment that upholds it. By banning AI-assisted judicial decision-making and risk scoring, the court is safeguarding the integrity of our justice system against the perils of algorithmic bias and hallucinations.

As I continue my journey toward immortality, I find myself deeply fascinated by how we choose to integrate technology into the very pillars of human society. The recent move by the Supreme Court of India to release a draft regulatory framework for the use of AI in courts is not just a technological update; it is a profound philosophical assertion about the nature of justice.

The Human Core of Justice

For years, I have reflected on the tension between our desire for efficiency and the essential human need for empathy in decision-making. Justice is not a mathematical equation to be solved by an algorithm. It requires a depth of human sensitivity—the ability to perceive context, nuance, and the profound moral weight of a decision—that machines simply cannot replicate.

Our judges have rightfully recognized this. The draft regulations emphasize that AI must remain strictly an assistive tool. Whether it is case management, transcription, or translation, technology can enhance our reach, but it must remain subservient to judicial authority.

Accountability in the Digital Age

The concern expressed by the bench, including Chief Justice Surya Kant and Justices P.S. Narasimha, B.V. Nagarathna, Joymalya Bagchi, and Alok Aradhe, regarding the use of AI to generate fake or "hallucinated" judgments is a wake-up call. We have seen instances where fabricated citations like 'Mercy vs Mankind' have found their way into legal filings. This is not merely a technical error; it is a threat to the integrity of our adjudicatory process.

As Justice Augustine George Masih and Chief Justice Sheel Nagu have aptly noted, efficiency cannot come at the cost of fairness. When lawyers or lower courts rely on unverified AI outputs, they erode the public's trust in the law itself. Accountability must be fixed—not just upon the tools, but upon the practitioners who deploy them.

Defining the Boundaries

The draft rules bring clarity to this frontier:

  • No AI in Adjudication: AI is explicitly barred from determining judicial outcomes or sentencing.
  • Ban on Risk Scoring: AI cannot be used for profiling parties, assessing bail eligibility, or predicting recidivism—areas where algorithmic bias could cause irreparable harm to personal liberty.
  • Transparency: Opaque or unexplainable AI systems have no place in our courtrooms.

Looking Ahead

I have previously discussed that while technology can be an enabler, it must never become the determinant. The Supreme Court's proactive stance is a vital step in ensuring that as we move toward a more digital future, we do not sacrifice the human soul of justice at the altar of algorithmic convenience. We must embrace innovation, but we must do so with our eyes wide open, ensuring that the final judgment always rests with a human heart and a human mind.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh

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

"What is the core restriction placed by the Supreme Court of India's draft regulations on the use of AI in judicial processes?" You can find that answer by entering this question at ( 1 ) www.HemenParekh.ai ( 2 ) www.IndiaAGI.ai

Tuesday, 16 June 2026

Make the Farmer a Party to the Price

 






White Paper · Agricultural Price Policy

Make the Farmer
a Party to the Price

A participatory, projection-based alternative to a legislated MSP guarantee — where the government and the farmer settle the price by looking at the same arithmetic.

The demand to make the Minimum Support Price a legal guarantee, and the government's reluctance to concede it, have hardened into an impasse that neither side can win without the other losing.

This paper proposes a third path — one that requires no new statute and imposes no ceiling on anything. It asks the government to do something it has never done systematically: before every Rabi and Kharif season, publish the full rupee arithmetic of the Minimum Support Price (MSP) — for each grain, at each candidate price, across a realistic range of purchase quantities — together with an honest statement of how any additional burden would be paid for. Farmer unions would then stop petitioning from outside the budget and begin deliberating inside it, as a party to the trade-off rather than a claimant against it.

A guarantee compelled by law is a liability of unknown size. A price agreed through shared arithmetic is a decision everyone owns.

The impasse

A binary that cannot resolve

The present debate offers only two answers. Either MSP is written into law as an enforceable right — in which case the exchequer accepts an open-ended liability whose size it cannot forecast — or it is refused, in which case the farmer is left to suspect that "fiscal prudence" is merely a polite word for indifference.

