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Mountaineer | Anurag Nallavelli | First Civilian To Climb 8000m
Global IndianstoryAnurag Nallaveli peaks sans oxygen, has climbed Manaslu, Pico de Orizaba & Denali
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Anurag Nallaveli peaks sans oxygen, has climbed Manaslu, Pico de Orizaba & Denali

Written by: Vikram Sharma

(December 30, 2021) At 2 am on September 28, 2021, mountaineer and software engineer Anurag Nallavelli left Camp-4 to summit Mount Manaslu — the eighth highest mountain in the world at 8,163 meters above sea level. He climbed all night in snowy weather with barely any visibility. As he entered the death zone, he “came across” a cafe that was surprisingly “ busy.” On his way to the summit, he saw a Canadian climber’s corpse being dragged by four people. “What the heck?” he wondered as he finally made it to the summit. With that he achieved the unique feat of summiting Mt Manaslu sans supplementary oxygen and sherpa (local guide).

In the death zone (term for an altitude when oxygen pressure is insufficient), the mind and body behave differently and trick you into seeing things that don’t exist. The cafe that Anurag “saw” was unreal. The dead body was real, though.

Mountaineer | Anurag Nallavelli | First Civilian To Climb 8000m

“After I made it to the summit and back at Camp 4, I just laid down and cried. Those images of the dead climber haunted me. I felt helpless and drained, emotionally and physically,” recalls Anurag.

Climbing is meditative, and mountains make Anurag feel alive. “When you are high up in the clouds, you get to see the world from a different perspective. There are no distractions. As you go up in altitude, the air is thinner and every step is difficult. Overcoming hurdles and making it to the top and back safely, empowers you,” he tells Global Indian.

How a software guy turned mountaineer

Born and brought up in Hyderabad, mountain climbing was nowhere in the realm of imagination for this software engineer at Ford Motor Company in Michigan. Back in 2018, Anurag was going through a rough patch – a painful break-up. One April evening, his cousin asked him to join him on a backpacking trip. Anurag had never backpacked, and his first altercation with the mountains was at Havasu Falls in the Grand Canyon, Arizona. In the wilderness for three days, a realisation dawned — he needed to keep busy, and stay away from distractions. Thereafter, the 29-year-old was a changed man who chose to live life on the edge, literally.

Mountaineer | Anurag Nallavelli | First Civilian To Climb 8000m

In 2020, he was to go to Nepal to trek to Mt Everest’s base camp with a friend, and visit his parents. However, the pandemic struck, and his plans went awry. So, he took a month off from work and went to Colorado on a 500-mile trail. “I met other hikers, camped with them and that journey was life-changing. I moved to Oregon to do more,” informs Anurag, who finished his schooling from Narayana Concept School in Hyderabad.

Mount Hood in Oregon was his first adrenaline rush, using ice tools while tarrying through the tough route (Pearly Gates/Old Chute). He later climbed Mt Hood as many as 11 times and Mount Rainier twice — all in the peak of winter.

Mountaineer | Anurag Nallavelli | First Civilian To Climb 8000m

“My climbing partner’s dream was to climb Denali and we decided to attempt it without a guide. Before Denali, I underwent altitude training in Colorado and even stayed in Leadville (at 10,200 feet, it is the highest city in the US) to acclimatise. We climbed some peaks above 14,000 feet during my training in August 2021,” says Anurag, who went to college in Canada. Eventually, he and his friend climbed Denali in June 2021. “I felt stronger, physically and mentally, and then wanted to try something more challenging,” says the techie, who moved to the US in 2015 where he did his Master’s in information technology from Southern New Hampshire University.

Mountaineer | Anurag Nallavelli | First Civilian To Climb 8000m

The Himalayas call out to him

He planned to visit the Himalayas, and attempt to summit an 8,000-metre peak. “As a kid, I was always fond of the Himalayas. Stories of the presence of Lord Shiva always fascinated me. But I had just returned from Denali and could not financially afford to pay for a full-support expedition which cost $20,000. I decided to take only basecamp support as it was going to be a 30 to 40-day expedition,” recalls Anurag, which took care of logistics and food. For everything else, he was on his own. Not having a sherpa is not the norm in these gruelling expeditions. “I read a book No Shortcuts to the Top: Climbing the World’s 14 Highest Peaks by Ed Viesturs and David Roberts. Viesturs was the first American to do all 14,8000 m peaks without supplemental oxygen. That book motivated me to experience the death zone without using supplemental oxygen,” says the ardent climber.

Finally in September, he did the impossible by conquering Manaslu sans supplemental oxygen and Sherpa. “I have made up my mind to climb without supplemental oxygen, no backup if something goes wrong. If I feel unwell during climbs, I would rather come down, instead of using oxygen to summit,” says Anurag, who also scaled Pico de Orizaba, the highest point in Mexico and third highest peak in North America besides the 20-plus 14,000 feet peaks while training for Manaslu.

