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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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

WOMEN TEACHING ROBOTS

 

WOMEN TEACHING ROBOTS — AND EARNING FROM IT !

aka : Distributist Economy — Arriving Through AI's Back Door


Today's News

Times of India ( 15 June 2026 ) reports :

" Now Indians Are Getting Paid to Teach Robots How to Cook, Clean and Stitch "

In kitchens, factories and specially designed studios across India, thousands of workers — mostly women — are strapping smartphones and GoPro cameras to their heads and filming themselves doing everyday household tasks.

Chopping mangoes. Folding clothes. Making coffee. Ironing. Stitching.

This first-person footage — called "egocentric data" — is invaluable to global tech companies building the next generation of AI-powered humanoid robots.

One such worker, 25-year-old Chennai housewife Nagireddy Sriramyachandra, earns ₹250 per hour — just for filming herself doing housework she was already doing for free.

Her reaction ?

" Who else will give you 250 rupees an hour just for doing housework ? "


My Prior Thinking

Eleven years ago, on 13 September 2015, I wrote :

" A New Economic Order ? aka Start Up Act - 2015 "
( https://myblogepage.blogspot.com/2015/09/a-new-economic-order.html )

I called it a Distributist Economy — one that goes beyond Communist / Socialist / Capitalist models.

The idea was simple :

Every Indian already HAS skills. Every Indian already DOES things. What if we created a system where those skills — however humble — could become a source of income ?

Not handouts. Not subsidies. Not freebies.

Earn by doing what you already know how to do.

And then, on September 2025, I reinforced this idea in :

" Empowering Women — Not Handouts "
( https://myblogepage.blogspot.com/2025/09/empowering-women-not-handouts.html )

The argument was the same — true empowerment means giving women a way to earn, not just receive.


The Vindication

I could not have imagined, back in 2015, that the agent of this transformation would be Artificial Intelligence.

But here we are.

AI companies desperately need to teach robots how humans move, cook, clean, stitch, fold, sort — all the physical tasks that seem trivial to us but are enormously complex for a machine to learn.

And who knows these tasks best ?

Indian women. In their own kitchens. In their own factories. In their own homes.

The Distributist Economy I imagined — where every citizen monetises their existing skills — is arriving. Not through a government Start Up Act. Not through policy reform.

Through AI's insatiable hunger for human data.


The Irony

There is, of course, a deep irony here.

These women are being paid to train the very robots that may one day come to replace them.

As Objectways CEO Ravi Shankar put it :

" Some jobs are supposed to be taken over — so humans can go and do better things. "

Perhaps. But that transition will take decades. And in the meantime, millions of Indian women — homemakers, factory workers, informal labourers — have a new, dignified source of income.

Not charity. Not a government scheme.

Their own hands. Their own skills. Their own data.


The Larger Picture

India has 490 million informal workers. Most of them women. Most of them invisible to the formal economy.

AI data collection is quietly pulling them into the digital economy — one egocentric video at a time.

If India moves fast — if MSME Ministry, Skill India, and Women & Child Development Ministry wake up to this opportunity — we could create a National AI Data Labour Programme :

  • Register informal women workers as certified AI data contributors
  • Connect them directly to global AI companies via a government-backed platform
  • Ensure minimum wages, social security, and e-Shram coverage for this new category of gig work
  • Give India a strategic data advantage in the global humanoid robotics race

This is not science fiction. It is happening RIGHT NOW — in Tamil Nadu.

It just needs to scale.


Closing Thought

In 2015, I wrote that the world needed a New Economic Order —

" which transcends national boundaries " and " goes beyond Communist / Socialist / Capitalist economies. "

In 2026, that New Economic Order has a name.

It is called the AI Data Economy.

And Indian women are already building it —

One mango slice at a time.