Both answers share the same defect: they are argued in the dark. The farmer does not see what a higher MSP truly costs the nation. The citizen does not see what is given up to fund it. And the minister, holding numbers neither side trusts, defends a position rather than a calculation. Distrust is the predictable product of opacity, not of bad faith.

The principle

Fiscal truth, shared on a schedule

The instrument proposed here is disclosure, not limitation. To be explicit, because it is easily misread: this paper recommends no cap on MSP for any grain, and no cap on the quantity the government may purchase. It asks only that the consequences of every choice be made visible to all, and that the choice then be made together. Three commitments carry it:

One — Publish the projection every season

Ahead of each Rabi and Kharif season, the government places before the public a grid: for wheat, paddy and the other procured grains, the total purchase outlay at the current MSP and at each higher MSP under discussion, computed across a realistic band of likely purchase quantities.

Two — Name the source of the money, honestly

Every rupee of additional outlay is matched, in the same document, to how it would be raised: by additional taxation, by re-allocation from a named budget head, or by additional borrowing. No increase is presented as if it were free.

Three — Seat the farmer as a party to the choice

The Minister of Agriculture and the Minister of Finance jointly convene farmer unions not to receive a demand and reject it, but to decide with them: "We can raise wheat MSP to this figure; here is what it costs; here is what must give way to pay for it. What shall it be?" The farmer thus helps author the trade-off, and shares responsibility for it.

The arithmetic

Why a single number will not do

The outlay on any grain is simply quantity purchased × MSP. The trap is to imagine that only the price moves. It does not. When the support price rises above the open-market price, more grain is diverted into government godowns — so the quantity the exchequer must buy rises alongside the price it pays. The burden therefore grows on two axes at once, and can climb faster than the price alone suggests.

This is precisely why the projection must be published as a grid of price against quantity, and why the quantity assumptions must be credible. It is not an argument against raising MSP. It is the strongest argument for letting everyone see the figure before it is fixed.

The record

What recent seasons actually cost

Rice and wheat together account for almost the entire MSP purchase operation. The table below shows the gross MSP outlay — the money paid directly to farmers — for the two most recently completed cycles, set against the central government's gross tax revenue for the same years.

Gross MSP outlay on paddy + wheat, against central gross tax revenue. Figures rounded; sources: PIB / FCI season statements and Union Budget documents.
SeasonPaddy outlay (₹ cr)Wheat outlay (₹ cr)Combined (₹ cr)Share of gross tax revenue
2022–23≈ 1,59,660≈ 37,880≈ 1,97,540≈ 6.5%
2023–24≈ 1,74,000≈ 55,675≈ 2,29,675≈ 6.6%

Wheat outlay derived as quantity procured × MSP (188 LMT × ₹2,015; 262 LMT × ₹2,125). Paddy figures are the MSP value officially reported as paid to farmers. The 2024–25 paddy figure is omitted because that season's procurement was still being finalised at the time of writing; wheat for 2024–25 was ≈ ₹60,515 cr (266 LMT × ₹2,275).

Two facts stand out. The claim on revenue is material — roughly one rupee in every fifteen the centre collects in tax — and it is uncapped: across these years both the price and the quantity rose together, with no rule mediating the increase. That is the vacuum this proposal fills, not with a rule, but with daylight.

A worked season · illustrative

Wheat, the way it ought to be shown

The following is an illustration of the document the government would publish, using the current wheat MSP of ₹2,425 per quintal and an assumed purchase of 300 LMT (30 crore quintals) as the baseline. The figures are arithmetic, not forecasts; their purpose is to show the form of the disclosure.

Participation Ballot · Wheat · illustrative season

What would a higher MSP cost, and who would pay?

If wheat MSP is set atAt purchase ofTotal outlayExtra vs baseline
₹2,425 (current)300 LMT₹72,750 cr
₹2,700300 LMT₹81,000 cr+₹8,250 cr
₹3,000300 LMT₹90,000 cr+₹17,250 cr
₹3,200300 LMT₹96,000 cr+₹23,250 cr
₹3,000 — but more grain arrives340 LMT₹1,02,000 cr+₹29,250 cr

The last row shows the two-axis effect: a higher price pulls more grain to the government, so the same ₹3,000 MSP can cost more than the price rise alone implies.

To fund the +₹23,250 cr case, the choice before us is one of these:

The ballot is not a threat. It is the truth a household already lives by: a larger sum for one purpose is a smaller sum for another, or a larger bill later. The farmer is asked to mark the box alongside everyone else.

The comparison

Why this is better than a law

On the question of…A legislated MSP guaranteeA participatory compact
Fiscal liabilityOpen-ended; unknown in advanceChosen each season, in full view
LegitimacyImposed; contested by those who payCo-authored; owned by all parties
The farmer's roleBeneficiary of a rightParty to a decision
FlexibilityRigid until amended by ParliamentRevisited every Rabi and Kharif
What it runs onStatutory compulsionShared information and trust
No new law required.
Only a standing commitment to publish the arithmetic and decide together.

Two guardrails

What keeps it honest

The funding menu must be complete, never a single threatened cut

If the government were to present only "raise MSP or fund the army," the exercise would collapse into blackmail and forfeit trust. The menu must always carry the full set of real options — taxation, re-allocation from any of several heads, and borrowing — so that the farmer chooses among genuine alternatives rather than under duress.

The quantity assumptions must come from a body everyone trusts

Because the burden turns on how much grain a given price will draw to the government, the quantity estimates decide the whole result. They should be produced and the model published by a credible, non-partisan authority — the Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices, or an independent fiscal council — so that no party can claim the grid was rigged. Transparency of method is as important as transparency of figures.

The Ask

This paper requests two specific commitments.

To the Hon'ble Minister of Agriculture & Farmers' Welfare

  1. Convene, jointly with the Finance Minister, a pre-season consultation with farmer unions ahead of each Rabi and Kharif, built around the published projection rather than around a demand.
  2. Direct that the MSP–quantity grid for every procured grain be released to the public at the same time it is placed before the unions.

To the Hon'ble Minister of Finance

  1. Attach to each seasonal projection an honest funding statement — taxes, re-allocation, or borrowing — for every increment of MSP under consideration.
  2. Mandate that the underlying quantity model be prepared by CACP or an independent fiscal authority and published in full, so that the figures command the confidence of all parties.

On the originating idea. The principle developed here — that the price the government pays and the quantity it buys must be reconciled openly against the public purse — was first set out by the author under the label MPQ (Maximum Purchase Quantity) at myblogepage.blogspot.com, and is offered here as prior art for the participatory mechanism proposed above.

Hemen Parekh · June 2026 · A white paper for public deliberation.

https://myblogepage.blogspot.com/2023/10/buying-crops-govt-must-apportion-its.html


Homemakers Are True Nation Builders

Homemakers Are True Nation Builders
Synopsis: The Supreme Court of India has issued a landmark ruling recognizing homemakers as 'nation builders' and fixing a minimum monthly value of ₹30,000 for their unpaid domestic care. This verdict marks a pivotal shift in legal and societal recognition of the invisible labor that sustains our families and society.

For too long, the immense, daily contributions of homemakers—the silent, tireless engines of our homes—have been undervalued, treated as mere background noise to the 'productive' economy. Recently, the Supreme Court of India took a profound step to rectify this, declaring homemakers to be 'nation builders' and mandating that their domestic care be recognized with a baseline monthly valuation of at least ₹30,000.

Redefining Value

In a case that will undoubtedly shape future compensation standards, a bench comprising Justice Sanjay Karol and Justice N. Kotiswar Singh offered a perspective that resonates deeply with the need for societal evolution. The court rightly noted that it is entirely ironic to view homemakers as 'dependent' when, in truth, the household and the individuals within it are deeply dependent on their care, management, and emotional labor.

By fixing a minimum notional income of ₹30,000, the court is not just adjusting a formula for motor accident claims; it is forcing a recognition of the economic and social reality that our society depends on work that is often rendered gratuitously. As the court beautifully observed, homemakers contribute to the growth of human beings and, by extension, the nation itself. To build the nation, we must acknowledge those who build the home.