Mountaineer | Anurag Nallavelli | First Civilian To Climb 8000m

The self-taught mountaineer has no formal training. He has been working in the US since 2015, and has his own set of physical and mental exercises – hiking/climbing peaks with a 50-60 pound (23-27 kg) backpack, rock climbing twice a week and biking at 10,000 feet elevation, camping in bad weather, cold showers, and sleeping on the floor.

The techie’s home base is an animal sanctuary in California. “This is my happy place,” quips the mountaineer, who is currently reading Nimsdai’s Beyond Possible. A big movie buff, before the US, Anurag worked at VFX Studios in Hyderabad. “I worked as a compositor for over a year, and worked on a couple of Telugu movies.”

Mountaineer | Anurag Nallavelli | First Civilian To Climb 8000m

Next on his list is Dhaulagiri, Annapurna and Makalu back-to-back with no supplemental oxygen in March/April 2022. “I have already begun training for it,” informs the February 1992 born, who considers ace shuttler PV Sindhu as his favourite Global Indian.

 

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  • Anurag Nallavelli
  • First civilian to climb 8000 m peak without supplemental oxygen
  • Global Indian
  • Mount Denali
  • Mount Hood
  • Mount Manaslu
  • Mountaineering 101
  • Mt Everest
  • self-taught mountaineer
  • software engineer turned mountaineer
  • Southern New Hampshire University

Published on 30, Dec 2021

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Ramit Debnath: The Cambridge Zero scholar’s data-driven bid for climate action

(June 1, 2024) When the pandemic hit in 2020, people began washing their hands often, wore masks when they stepped out and maintained social distancing protocols. When the vaccines were rolled out, they lined up to receive them. Ramit Debnath, a Gates-Cambridge and Cambridge Zero (the university's climate action initiative) scholar, wondered how the government went about tackling a task on such a massive scale and how over a billion people, even those who were not personally affected, conformed to a new and elaborate set of rules. The winner of the Turing Enrichment Award, Ramit, who is currently at Churchill College, Cambridge University, found that some methods used were in line with the Nudge Theory, a means of using positive reinforcement to modify behaviour. At no point did the Indian government, for one, declare vaccines mandatory. While lockdowns and other measures were put into place, punitive and coercive techniques but the latter can only be applied with very strict limitations and protocol like washing one's hands regularly cannot be constantly monitored. After all, this is not the world that Anthony Burgess' famous anti-hero, Alex, inhabits in A Clockwork Orange, where negative reinforcement can be used to alter behaviour.  However, those

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the world that Anthony Burgess' famous anti-hero, Alex, inhabits in A Clockwork Orange, where negative reinforcement can be used to alter behaviour.  However, those who paid close attention might have noticed what experts call 'behavioural nudges' - from things as seemingly bizarre as banging cutlery shouting "Go Corona Go' or the 'clap for carers' initiative, or the countless pictures of politicians proudly flaunting their masks. The idea is simply based on positive reinforcement, if you see your family, friends, neighbours, and your favourite public figures wearing masks, you're more likely to do so yourself.    

Bridging data science, AI and policy

Ramit, who now works on countering climate misinformation using Machine Learning to analyse crowd intelligence on Twitter, used Artificial Intelligence and 'topic modelling', looking to see how often terms like 'health' occurred across social media posts and government communications. He found that behavioural nudges did in fact occur across communication channels. The Nudge Theory is fairly new, developed as recently as 2008 by behavioural economists Richard Thaler and Cass Sunstein, in their book, 'Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth and Happiness'. "Choosers are human, so designers should make life as easy as possible," they write.

[caption id="attachment_28161" align="aligncenter" width="298"]Ramit Debnath | Global Indian Ramit Debnath[/caption]

Ramit is among a handful of academics and researchers who are the forefront of a new, cutting-edge approach that involves the intermingling of various specialisatoins, which previously existed in their silos, to address and solve real-world problems. His area of work lies at the intersection of data science and public policy, using AI and Machine Learning to inform policy, mainly in terms of climate change and sustainability. He is also interested in exploring how decisions related to energy and climate justice are made at various levels: policymakers, large multinationals, communities, and individuals.  

The Stanford Experiments

"I'm trained as an electrical engineer and moved from core engineering to public policy," Ramit tells Global Indian. Born in Kolkata and raised in Arunachal Pradesh, Ramit's career saw a major transition when he arrived to study at IIT-Bombay. "The course was called Technology and Development and it was about using engineering to influence policy for sustainable development," he says. Soon after, he moved to Stanford University as a visiting researcher. His work has been varied, from working with low-income housing in India, Africa, and South America to analysing Twitter for climate misinformation. At every point, he realised, "The problem is connected with climate action."  

Starting in 2016, Ramit and his colleagues at Stanford University's Civil and Environmental Engineering Department experimented with install temperature and humidity sensors in slums, "to understand the thermal comfort characteristics of people and how we can make informal settlements more liveable using data-driven design." One technique involved building computer simulations to model thermal comfort in slums, "and trying to scale it up to a country scale. We studied between 10 and 20 slum houses and installed sensors to gather data over about three months. The idea was to create a robust simulation model and scale up from the micro level."  