Hemen Parekh
15 June 2026
www.hemenparekh.in / myblogepage.blogspot.com

FROM MILK TO METAL

 

FROM MILK TO METAL  : 


KURIAN'S GHOST WALKS THE ALANG SHORE

hemenparekh.in | June 2026


[ What Just Happened ]

India's Ministry of Ports, Shipping and Waterways, at the 37th Foundation Day celebrations of JNPA on May 29, 2026, unveiled a Unified Ship Recycling Portal as part of the government's ₹70,000-crore maritime development package. Press Information Bureau

Under the scheme, ship owners recycling vessels at Hong Kong Convention-compliant Indian yards can receive a credit note equivalent to 40 per cent of the vessel's scrap value, redeemable against new shipbuilding projects in India. Press Information Bureau

India has since issued its first Ship Recycling Credit Note to Bella Shipping India Pvt Ltd, following the environmentally compliant recycling of a Capesize bulk carrier — marking the operational launch of a scheme designed to link ship recycling with domestic shipbuilding. Shippinginbox

The credit note system forms an integral part of the ₹69,725 crore maritime development package approved by the Union Cabinet on September 24, 2025, aimed at revitalising India's shipbuilding and recycling industries. Under the policy, when a ship is dismantled in India, the ship owner receives a credit note worth up to 40% of the ship's scrap value — redeemable when building a new ship in an Indian yard, or, with a recent amendment, sold to another party, with a three-year validity period. Shippinginbox


[ What I Had Suggested — Earlier ]

My blog post on Verghese Kurian ( myblogepage.blogspot.com/search?q=Verghese+kurian ) drew a pointed analogy:

What Kurian did for milk — he did for the primary producer.

Before Amul, the milk farmer produced the raw material, sold it cheap to middlemen (Polson Dairy), and saw none of the value that was created downstream — in processing, branding, distribution, and profit.

Kurian flipped that equation. He made the farmer the owner of the cooperative — the very entity that processed, branded and sold the milk. Value that had leaked downstream was now retained within the producing community.

I asked: why can't we do this at Alang?

Alang's ship recyclers — the yard workers, the small operators — are today's version of Kurian's milk farmers. They provide the raw material (dismantled steel, salvaged equipment), but the bulk of the value — as re-rolled steel, as commodity inputs to construction and manufacturing — gets captured by downstream steel mills and traders. The Alang worker sees daily wages. The steel mill sees margin.

My suggestion: an Alang Cooperative on the Amul model — where recycling yards collectively own downstream processing, or receive a structured value-share in the steel they produce, rather than merely a scrap-price.


[ The Commonality — Striking and Undeniable ]

The government's Credit Note scheme and my Kurian-inspired cooperative suggestion share one foundational idea:

Value created at the point of dismantling must not all leak downstream. Some of it must flow back — to incentivise, to retain, to reinvest.

Kurian achieved this through ownership — the farmer owned the co-op that sold the milk.

The Credit Note achieves this through financial instrument — the ship owner who demolishes retains a claim (40% of scrap value) on the next cycle of creation (new ship construction).

Both are, at their core, circular value architectures — ensuring that the act of ending (a cow's milk, a ship's life) seeds the act of beginning (the next product, the next vessel).


[ Where the Government Has Gone Further ]

The Credit Note system adds a dimension I had not fully articulated: it links demolition to construction — not just redistributes value horizontally within recycling, but creates a forward chain:

Recycle here → get credit → build here → recycle here again.

Industry experts believe the scheme could play an important role in supporting India's ambitions to develop a stronger domestic shipbuilding industry. By linking recycling incentives to new vessel construction, the government aims to retain more value within the maritime sector and stimulate investment in local shipyards. The measure also supports the country's "Make in India" initiative and broader goals of enhancing maritime self-reliance. Shippinginbox

Kurian would have recognised this instantly. Operation Flood was not just about cooperatives — it was about building the full chain: procurement → processing → branding → marketing → reinvestment. He never allowed value to leak at any node.

The Credit Note does the same for maritime India.


