Here are the big stories from Karnataka today

morly
5 Min Read


A view of the waste to energy plant at Bidadi near Bengaluru.
| Photo Credit: RAVICHANDRAN N

1. Failure of waste-to-energy plant exposes lack of segregation in Bengaluru 

On the one hand, where the civic administration is finding it difficult to manage the waste in Bengaluru, the waste-to-energy (WtE) plant at Bidadi, is unable to get the required amount of dry waste to produce energy. Karnataka’s first of its kind WtE plant, a joint venture of Karnataka Power Corporation Limited (KPCL) and BBMP, was set up across 10 acres of the vast 163-acre KPCL premises.

The plant has not been able to generate its full capacity of 11.5 Megawatts (MW) of electricity every day, due to the lack of dry waste. The plant requires 600 metric tonnes of properly segregated dry waste every day to produce 11.5 MW of electricity. The KPCL officials say that they have been receiving not more than 400 metric tonnes of waste every day from the BBMP.

2. Karnataka students achieve 99.7% results in Class 10 ICSE and 99.63% in Class 12 ISC exams

Karnataka students have achieved a pass percentage of 99.70% in the class 10 ICSE exams conducted by the Council for the Indian School Certificate Examinations (CISCE). The results were announced on April 30. Class 12 students of ISC achieved a pass percentage of 99.63%.

A total of 29,745 students from 425 schools in the State had written their class 10 exams, while 2,442 students from 55 schools had given their class 12 examinations. Girls outshone boys (pass percentage of 99.58%) in class 10 with a pass percentage of 99.82%. In ISC, boys outdid girls (99.61%) with 99.65% results. A total of 89 students of class 10, and 9 students of class 12 have failed.

3. Mysuru students come up with sustainable cooking solution to help street food vendors

A sustainable cooking solution designed by two class 10 students of Mysuru, which seeks to help street food vendors by reducing fuel consumption and minimising environmental impact, has qualified for funding by the Ministry of Education to not only develop the product, but also for its commercialisation.

The cooking solution — Agnipath — was designed by Shruthakeerthi V. and Aditi V., students of Excel Public School (EPS) in Mysuru. It was pitted against close to one lakh entries from across India in the latest edition of School Innovation Marathon (SIM) organised jointly by Union Ministry of Education, Atal Innovation Mission (AIM) and Niti Ayog.

4. Unified Karnataka Grameena Bank to come into existence on May 1

As per a notification issued by the Central Government in line with its ‘One state, One RRB’ policy, a unified Karnataka Grameena Bank (KGB) with its headquarter at Ballari, will come into existence on May 1. KGB has been formed by the amalgamation of Karnataka Vikas Grameena Bank (KVGB) and Karnataka Grameena Bank (KGB).

KVGB, headquartered in Dharwad, had 629 branches across 9 districts, while KGB, headquartered in Ballari, had 1,122 branches across 22 districts. The newly-formed Karnataka Grameena Bank will continue to be government owned, with the Central Government holding a 50% stake, the State Government 15% and Canara Bank (sponsor bank) 35%.

5. IKEA India’s first ‘Plan and Order Point’ opens in Bengaluru

Swedish home furnishings retailer IKEA opened its first Plan and Order Point (PaOP) in India, in Bengaluru, on April 30. Located at the Essensai 067 Experience Centre on Whitefield-Hoskote Road, it will serve consumers in east Bengaluru.

Spanning 740 sqm, the new format, according to IKEA, serves as a dedicated customer meeting point, with personalised consultations, planning support, and installation services, with access to IKEA’s full home furnishing range of over 7,000 products. 



Source link

[ad_3]

[ad_4]

Share This Article
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *