Category Archives: Business & Economy

Rudresh Gowda, Congress MLA, dead

RudreshGowdaBF25mar2018

He represented Belur constituency for two terms

Y.N. Rudresh Gowda, Congress MLA representing the Belur Assembly constituency, passed away in a private hospital here on Saturday. He was 63.

He was hospitalised after he collapsed on the way to Bengaluru to cast his vote in the Rajya Sabha elections on Friday.

Rudresh Gowda began his political carrier in 1985 when he was 30. He was a member of the Hassan Zilla Panchayat from 1985 to 1996 and was its president during 1995–96. He was a member of Parliament from the Janata Dal when H.D. Deve Gowda was the Prime Minister. He quit the JD(S) and joined the Congress in 2004. He represented Belur constituency for two terms — 2008–13 and 2013–18.

Rudresh Gowda is survived by his wife, M.N. Keerthana, daughter, Y.N. Anshrutha, five brothers, and four sisters. He hailed from a coffee planter’s family known for its philanthropic activities in the district.

Tributes paid

Hundreds of people paid tributes to him when his body was kept on the premises of the District Congress Committee office and the Deputy Commissioner’s office in Hassan.

The last rites will be performed at his estate at Cheekanahalli in Belur taluk on Sunday. Congress president Rahul Gandhi, who is touring Mysuru district, and Chief Minister Siddaramaiah are expected to participate in the funeral.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> States> Karnataka / by Special Correspondent / Bengaluru – Hassan, March 25th, 2018

Karnataka: Facebook group for farmers runs online agriculture manifesto

AgricultureFBmpos24mar2018

Puttur :

Ahead of the upcoming assembly elections in Karnataka some of the agriculturists in the state have started an online agriculture manifesto campaign through a Facebook group.

The Facebook group created by the agriculturists has 2.77 lakh active members across the world. According to Mahesh Pucchapadi , one of group’s admin, the group members include both Indians and NRIs.

Earlier, the group members were from the areas of Puttur and Sullia only, but now it has members from across the world, said Ramesh Delampadi, one of the group admin.

Manifesto for Farmers

It is said that the youths are not interested in agriculture but the recent trend has seen high salaried people too turning to agriculture sector. So with the technological advancement, the expectations of the agriculturists have risen. The admins say that they discuss the problems faced by the agriculturists in their Facebook group.

Following are the group’s demands for political parties and their election manifesto:

– 24 hours power supply for agriculture pump sets
– Market Price Declaration for agricultural products
– Support price announcement when price falls down for agri products
– Support for using modern technology

– Control of mediator

– Supporting educated people who enter the agriculture sector

– Hiring science graduates to village level of agriculture technological information

– Water refilling system to be made mandatory.

– Taluk level agriculture warehouses.

– Support for cattle farming and products selling

Read this story in Kannada

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City News> Bangalore News / by Vijay Karnataka / March 23rd, 2018

Profits mushroom for this urban farmer

Kamala
Kamala

Kamala makes IRs. 30,000 a month after turning her Bengaluru house into a mushroom farm

A small house can turn into an urban farm, yielding a tidy income. That is what it did for 40-year-old Kamala, who gave up her job as a garment worker in Bengaluru and turned her house in a 1,200 sq. ft. plot into a mushroom farm.

Two decades of back-breaking work in different garment factories in the city convinced the woman, who has a pre-university education, that it was time to try something less strenuous. “The continuous hard work does not even give you enough time to visit the washroom. It started making me feel as though I was in jail,” she recalls.

She quit the garment job that was fetching her ₹8,000 a month and chanced upon an article on mushrooms in a magazine. Inspired, she went to Indian Institute of Horticultural Research (IIHR), 4 km from her house on Tumakuru road on the city’s outskirts, and enrolled in a mushroom cultivation course.

“A short training session by experts was offered, after which I launched cultivation in my house about two years ago. It started with two to three kg a month. Now I grow 50 to 60 kg of oyster mushrooms a month without engaging labour, and earn a profit of about ₹30,000,” she says proudly.

What she cultivates is sold to hotels and vegetable shops regularly. Now that Ms. Kamala has mastered the basics, she has joined a training programme at IIHR on value addition: turning leftover mushrooms into sambar powder and ready-to-eat products.

Her quest now is to set up an unique hotel that is dedicated to mushroom dishes in her husband’s home town of Kushalanagar in Kodagu district. He works as a supervisor in a garment unit, and the couple have a daughter and a son.

“I know I have the potential to increase mushroom production five-fold. But I cannot raise the resources required for such an increase on my own. I am looking for government assistance in any form,” she says.