[ Where My Suggestion Goes Further Still ]

The Credit Note currently flows to the ship owner — the large corporate entity that decides where to scrap its vessel.

My Kurian-inspired suggestion was aimed one level lower: the yard operators and workers at Alang, who account for nearly 98 per cent of India's ship recycling volume and a third of global volume, but who remain piece-rate wage earners — not beneficiaries of any value-share instrument. Al Jazeera

I would urge the Ministry to consider:

Amendment to the Credit Note Scheme: A portion of the 40% credit note — say, 5–10% — to be mandatorily deposited into an Alang Workers' Cooperative Fund, managed on the Amul model, invested in worker housing, health, skills upgrading, and ultimately, in cooperative ownership of secondary processing facilities at Alang itself.

Call it the Kurian Clause.


[ The Bigger Picture ]

India has always been good at producing raw materials and exporting value to others.

Kurian broke that pattern for milk. Now — partially — the Credit Note breaks it for ships.

The next step is to break it for people — the 25,000+ workers of Alang — who are still, half a century after Kurian showed us the way, selling their labour cheap while others capture the margin.

When that happens, we will have truly honoured Verghese Kurian's legacy — not with a statue, but with a structure.


Prior Blog Reference:
http://myblogepage.blogspot.com/search?q=Verghese+kurian

News Trigger:
Hindu BusinessLine — Credit Note Buoys Up Ship Recyclers (June 2026)


With regards,
Hemen Parekh | hemenparekh.in | Mumbai | June 2026

3D Concrete Printing for Public Housing

 Congratulations : Govt Eyes 3D Concrete Printing for Public Housing — Please also look at VERTICAL 3D Printing


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


Respected Shri Manohar Lal Khattar-ji,


Housing & Urban Affairs Minister

Government of India


Warm congratulations on the Government's initiative to explore 3D Concrete Printing for public housing — as reported in Hindustan Times.


This is a step in the right direction. But I urge you to look beyond the HORIZONTAL gantry-based systems currently in discussion, and focus your attention on VERTICAL 3D Printing technology.


Why VERTICAL matters for Indian cities:


Indian cities do not need more low-rise rows — they need HIGH-DENSITY, HIGH-RISE housing. The horizontal gantry printer has a fundamental constraint: the machine must be LARGER than the building it prints. That is a hidden ceiling on the entire idea.


The ceiling was broken in June 2026, when Australian firm Luyten unveiled its "Ascend" tower-crane 3D printer — capable of printing concrete structures up to 328 feet (100 m) tall, within a 45-metre radius, using AI-generated print paths, and deployable on existing cranes within 1-2 days.


This is the technology that Indian cities have been waiting for.


I have been advocating 3D printed construction for India since 2015 — eleven years of letters to your Ministry and to the Prime Minister. I have documented this entire journey in my recently published Whitepaper:


► "A Decade Ahead of the Tower Crane" — Whitepaper on Construction Technology Policy

https://myblogepage.blogspot.com/2026/06/whitepaper-construction-technology.html


This paper traces my proposals from 2015 (Building Castles in Air?) through 2026, and places the Luyten Ascend announcement exactly where it belongs: at the end of an eleven-year line of dated, published advocacy.


For Indian housing developers and researchers, an independent technical analysis confirms that 3D concrete printing is fundamentally a VOLUME technology — it rewards housing missions and large developers, and becomes economically compelling only at the scale of programmes like PMAY-U. Domestically manufactured, open-material gantry printers that allow locally sourced mix qualification are the sustainable path for India.


A Lifetime Learning Opportunity for Civil Engineers:


Minister-ji, I also urge you to seize what I called — in a letter to PM Modiji in July 2021 — a "once-in-a-lifetime learning opportunity" for India's civil engineering community.


India has 3,179 Civil Engineering colleges admitting nearly 6 lakh students every year. When the Light House Projects were launched, I proposed live-streaming drone feeds from construction sites into every civil engineering classroom — enabling millions of students, professors, and working engineers to watch, learn, and ask questions in real time, without visiting the site.


