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The president was inaugurating the country’s first-of- its-kind microgrid power project at the Indian Institute of Engineering Science and Technology (IIEST) at Shibpur here that uses solar, wind and biogas energy to produce electricity.
He said he was “happy” that the Cabinet has decided to ramp up power generation by clearing a proposal to build ten indigenous Pressurised Heavy Water Reactors, each with a capacity to produce 700 MW.
Mukherjee said more than 300 million people in the country still do not have access to power. “We have to provide electricity to ordinary people,” he said, adding that there is a need to emphasise on renewable energy to meet the demand.
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Mukherjee also inaugurated the Centre for Water and Environmental Research, which will focus on ways to supply safe drinking water, besides irrigation.
Former ISRO chairman and chairperson of the IIEST Board of Governors, K Radhakrishnan, its director Ajoy Kumar Ray, and registrar Biman Bandyopadhyay were present at the programme, besides West Bengal Power Minister Sovandeb Chattopadhyay.
The Integrated Renewable Energy Smart Microgrid Centre at the institute utilises 600-1,000 Kg of kitchen and food waste from the entire campus to prOduce biogas energy.
It can offer a complete solution for 24×7 electricity access in regions having either no grid or weak and unreliable grid, project coordinator professor Hiranmay Saha said.
The smart grid is a project of the West Bengal Renewable Energy Development Agency.
At an event at the Raj Bhavan in Kolkata, the president received the first copies of two books in Bengali.
‘Jnan, A-Jnan O Bijnan — Popper-er Jnantatta’ (knowledge, ignorance and science — Popper’s theory of knowledge) and ‘Samudra Banijjer Prekshite Sthala Banijjer, Bharat Mahasagar Anchal, 1500-1800’ (overland trade in the backdrop of oceanic trade, Indian Ocean Region) have been written by retired professors of the Calcutta University, Mahasweta Chaudhury and Sushil Chaudhury respectively.