Ms. Kamala has become an example for her former colleagues in the garment industry, and some have adopted her business model. “People from farming families too can add to their incomes with mushrooms,” she says. On Thursday, she was honoured by the IIHR for her achievements at the inaugural session of its three-day national horticultural fair which attracted farmers from several States.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> States> Karnataka / by B S Satish Kumar / Bengaluru – March 16th, 2018

Foodpanda launches tech centre in Bengaluru, to hire 100 personnel

New Delhi:

Online food delivery marketplace Foodpanda on Tuesday announced the launch of its dedicated technology centre in Bengaluru, thus venturing into advanced technology such as machine learning and data analytics.

The state-of-the-art tech centre will be aimed to strengthen the technology infrastructure, product capabilities and end user experience for the company. A blueprint has been drawn to hire 100 team members with strong tech background in a span of six to nine months.

The tech center will be fully operational in a couple of weeks, and will be headed by Nitin Gupta, who was recently appointed as the Head of Engineering at Foodpanda.

The tech centre will extensively work on re-imagining the product, integrate functions and introduce specialised domains of machine learning and data sciences. This would be directed to develop more personalised offerings for the restaurant partners and millions of prospective customers in the country.

The tech centre is envisioned to become a hub for the best tech talent working in the food tech space in the country, and will also be used for aggressive R&D functions in the future while leveraging best practices from around the world.

“Through the technology centre in Bengaluru, we envision to bring together the best team of tech enthusiasts working on building a future ready product. Leveraging robust data sciences and machine learning, we intend to personalise offerings for all our stakeholders. Following the commitment to strengthen our delivery network, this is an instrumental step towards building a strong food tech ecosystem in the country,” said Foodpanda India CEO, Pranay Jivrajka.

With Foodpanda’s recent allocation of Rs. 400 crores for delivery logistics, the tech centre will ensure an aggressive push in the direction of building a seamless experience for all its stakeholders – partner restaurants, riders, and end consumers – and creating a significant long-term business value.

source: http://www.gadgetsnow.com / Gadgets Now / Home> News> Tech News / by ANI / March 14th, 2018

Indo-French centre of excellence

The Indo-French Centre of Excellence in Electricity Automation and Energy was inaugurated by French Minister of Higher Education, Research and Innovation Frédérique Vidal on Monday at the New Horizon College of Engineering.

According to a press release issued by the Consulate General of France, this was an initiative of French company Schneider Electric, which would impart technical training to future professionals. It would have a combination of theoretical knowledge with practical use of tools and equipment, the release added.

At the same event, the Minister also witnessed the signing of a partnership between New Horizon College of Engineering and CMQ3M of Rouen, France, which is an institute specialising in electrical engineering and efficiency.

The Minister was on a three day visit to India. On Monday, she also visited the ISRO Satellite Integration and test establishment, and had a collective meeting with French companies which have research and development centres in the city.

She visited the Indian Institute of Science to focus on Indo-French collaborations in the field of scientific research undertaken at IISc. She met French scholars and students on the campus.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Bengaluru / by Staff Reporter / March 12th, 2018

Soulfood for craftsmen

An artisan weaving a Gomi Teni sari | Photo Credit: Special Arrangement
An artisan weaving a Gomi Teni sari | Photo Credit: Special Arrangement

Hemalatha Jain is reinventing ancient, forgotten weaves from India’s heartlands

The Gomi Teni sari from North Karnataka, was worn by women in the 12th century.

“They haven’t been worn in over 40 years, though their border styles are used in some versions of the Ilkal sari,” says Hemalatha Jain, who is bringing the sari to Bengaluru, after having worked on its revival through her Punarjeevana initiative which seeks to empower the weavers and sustain such crafts.

“The sari’s motifs (especially on the border) evoke the patterns of jowar seeds, a prominent crop in North Karnataka, and are represented by the herringbone stitch. Gomi Teni saris used to be gifted to pregnant women and were worn by married women during the Sankranti festival. The sari is gifted on these occasions because it represents prosperity.”

She has already revived the Patteda Anchu craft, in collaboration with local craftsmen in Karnataka. She began her work in the town of Gajendragarh (Gadag district).

“When I was working in Karnataka on these crafts, I came across historical evidence for seven saris. The Gomi Teni is among them. It is an everyday kind of sari worn by farmers and other locals. It died out because of power looms and the availability of cheaper material. I was able to get a worn out sample of the sari and I decided to stick with cotton for the revival because of the hot weather in these regions,” explains Hemalatha.

“The reason I took this up is that many weavers want to work with art and I wanted to help them increase the number of looms so more artisans can come together and create a prosperous cluster.”