That opportunity was not fully seized then. The Vertical 3D Printing era gives us a second chance.


Please read my 2021 letter:

► "Unfair, Dear Narendrabhai" — https://myblogepage.blogspot.com/2021/07/unfair-dear-narendrabhai.html


My Recommendations:


1. Commission a tower-crane (vertical) 3D printing pilot on one PMAY-U 2.0 high-rise site — invite Luyten and comparable firms under BMTPC supervision.


2. Issue a National Construction Technology Policy — converting the one-off GHTC challenge into standing, repeatable procurement policy.


3. Mandate live-streaming of all 3D printing pilot sites to Civil Engineering colleges via dedicated YouTube / Swayamprabha channels — making this a national skills and learning event, not just a construction project.


4. Couple the technology to export strategy — train India's 71-million-strong construction workforce to bid for Gulf-financed reconstruction projects in Gaza, Syria, and Iran.


The technology has finally caught up to the vision. The policy will must now catch up to the technology.


With regards and continued faith in India's built future,


Hemen Parekh

hcp@RecruitGuru.com

www.hemenparekh.ai | www.IndiaAGI.ai

Mumbai — 15 June 2026


CC: Shri Tokhan Sahu (MoS, HUA) · BMTPC · CIDC · 

Saving Civil Life on Railway Tracks

 Saving Civil Life on Railway Tracks — My TIDS Proposal & Alstom's Parallel

 Innovation


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


Respected Shri Ashwini Vaishnawji,


Namaste.


I write to you as a 92-year-old blogger and policy thinker who has been proposing technology-driven solutions for India's railways for several years.


The subject of this letter is the tragic and preventable loss of wildlife — and occasionally human lives — at the intersection of railway tracks and forest corridors. I call this the "Civil Life" problem: the daily, silent toll on our nation's biodiversity caused by train-animal collisions.


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MY PRIOR PROPOSAL — TIDS

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Some years ago, I proposed a Track Intrusion Detection System (TIDS) on my blog (myblogepage.blogspot.com — search: TIDS), envisioning AI-powered cameras, sensors, and acoustic/light-based deterrents placed along forest-abutting railway corridors to:


• Detect animal presence in or near the track zone in real time

• Alert loco pilots, station masters, and control rooms with sufficient lead time

• Repel animals using sound or light signals — scaring them away rather than letting a collision happen


This was not just detection — it was detection + deterrence, a two-stage system.


──────────────────────────────────

WHAT ALSTOM IS NOW DOING IN SWEDEN

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I was therefore deeply interested to read about Alstom's wildlife protection initiative, currently being validated in Sweden in collaboration with partner Flox and customers TiB and VR.


Alstom describes their system as combining:

• Advanced vision systems (cameras / AI)

• A trained brain (intelligent algorithms)

• Tailored repellent acoustics — to herd animals away from tracks


The inspiration, Alstom says, is the ancient practice of "herding."


This is precisely the two-stage logic I described in TIDS — detect, then deter.


Sweden currently records approximately 5,000 wildlife collisions annually on its railways — nearly 14 per day. India's numbers, given our far larger rail network and rich biodiversity (elephants, tigers, leopards), are likely far higher.


──────────────────────────────────

WHAT INDIAN RAILWAYS HAS ALREADY STARTED

──────────────────────────────────


I am aware that Indian Railways has already taken encouraging steps:


• Northeast Frontier Railway (NFR) has deployed a fibre-optic Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) based IDS across 64 km of elephant corridors in West Bengal and Assam, with plans to expand to 146+ km by April 2026.

• AI-enabled sensors are being installed at identified wildlife corridor locations to alert loco pilots 0.5 km in advance.

• Rajasthan's Forest Department is now deploying AI-based surveillance in wildlife sanctuaries.


These are welcome steps. But they are largely detection-only. The missing piece is deterrence — the acoustic/light-based repellent layer that Alstom is now validating in Europe.