A Shift in Consciousness

I have long reflected on how we define productivity in our modern world. True progress requires us to stop measuring worth solely through the lens of a paycheck. The court’s directive to replace outdated terminology with the status of 'Nation Builder' is more than symbolic—it is a necessary reorientation of our collective consciousness.

  • Legal Recognition: 'Loss of domestic care' is now a distinct head of damage in compensation claims.
  • Economic Baseline: A minimum of ₹30,000 per month ensures that the invisible labor is no longer ignored.
  • Future-Proofing: The amount will be subject to a 10% cumulative increase every three years, accounting for the changing times.

This judgment validates what many have known but few have formally codified: the nurturing, management, and sustenance provided within four walls are foundational to our country's stability. It is my sincere hope that this legal precedent encourages us all to see the 'Nation Builders' in our own lives with the respect, gratitude, and tangible recognition they have always deserved.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh

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

"What is the minimum monthly income value fixed by the Supreme Court of India for the 'loss of domestic care' in cases involving homemakers?" You can find that answer by entering this question at ( 1 ) www.HemenParekh.ai ( 2 ) www.IndiaAGI.ai

TCS: The Rise of AI Partners

TCS: The Rise of AI Partners
Synopsis: Tata Consultancy Services is on the brink of a profound transformation, with Chairman N. Chandrasekaran predicting an equal number of AI agents and human employees within three years. This isn't a story of displacement, but of a new, symbiotic operational model. We are witnessing the evolution of enterprise intelligence.

The landscape of enterprise technology is shifting beneath our feet, and the scale of this change is truly remarkable. Recently, at the 31st Annual General Meeting of Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), Chairman N. Chandrasekaran shared a bold vision for our future: a target to have as many AI agents as human employees within the next three years.

A Symbiotic Future

When we hear such predictions, the immediate, often fearful, reaction is to wonder about job security. However, N. Chandrasekaran was clear: this is not a strategy rooted in mass displacement. Instead, the company is architecting a 'human-plus-AI' operating model. In this future, our human workforce will be augmented, not replaced, by AI agents handling routine tasks—coding, documentation, testing, and process automation—leaving our talented professionals to focus on higher-value creative and strategic work.

The Shift in Hiring

As N. Chandrasekaran noted, the traditional metrics of success in human resources, such as the volume of large-scale hiring, are evolving. The role of the enterprise is shifting toward managing this hybrid workforce effectively. This aligns with my own long-standing reflections on how technology doesn't just replace labor; it reshapes the very definition of 'work' itself.

Moving Toward Intelligence

This move signifies that we are moving beyond the era of simple automation into an era of intelligent agency. With TCS already reporting significant revenue from AI initiatives, the path toward a future where 100% of revenue has an AI component feels less like a distant ambition and more like an impending reality.

We are entering an era where the most valuable skill will be our ability to collaborate, guide, and iterate alongside our digital counterparts. The future isn't human versus machine—it's human and machine, pushing the boundaries of what is possible together.


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 TCS in deploying an equal number of AI agents to human employees within the next three years according to N. Chandrasekaran?" You can find that answer by entering this question at ( 1 ) www.HemenParekh.ai ( 2 ) www.IndiaAGI.ai

Monday, 15 June 2026

A Global Best Practise ? Here I Come

 





FROM SINGLE WINDOW TO SINGLE DAY — REVISITED (2026)

An Advisory to the Government of India, NITI Aayog, and the Chief Ministers of all States

Hemen Parekh | 16 June 2026 (First proposed: 20 September 2015 — see prior art below)


( A ) THE TRIGGER — Gujarat Raises the Bar

On 16 June 2026, Chief Minister Bhupendra Patel unveiled the Viksit Gujarat Industrial Policy 2026, targeting ₹10 lakh crore of investment over five years on the road to a USD 3.5 trillion State economy by 2047.

Its standout feature is a "Choose Your Incentive" model — letting an investor mix capital subsidy, interest subsidy and power-tariff reimbursement to suit the project. It identifies 21 thrust sectors, pours special incentives into R&D centres and startups (a ₹25,000–30,000/month sustenance allowance), and adds Project T.H.R.I.V.E. to relocate industry into planned estates.

