Publications
R Srikanth co-authored Sustainability of Coal Mining: Case study of Dorli-Bellampalli coal mines NIAS Research Report No. NIAS/NSE/EEP/U/RR/06/2020 |
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Tejal Kanitkar Associate Professor, Energy, Environment and Climate Change Programme Is India concerned about its energy security? https://www.theindiaforum.in/article/india-concerned-about-its-energy-security The India Forum, 2 October 2020. 7 pages. India's overambitious targets for solar energy could destabilize its power sector and threaten energy security. Rather than 'green' political posturing, the country must plan an energy transition based on its developmental interests. |
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R Srikanth Coal mining technology and practices in India: Challenges and prospects. In: Future of Coal in India: Smooth Transition or Bumpy Road Ahead? Notion Press and Brookings India |
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Ashni Kumar Dhawale, Anindya Sinha, M Ananda Kumar Ashni Kumar Dhawale is PhD Scholar; Anindya Sinha is Professor, Animal Behaviour and Cognition Programme Changing ecologies, shifting behaviours: Behavioural responses of a rainforest primate, the lion-tailed macaque Macaca silenus, to a matrix of anthropogenic habitats in southern India https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0238695 PLoS One, September 2020 This study highlights the importance of understanding behavioural changes displayed by animals in response to human interactions; such knowledge could be crucial for the planning and implementation of management and conservation strategies for endangered species such as the lion-tailed macaque and possibly other wildlife in the increasingly anthropogenic landscapes of the tropical world. |
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R Srikanth, A V Krishnan R Srikanth is Professor and Head; A V Krishnan is Visiting Professor, Energy, Environment and Climate Change Programme NIAS Transition Plan for Thermal Power Plants in India NIAS Policy Brief, September 2020 The NIAS Transition Plan for Thermal Power Plants (TPPs) recommends the progressive retirement of obsolete TPPs while shifting the load to existing and under-construction, modern TPPs and Nuclear Power Plants (NPPs) instead of retrofitting them with costly Flue Gas Desulfurisers (FGDs). Stack heights mandated for TPPs in India are designed to disperse SO2 emissions to ensure that ambient air SO2 levels comply with National standards. FGDs must be mandated only for TPPs in urban or sensitive or highly polluted areas since they increase specific CO2 emissions and water requirements and also hike tariffs. TPPs can use washed coal and retrofit high-performance Electrostatic Precipitators to reduce Particulate Matter (PM) emissions by 99.97 per cent without major capex. |
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Tejal Kanitkar co-authored Associate Professor, Energy, Environment and Climate Change Programme Impact of the Covid 19 pandemic on the Indian economy: A critical assessment http://ec2-3-108-111-222.ap-south-1.compute.amazonaws.com/niastestweb/sites/default/files/2022-03/2020-WP-18-Tejal-Kanitkar-Final.pdf NIAS Working Paper, September 2020 This paper analyses the economic impact of Covid-19 in India. It documents the trajectory of infections and the lockdown and evaluates the extent of economic losses due to the lockdown. It also critically assesses the economic response of the Indian government to the pandemic and the lockdown. |
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Tejal Kanitkar Associate Professor, Energy, Environment and Climate Change Programme Is India concerned about its energy security? https://www.theindiaforum.in/article/india-concerned-about-its-energy-security The India Forum, September 2020 India's overambitious targets for solar energy could destabilize its power sector and threaten energy security. Rather than 'green' political posturing, the country must plan an energy transition based on its developmental interests. |
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Tejal Kanitkar Associate Professor, Energy, Environment and Climate Change Programme The COVID-19 lockdown in India: Impacts on the economy and the power sector. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.glt.2020.07.005 Global Transitions, August 2020 This paper demonstrates the use of a linear Input-Output (IO) model to estimate the economic losses in India due to COVID-19. The results show that depending on the duration of the lockdown, the Indian economy is likely to face a loss of about 10–31% of its GDP. The paper also discusses the impacts of COVID-19 on the demand and supply of electricity and CO2 emissions from the power sector. The cost of avoided carbon is approximately 186–264 $/tCO2. |