──────────────────────────────────

MY REQUEST

──────────────────────────────────


I humbly request that the Ministry of Railways:


1. Consider formally integrating a deterrence layer (acoustic repellents, directional light signals) alongside the DAS/IDS systems already being rolled out — completing the TIDS vision.


2. Explore a Technology Partnership with Alstom's Innovation Station (Stockholm) to adapt their wildlife herding system for Indian conditions — our animals, our forest densities, our terrain.


3. Extend the IDS/TIDS rollout beyond elephant corridors to include tiger reserves, leopard zones, and migratory bird corridors, in coordination with the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change.


4. Consider this a "Civil Life" initiative — a branding that gives wildlife protection the same policy urgency as passenger safety.


Every animal killed on a railway track is a loss from our national natural heritage — and every such collision also delays trains, damages locomotives, and demoralises loco pilots who carry the trauma for life.


With AI, acoustics, and optical sensing now mature technologies, there is no reason this problem should persist.


I remain, as always, available to elaborate on any of these ideas.


With warm regards and deep respect,


Hemen Parekh

Founder, RecruitGuru.com | Blogger since 2016

hemenparekh.in | myblogepage.blogspot.com | hemenparekh.ai

Mumbai — 15 June 2026

Sunday, 14 June 2026

Justice : Wherefore Art Thou , O Justice ?

 

Justice Delayed : 55 Million Reasons to Act NOW !

— Hemen Parekh  |  14 June 2026  |  www.hemenparekh.in

◉   What Happened ?

The Supreme Court of India has just formed a high-powered Judicial Infrastructure Advisory Committee, headed by Justice Aravind Kumar, to prepare a nationwide roadmap for modernising courts at every level — district courts, High Courts, and tribunals. The Committee is expected to recommend construction standards, digital integration, hybrid hearing systems, security mechanisms, and litigant-friendly facilities. Reports suggest the judiciary may seek a budgetary allocation of ₹ 40,000 – 50,000 crore from the Government of India to implement the plan.

Hindustan Times covered this on 12 May 2026 :
➤  https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/supreme-court-forms-panel-to-prepare-roadmap-for-judicial-infrastructure-101778644850010.html

Why does this matter so urgently ? Because as of March 2026, India's courts are carrying a staggering 55.8 million pending cases — 49 million in district courts, 6.2 million in High Courts, and over 80,000 in the Supreme Court itself. Of these, 17.2 million cases have been dragging on for more than five years. The average judge is currently handling over 2,200 cases simultaneously. And India spends a mere 0.08% of its total budget on its entire judiciary.


◉   Did I Not Say This — Eight Years Ago ?

On 13 September 2018, I published a blog titled "Justice Delayed is Justice Denied". Here is the link — dated, archived, and verifiable :
➤  https://myblogepage.blogspot.com/2018/09/justice-delayed-is-justice-denied.html

At that time, the backlog stood at 2.76 crore (27.6 million) cases in district and subordinate courts alone, with 5,223 vacant judge posts. I had anchored the blog on Beijing's 24/7 internet court — where cases were filed online, heard via video call, and the court never closed — and contrasted it with India's chronic paralysis.

My specific prescription, written in September 2018, was to launch a portal — www.OnlineJustice.gov.in — with the following features :

  1. Online case filing — no need to go to court with paper-based material
  2. Virtual / online court rooms — not limited by any physical constraints; software could open as many as required
  3. Audio-Video Conference hearings for all trials
  4. Online payment of court fees and lawyer fees
  5. Public video broadcast of hearings
  6. Upload / download of all case documents
  7. Empanelled lawyers with transparent fee tariffs
  8. AI-computed case disposal time targets — based on historical data, continuously updated
  9. Bonus-cum-Penalty formula for judges — linked to actual vs target disposal time, paid into Jan Dhan accounts
  10. Retired judges on per-case retainer basis — to conduct online trials from home, without imposing any infrastructure burden on the State

I had urged then Chief Justice Deepak Misra to treat my email as a PIL and direct the government to act. Eight years later, the backlog has doubled — from 27.6 million to 55.8 million cases.