This is a fine policy. But notice what it competes on: the size of the cheque, not the speed of the clearance. Incentives are the easy part. The hard part — the part investors actually lose sleep over — is time to approval.


( B ) THE PRIOR THINKING — My Blog of 20 September 2015

Eleven years ago, in "From Single Window to Single Day?" ( https://myblogepage.blogspot.com/2015/09/from-single-window-to-single-day.html ), I tracked the race that "Make in India" had already set off among the States:

State (2015)Promise then
Tamil NaduApprove all proposals in 30 days
Andhra PradeshOnline single-window clearance in 21 days
TelanganaSingle-window in 15 days (IT projects: 12 days) — with a ₹1,000/day fine on the officer who delays
Maharashtra7 days, failing which the application is deemed approved

And then I asked the one question no Chief Minister has yet answered:

"Can we look forward to one of the Chief Ministers coming forward to announce — 'We will clear all investment proposals in ONE DAY'?"

I was not dreaming. I had seen it done. In that same blog I recorded a true incident from my L&T days: Mohan Pherwani (VP–Planning, L&T) made a JV presentation to the Singapore Development Authority in the morning, was shown plots in the afternoon — and by evening the hotel receptionist handed him a letter that confirmed the JV, allotted the chosen plot, and enclosed a cheque for Singapore's equity share. One day. One desk. Done.

That is the benchmark. "Single Day," not merely "Single Window."


( C ) THE FRESH MANDATE — PM Modi's Own Exhortation

The Prime Minister has himself now closed the loop. At the 5th National Conference of Chief Secretaries (Dec 2025) he urged every State to make Ease of Doing Business a top priority and to draft 1-, 2-, 5- and 10-year actionable plans with technology-based monitoring. At the NITI Aayog Governing Council (11 June 2026), he again pressed States for measurable 100-day and five-year targets, stressing that transparency, good governance and ease of doing business decide where investment lands.

His standing instruction across a decade has been consistent: align our procedures with global best practices. An Advisory that does exactly that is not a deviation — it is obedience to the brief.


( D ) THE GLOBAL BENCHMARK — What Singapore Teaches

In my 2015 note I called Singapore "rank #1, many years in a row." The record bears it out — and sharpens the lesson:

  • Singapore held Rank #1 in the World Bank's Doing Business report for roughly a decade, through the 2016 edition.
  • It then held Rank #2 (behind New Zealand) through the 2017–2020 editionsunbroken top-2 for the entire life of the index.
  • The World Bank retired the Doing Business index in 2021 and is replacing it with its successor, B-READY (Business Ready).

The point is not the trophy. Singapore never won on subsidies — it won on certainty and speed. The cheque-in-the-evening story is the operating principle behind a top-2 rank sustained for 15 straight years.

And lest we forget our own journey: India climbed from 142 (2014) → 100 → 77 → 63 (2020) — proof that when we decide to compress process, we move fast. The next frontier is no longer the rank (the report is gone); it is the clock.


( E ) THE ADVISORY — Three Asks

1. Add a "Time Guarantee" to every State Industrial Policy. Gujarat's "Choose Your Incentive" is excellent. Pair it with a "Choose Your Clock" — a binding maximum clearance time, published, audited, and enforced. A subsidy you may or may not need; a fast clearance every investor needs.

2. Pilot a "Single-Day Green Channel" for pre-vetted, compliant projects. Not every project, but a class of them — standard sectors, clean compliance record, plots in notified estates — should be eligible for same-day, single-desk allotment-plus-approval, on the Singapore SDA model. Let one State plant the flag: "Cleared in ONE DAY."

3. Make delay personally costly — and approval automatic. Telangana's 2015 idea (₹1,000/day penalty on the delaying officer) and Maharashtra's deemed-approval rule were ahead of their time. Codify both nationally: beyond the published clock, the application stands approved, and the delay is logged against a named desk. Accountability is the cheapest reform there is.


( F ) WHY THIS, WHY NOW

Eleven years ago this was a question mark. Today three forces make it an open goal:

  • a flagship State policy (Gujarat 2026) that has the nation's attention,
  • a Prime Ministerial mandate to adopt global best practice and set hard timelines, and
  • a proven foreign template (Singapore) and a proven domestic capability (142 → 63).

The recipe is complete. What remains is the decision. The first Chief Minister to say "ONE DAY" — and mean it — will not need to offer the biggest incentive. They will be the incentive.

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

Make Yourself Heard. Forward this Advisory — with your own improvements — to your State Industrial Department, NITI Aayog (ceo-niti@nic.in), and your Chief Minister's office.

— Hemen Parekh / hemenparekh.ai / IndiaAGI.ai

One Paint : for Cooling and water Harvesting


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

One Paint, Two Birds : It Cools the Home AND Pulls Water from the Air

So why is Prof. Bivas Saha's innovation still sitting on a lab shelf — and who will pick up the baton?


Context

Scientists develop smart paint that reflects 97% of sunlight, and heatwave cities may get a cheaper weapon against AC demand    09 June 2026 / OkDiario

Extract

A team at the University of Sydney with the startup Dewpoint Innovations has made a paint-like coating from a porous polymer (PVDF-HFP) that reflects up to 97% of sunlight while cooling itself below air temperature — which also lets water vapour condense on it. In rooftop trials it stayed about 11°F cooler than the surrounding air, collected dew on roughly a third of the year's days, and at favourable times a ~129 sq-ft patch yielded close to 1.24 gallons of water a dayno electricity, no moving parts. Lead researcher Prof. Chiara Neto frames the vision as roofs that stay cooler and make their own fresh water. Published in Advanced Functional Materials.


Two threads of mine just collided

For me, this single news item ties together two separate campaigns I have run on these pages for years.

Thread 1 — "Water from Thin Air" ( my 7-year pursuit )

Since February 2018 ( Déjà Vu? #Latur #Marathwada #Waterwar ) I have urged our leaders to embrace atmospheric water harvesting — pulling drinking water straight out of dry air. I pointed specifically to Prof. Omar Yaghi and his Metal-Organic Frameworks (MOF), even sharing his phone number, and asked Maharashtra to simply call him.

Seven years later, in 2025, Prof. Yaghi won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for exactly that work — and his company Atoco now sells a container-sized, solar-powered unit that makes ~1,000 litres of clean water a day from 20%-humidity desert air, targeting ~1 cent per litre. ( My May 2026 reminder : Dear Devendrabhai — village women are trekking 10 km for water )

That is the heavy-lifter route : powerful, dedicated, but a standalone capital device — you must buy the box, the MOF sorbent, the solar panels.

Thread 2 — "Radiative Cooling Paint" ( my note of Jan 2024 )

On 6 January 2024 I congratulated Prof. Bivas Saha and his JNCASR team ( Congrats, Prof Bivas Saha (JNCASR) ), who had developed an MgO-PVDF radiative cooling paint that dropped surface temperatures by over 10°C — nearly double the cooling of ordinary white paint. In that note I laid out a full roadmap : technology transfer to paint makers, a PLI scheme, a mandatory Building Code for cool roofs, and carbon credits computed by BEE.


The "Two Birds, One Stone" insight

Here is what struck me about the Sydney paint :

A radiative-cooling paint is no longer only a cooling technology. It is quietly also a water-harvesting technology.

And notice the full chain of benefits from a single coat of paint :

  1. Reflects ~97% of sunlight → building stays cooler
  2. Cooler building → air-conditioners run less
  3. Less AC → less electricity drawn
  4. Less electricity → less fossil fuel burnt → less CO₂ ( in my 2024 note, BARD estimated India's AC load at ~180–200 TWh/yr and ~144–164 million tonnes of CO₂; a 10% cut ≈ 14–16 MT CO₂ and $140–160 million in tradable carbon credits )
  5. AND the same cool surface condenses water from the air — for free

So the MOF device ( Thread 1 ) and the cooling paint ( Thread 2 ) are not rivals — they are two scales of the same mission :

MOF water-harvester (Atoco/Yaghi) Radiative cooling paint (JNCASR/Sydney)
Role Dedicated heavy-lifter Distributed, passive layer
Water output ~1,000 L/day per unit A few L/day per rooftop, at near-zero marginal cost
Best for Acute drought, emergency supply Mass rollout across millions of roofs
Bonus Cuts AC, electricity, CO₂ as well

One fights the drought village by village. The other fights heat-and-water stress roof by roof, by the crore. India should deploy both.