Beginning with one weaver, she now has a team of 45, including over 35 weavers and other artisans associated with ancillary activities around weaving.

Through her intervention in the revival process, she has brought out saris featuring check body with 2/20 s × 2/40s count and a five-inch border with Gomi design. The saris are reversible with two different pallus (there is no right-side or wrong-side to the sari) and two different borders. They have been dyed using eco-friendly dyes.

“The saris were traditionally made in red, brown and yellow because those were the colours that were available there. They didn’t use colours like black. But now we have saris in a range of colours from navy blue to black and pastel shades, apart from red,” explains Hemalatha. “We are also working to use as little water as possible because North Karnataka doesn’t have much water. Our saris are low-maintenance, the colour fastness is good. They can be washed in the machine, they don’t need any starch, they don’t even need to be ironed.”

Hemalatha brought in these characteristics by keeping the yarn count thick, so the sari doesn’t normally wrinkle.

“I am working on more such saris but I don’t want to talk about them just yet because there is a high danger of replication and duplication in this field.”

The Gomi Teni sari will be brought to Bengaluru tomorrow at Kamalini, the craft store by Crafts Council of Karnataka.

The saris will be on display at Sri Bhooma, 17th Cross, Malleshwaram until March 10. For details, call 23567470.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Bengaluru / by Harshini Vakkalanka / March 08th, 2018

Xylem expands Indian operations, opens tech centre in Bengaluru

Bengaluru :

Xylem Inc, an NYSE listed global water technology company, has expanded its Indian operations by opening an India Technology and Customer Experience Centre in Bengaluru. Today’s launch will be followed by opening of a similar technology centre in Vadodara, Gujarat.

Xylem is bringing together a broad spectrum of competencies at these centres to accelerate the development of critical water and infrastructure solutions for its customers in India and around the world. The India Technology Centre in Bengaluru was opened by Mahendra Jain, Karnataka Additional Chief Secretary, Urban Development Department, and Patrick Decker, President and CEO of Xylem.

The centre in Bengaluru will develop products and solutions with a focus on software and advanced infrastructure analytics. The centre will ultimately have over 400 engineers creating smart, innovative solutions to treat, analyse, monitor and return water to the environment, and to address critical energy resource infrastructure needs.

source: http://www.thehindubusinessline.com / Business Line / Home> Specials / by Anil Urs / Bengaluru – March 06th, 2018

Bengaluru’s first helitaxi service takes off

At Electronics City, the helicopter will land in Thumby Aviation’s facility in Phase I, near the toll plaza. | Photo Credit: Email Handout
At Electronics City, the helicopter will land in Thumby Aviation’s facility in Phase I, near the toll plaza. | Photo Credit: Email Handout

Made two round trips on day one between KIA and Electronics City

App-based taxi service took on a whole new meaning on Monday when Bengaluru’s first helitaxi service took off, ferrying passengers from Kempegowda International Airport (KIA) to Electronics City in 15 minutes. The helitaxi made two trips, with the first one taking off at 6.30 a.m.

The helitaxi, touted to be the first such service in the country, was announced in August 2017 by Union Minister of State for Civil Aviation Jayant Sinha. The service is being offered by KIA in partnership with Thumby Aviation Pvt Ltd, in an effort to reduce the time taken to travel to the city from the international airport.

According to Capt. K.N.G. Nair, Chairman and Managing Director, Thumby Aviation, the helicopter can ferry six passengers. “On the first trip, we had four passengers from KIA. On the way back from Electronics City, we had five passengers. In the second trip, we had three passengers from KIA and two on the way back.” He added that they did not accept too many bookings for Monday as it was the inaugural service.

How does it work?

Those who want to avail the service can book a seat through the app (Heli Taxii). The fare is ₹4,130 per person, including GST. Once passengers exit the arrival lounge, the company has arranged vehicles to ferry passengers to its facility in the KIA premises, which would be a four-minute ride. For those heading to KIA, the company vehicle will drop passengers at the departure lounge.

At Electronics City, the helicopter will land in Thumby Aviation’s facility in Phase I, near the toll plaza.

More helicopters soon

At present, the company is operating only one helicopter. The number will increase depending on the demand. “Our service is not affecting any activities at the international airport. We have a different route, which is approved by the Ministry of Defence and Airports Authority of India, which does not interfere with the air force related traffic in Yelahanka or HAL either,” Mr. Nair added.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Bengaluru /  by Staff Reporter / March 05th, 2018

Cashew baron Gurpur Sadanand Prabhu no more

Mangaluru :

Gurpur Sadanand Prabhu, cashew industry pioneer and founder of the city-based Achal Industries, passed away on Sunday. He was 93.