◉   What Has Been Done — And What Has Not

Here is an honest scorecard of my 2018 suggestions against where India stands in June 2026 :

My Suggestion — Sept 2018Status — June 2026
Online portal for case filing✅   Partially done via e-Courts Phase III; limited rollout
Virtual / online court rooms — unlimited by physical space✅   Video-conferencing adopted post-COVID; now being institutionalised
Uniform standards — small towns equal to big cities✅   Now explicitly a goal of the new Committee
National digital infrastructure roadmap✅   Exactly what the new Committee has been tasked to create
Empanelled lawyers with transparent fee tariffs🔶   Still patchy and unstructured nationally
AI-computed case disposal time targets❌   Not yet proposed or implemented anywhere
Bonus-cum-Penalty formula for judges❌   Not yet proposed or implemented anywhere
Retired judges on per-case retainer❌   Not yet proposed or implemented anywhere

Vindication Score : ~ 55% — four of my eight core suggestions are now either implemented or formally on the agenda of the new Committee. The remaining three — the most original, the most cost-effective, and the most transformative — remain untouched.


◉   The Three Missing Pieces

Building new court complexes and laying fibre cables will cost ₹ 40,000 crore and take a decade. The three ideas below will cost a fraction of that — and can be implemented within 12 months :

1. AI-Computed Case Disposal Time Targets
Every case filed on the online portal gets an AI-assigned expected disposal date, computed from historical data of similar cases. This single change makes delays visible, measurable, and accountable — for the first time in Indian judicial history.

2. Bonus-cum-Penalty Formula for Judges
A judge who disposes a case before the AI-computed target date gets a performance bonus — paid digitally into a Jan Dhan account. A judge who exceeds the target without documented reason faces a proportional penalty. No brickbats, no public humiliation — just transparent, data-driven accountability, as any modern organisation would expect of its professionals.

3. Retired Judges on Per-Case Retainer
India has thousands of retired judges — experienced, available, and currently idle. Rope them in to conduct online trials from the comfort of their homes, paid a per-case retainer into their Jan Dhan accounts. No courtroom. No infrastructure. No commute. Just a broadband connection and a video camera. This alone could add the equivalent of 10,000 new judges overnight — at near-zero capital cost.


◉   My Humble Request to Hon. Chief Justice Surya Kant

Hon. Chief Justice Surya Kantji, you have taken a bold and commendable step in forming the Judicial Infrastructure Advisory Committee. I urge you — and Justice Aravind Kumar's Committee — to consider adding the following three items to its mandate :

  1. Direct NIC / MeitY to develop an AI module for case disposal time prediction, integrated with the National Judicial Data Grid (NJDG), deployable within 6 months.
  2. Recommend to Parliament a transparent performance incentive framework for all judicial officers — linked to AI-measured disposal time targets — as a pilot in three High Courts.
  3. Launch a National Retired Judges Online Panel — a dedicated cadre of retired judges empanelled to hear online cases on a per-case retainer basis, reducing the effective case load on sitting judges by 30% within one year.

At 55.8 million pending cases and counting, India cannot afford to spend the next decade building courtrooms while the case mountain grows. The three suggestions above require no cement, no steel, and no ₹ 40,000 crore. They require only political will, a broadband connection, and an AI model.

I am a 93-year-old blogger, not a lawyer. I cannot file a PIL. But I can write — and I have been writing about this since 2018. I urge this Committee to prove that India's judiciary can move faster than the backlog.


Hemen Parekh  |  14 June 2026  |  Mumbai, India
✉  hcp@RecruitGuru.com  |  🌐  www.hemenparekh.in  |  🤖  www.hemenparekh.ai

Prior Art Reference :   "Justice Delayed is Justice Denied" — 13 Sept 2018