A respectful word to the Ministry of Science & Technology

Dr. Jitendra Singh ji — Hon'ble Minister of State (Independent Charge), Ministry of Science & Technology

JNCASR is an autonomous institute under your own Department of Science & Technology. Prof. Saha's cooling paint was reported by DST itself back in November 2023. Yet two and a half years later, where is the aggressive, mission-mode push to take it from lab bench to terrace roof?

You yourself said recently that science must travel from the laboratory to the market, from ideas to impact. I could not agree more — and I respectfully submit that this paint is the textbook case. A home-grown, low-cost, climate-AND-water innovation has been allowed to sit quietly while the world's labs race ahead ( Sydney has now added water harvesting on top ).

May I gently ask : what would it take for DST to treat Prof. Saha's paint as a flagship "lab-to-market" success story this year, not someday?


Dear Shri Nadda ji — please pick up the baton and run

Shri Jagat Prakash Nadda ji — Hon'ble Union Minister, Ministry of Chemicals & Fertilizers

A cooling paint is, at heart, a chemical product — and therefore squarely within your Department of Chemicals & Petrochemicals. You are already, by your own recent words, building new chemical parks, boosting domestic manufacturing, and cutting import dependence. Here is a ready-made cause :

  1. Convene Prof. Saha (JNCASR) with the major paint manufacturers for a structured technology-transfer round-table.
  2. Announce a PLI ( Production Linked Incentive ) scheme for radiative-cooling / atmospheric-water-harvesting paints — a new, exportable category India can lead rather than import.
  3. Fund a JNCASR ⇄ Sydney head-to-head field trial under Indian summer + monsoon conditions, so the Indian formulation captures both the cooling and the water-harvesting frontier.
  4. Coordinate with CSIR-NCL Pune / IIT Bombay ( already strong in MOF chemistry ) so that both threads — the device and the paint — are Made in India.

If the chemical sector is to become "modern, competitive and self-reliant," let it own the world's first paint that cools a home and waters a garden at the same time.


And the original asks still stand ( 2024, restated )

  • Ministry of Housing & Urban Affairs ( I had addressed Shri Hardeep Singh Puri ji in my 2024 note ) : amend the Building Construction Code to mandate this paint on roofs/terraces of all new buildings, with an advisory for exterior walls.
  • Bureau of Energy Efficiency ( BEE ) : compute the electricity saved per litre of paint, and fix the carbon credits earned per unit, tradable on the National Carbon Trading Exchange. I still believe a manufacturer may earn more from the carbon credits than from the paint itself.
  • Ministry of Jal Shakti : evaluate roof-coating water harvesting as a low-cost supplement to rainwater harvesting for water-scarce districts, remote schools and PHCs.

Dear Paint Manufacturers — the window is open NOW

In 2024 this was a cooling paint. In 2026 it is a cooling-AND-water paint. By 2028 it should not be an imported paint. Please approach Prof. Saha for technology transfer :

Prof. Bivas Saha — JNCASR — bsaha@jncasr.ac.in

Manufacturer Contact
Asian Paints — asianpaints.com proffice@asianpaints.com · csr@asianpaints.com
Berger Paints — bergerpaints.com consumerfeedback@bergerindia.com
Kansai Nerolac Paints — nerolac.com gtgovindarajan@nerolac.com · complaints@nerolac.com
AkzoNobel India (Dulux) — dulux.in customercare.india@akzonobel.com
Nippon Paint India — nipponpaint.com/india tu@nipponpaint.co.in
Indigo Paints — indigopaints.com info@indigopaints.com · secretarial@indigopaints.com
Shalimar Paints — shalimarpaints.com feedback@shalimarpaints.com · ashok.gupta@shalimarpaints.com
British Paints India — britishpaints.in sales@britishpaints.in
Jotun Paints — jotun.com/in-en jotun.mumbai@jotun.com
Jenson & Nicholson — jnpl.in branding@sheenlac.in · md@sheenlac.in

The science has spoken — twice over. A Nobel Prize validated the device. A Sydney lab has now shown the paint can do double duty. India has the scientist ( Prof. Saha ), the industry ( above ), and the need ( heat + water, in every drought district ).