He is survived by his wife Rohini Prabhu and three children
He is survived by his wife Rohini Prabhu and three children

He is survived by his wife Rohini Prabhu and three children — son Giridhar Prabhu and daughters Prafulla Kamath and Anuradha Shenoy.

Prabhu had been the past president of Kanara Chamber of Commerce & Industry. He was actively associated with Mangalore Cashew Manufacturers’ Association.

According to his family, the last rites were held at his residence ‘Ananya’ at Bejai Kapikad followed by funeral at his hometown Gurpur.

Cashew industry leaders and past presidents of Karnataka Cashew Manufacturers’ Association, Kalbhavi Prakash Rao, Bola Ramanath Kamath, Bola Rahul Kamath, and others have condoled the demise of Prabhu.

Prabhu, born in 1925, was a native of Gurpur town in the outskirts of the city. After matriculation, he started his career as a teacher and later moved into business.

He joined as a partner with his relative in Konchady Appayya Shabhogue and Company at Bunder in the city.

Subsequently, he started Sadananda Prabhu and Company, a groundnut oil manufacturing unit.

In 1981, he established Achal Industries, one of the first industries to start at the newly formed Baikampady Industrial Area. In 1983, he started his second unit Achal Cashews at Turkewadi, a small village in Maharashtra.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Mangalore News / TNN / March 05th, 2018

Women as game-changers

The 8th International Women’s Conference will host women from all over the world who share the objective of a stress and violence free society

Since its first edition in 2005, the International Women’s Conference (IWC) has hosted over 375 speakers and 5,500 delegates from over 100 countries. This February (23-25) in its eighth edition, it is all set to host 500 women delegates from diverse backgrounds and professions, across the world.

“This year’s theme is ‘Life: A Mystical Journey’. In the past we have dealt with a wide variety of subjects from women in technology to women in leadership, and exploring inner beauty. This time, our chairperson, Bhanumathi Narasimhan, wanted to explore the mystical aspect, through spirituality. We will have sessions on everything from the relationship between science and spirituality to 360 degree views on behaviour patterns,” says Chinky Sen, one of the lead organisers of the conference.

The 2018 edition of the conference will feature a range of speakers from actor Rani Mukherji to environmentalist Vandana Shiva; Mridula Sinha, Governor, Goa; Adriana Marais, theoretical physicist, head of innovation at SAP Africa; Professor Maithree Wickramasinghe, founder director of Center for Gender Studies at the University of Kelaniya to Arundhati Bhattacharya, former chairman, State Bank of India; and Chetna Gala Sinha, Founder-Chairperson Mann Deshi Bank and Mann Deshi Foundation.

“Women are leading peacemakers. They work together towards creating a stress-free, violence-free society. The conference is a message in peace and unity,” says Bhanumathi Narasimhan, Chairperson, IWC.

The goal of the conference, which is hosted at the Art of Living International Centre, is individual development and collective action and to ‘facilitate partnership-building and leadership development among women leaders globally’.

“The sessions at the conference will be engaging and exciting. Among the highlights this year, is an exclusive dialogue with Sri Sri Ravi Shankar (Founder, Art of Living), called ‘Mind Matters’. There are some interesting sessions on topics such as ‘Intuition, Innovation and Creativity’; on life as a game, a play, a war; and the session on 360 degree behaviour patterns will also address how they can be changed through yoga and meditation,” says Sen.

The conference is also associated with the Art of Living’s ‘Gift A Smile’ project, which offers education to over 58,000 students in 435 free schools across 20 Indian states. Girl children comprise 48 per cent of the student demographic and 90 per cent of the students are first-generation learners.

This year the conference will also support the creation of open-defecation free districts in India. The project involves two phases. In the first phase, the organisation will work towards sensitisation and awareness, on the importance of health and hygiene. “We have already reached out to 12 gram panchayats in seven states. We will be presenting the report in the conference. We will then build toilets in the second phase.”

The organisation plans to build over 4000 toilets. In keeping with another social impact tradition, the conference will also include a signature campaign on violence against women and on gender equality.

The IWC in its previous editions, has worked on initiatives such as constructing homes for the underprivileged, creating awareness on environmental care, organising a movement to stop violence against women, and empowering women through skills training. It has also worked with the World Bank Institute to develop empowerment schemes for women in vulnerable nations and expanded vocational training for widows in Iraq.

The 8th International Women’s Conference will take place between February 23 and February 25 at the Art of Living International Centre on Kanakapura Road. For details visit artofliving.org/iwc.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Society / by Harshini Vakkalanka / February 20th, 2018