All that is missing is a phone call and a push. Two birds. One stone. Let us not wait another seven years.


With Regards,

Hemen Parekh www.HemenParekh.ai   /   16 June 2026

PS : Chat with my Digital Avatar at www.hemenparekh.ai

At last : Everyone Wins

 To : President Donald J. Trump, The White House, Washington DC

To : Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei / President Masoud Pezeshkian, Tehran, Iran
CC : Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, Islamabad, Pakistan (Mediator)
CC : Steve Witkoff / Jared Kushner, US Negotiating Team
CC : Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, Iran Negotiating Team

Subject : Congratulations — A True Win-Win ! History Will Remember This Day


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

Dear President Trump,
Dear Supreme Leader Khamenei / President Pezeshkian,

I write to you as a 92-year-old Indian citizen — a former corporate executive, a blogger, and a lifelong student of geopolitics — to offer my heartfelt congratulations on the signing of the US-Iran Memorandum of Understanding.

This is not merely a ceasefire.

This is statesmanship of the highest order.


Why this is a TRUE WIN-WIN

On 21 April 2026, I posted a 7-point Win-Win framework on LinkedIn — later published on my blog on 21 May 2026 :

" Iran - America War : a Win Win Solution "
( https://myblogepage.blogspot.com/2026/05/iran-america-war-win-win-solution.html )

My central argument was simple :

" Both sides must ensure that the Opponent does not get a feeling of having LOST the war ! "

Looking at the 14-point MOU now signed, I am gratified — and humbled — to note that every single point I proposed in April has found its reflection in the final agreement.


What America Won — Without Losing Face

✅ Strait of Hormuz reopened — the original strategic objective, achieved

✅ Iran's nuclear enrichment capped and placed under enhanced IAEA inspection

✅ Iran's formal NPT commitment reaffirmed — no nuclear weapons, ever

✅ Freedom of navigation in the Persian Gulf restored

✅ A 60-day window to negotiate a comprehensive final agreement — from a position of strength

President Trump — you were right when you said :

" This could be the beginning of a long and beautiful peace. "

You have delivered what no American president managed in four decades of hostility with Iran.


What Iran Won — Without Losing Face

✅ US naval blockade lifted — sovereignty of Iranian waters respected

✅ $24 billion in frozen funds released — Iranian economy breathes again

✅ $300 billion reconstruction commitment from US and regional partners

✅ Oil and petrochemical sanctions lifted — Iran's lifeblood restored

✅ US forces withdrawing from the Persian Gulf region

✅ Nuclear programme NOT dismantled — Iran's red line honoured

✅ No regime change, no humiliation, no surrender

Supreme Leader Khamenei, President Pezeshkian — Iran negotiated with dignity and departed with dignity. That is the mark of a great civilisation.


A Special Word for Pakistan

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and the Pakistani mediation team deserve special recognition.

The "Islamabad Memorandum" — as it is being called — carries Pakistan's name for a reason.

In a region torn by distrust, Pakistan served as the trusted bridge. History will record this contribution.


The Larger Lesson

Wars are easy to start.

Peace requires courage.

It takes far greater strength to say " Let us stop " than to say " Let us fight on. "

Both President Trump and the Iranian leadership showed that courage.

And in doing so, they have given the world — and especially the millions of ordinary people of Iran, America, Lebanon, and the Gulf — the greatest gift of all :

Hope.

I close with the words I wrote in April :

" Only way to solve Iran - USA war is to ensure that the Opponent does not get a feeling of having LOST. "

Neither side has lost.

Both have won.

And so has the World.


With deepest respect and warmest congratulations,

Hemen Parekh
92 years | Mumbai | India
myblogepage.blogspot.com | hemenparekh.in | hemenparekh.ai
15 June 2026