A people-centric, sustainable approach to low-income housing

At Cambridge University, he continued to build on the work. "It's where I started examining it through the angle of energy justice. I had realised that it was a socio-cultural problem and not just an engineering problem," Ramit explains. The end goal for governments in developing countries - they studied India, Brazil, and Nigeria - is affordable housing for all. It's a noble goal, no doubt but all three countries reflected one obstacle in common - rising energy costs. The nature and context of the problem is unique to each country, but the issue was the same.  

Ramit Debnath | Global Indian

In India, people in slum communities were organised according to a social structure that allowed people to share, especially electrical appliances. When they moved to vertical social housing structures, they became more individualistic and bought their own refrigerators, televisions, and so on, increasing energy costs.  "The other reason, the 'informal' one, is informal businesses. People would set up welding shops and other businesses like that on the ground floors of the housing complexes. They use a tremendous amount of energy and require high-voltage transformers. These bills are added to household metres. It's an informal spike in energy that is hard to quantify because nobody wants to reveal what's happening." The power distributors would also send bills once in several months, saddling the average, low-income household with an exorbitant sum that they had to pay, pronto. "This is why I call it an energy justice issue," Ramit remarks.  

The culture of sharing exists in Nigeria too, albeit very differently. Low-income communities exist in clusters on the outskirts, made up of daily wage and informal workers. "People use communal freezers to store their things, especially during summer. In Abuja, Nigeria's capital city, if an appliance is damaged, the owners would have to travel far, to the city centre to get it fixed. "Usually, it means losing that day's pay. There are also up to seven hours of load-shedding and lots of voltage spikes, so new appliances are damaged quickly." Load-shedding is a problem in Brazil too, where the government runs a well-intentioned programme in which the rich donate used appliances that are distributed among low-income communities. "At every point, I would realise that energy and climate injustices were at the core of the problem."  

Net-zero futures at COP 26

Ramit then participated at COP 26, in the 'Futures We Want' workshop, a flagship programme by the UK government, in which people in six regions were asked to imagine a globally net-zero, climate-resilient future. "That exposed me to various cross-cutting themes, not just in terms of energy but also its implications in climate change and vulnerability. The India chapter includes declarations like, "By 2050, India will have shifted decisively away from fossil fuels. Local renewables generation, coupled with battery and hydrogen storage will give rural communities more autonomy."  

Agroforestry is also on the wish list, with the need for sustainable farming techniques that will protect the environment and also improve food security. "Traditional practices like rice-fish culture- rearing fish in rice paddies to eat pests and oxygenate water are likely to be more popular," the website reads.  

"In India, people were concerned about agriculture, worrying that India might not be able to produce enough food to meet the growing needs of the population," Ramit explains. "Lack of rainfall and a rise in the frequency of drought is an effect of climate change. The land is also being flooded due to a rise in sea levels. how do we take these things into account?" Ramit worked with two professors, one from IIT-Delhi and another from B.R. Ambedkar University to write a policy brief on evidence of what India has in terms of climate vulnerability, looking at various sectors including agriculture, energy, water, food, and land, to try and connect the dots.  

Climate-action and greenwashing

After this, Ramit shifted his focus to 'climate action through net zero action'. When people talk about 'climate action, what actions do they talk about', he asks. "How can those systems be integrated into the current policy?" That's the project he's working on now and he uses Twitter to do so.  

[caption id="attachment_28162" align="aligncenter" width="545"] Graph showing network of Twitter interactions. Source: Cambridge Zero[/caption]

 

Social media provides a very unique data set, it's cross-sectional, spanning various geographies," Ramit says. "How do people react to climate events, extreme weather events, and greenwashing?" I nudge him on the latter- the average social media user's account is usually flooded with advertisements for consumer products trumpeting their sustainable practices. His answer is surprising. "Most greenwashing is popularly believed to come from fossil fuel firms," he says. The term greenwashing, also known as 'green sheen', is a form of misleading advertising or marketing spin, in which green PR and green marketing are used deceptively. "A major company might be drilling for oil but they say they are creating economy or investing in green technology."  

Ramit uses machine learning and AI to take a people-centric point of view to climate action, examining "global Twitter accounts that are very public-facing," he says. "How do they talk about climate change? What do fossil fuel firms talk about, versus governments and NGOs? What are the leading social media narratives?" From there, it leads naturally to how the stock markets affect these conversations, especially with fossil fuel firms. "Much of the misinformation is driven by investors," he says.  

Countering misinformation

At the same time, there also exists another end to climate action. One movement, Ramit says, is called Climate Repair, which involves a group of people claiming they can "intervene in the earth's system and use technology to solve problems." They talk of geo-engineering and solar-engineering, "like solar-radiation management with means spraying ions into the sky that reflect radiation, reducing the amount of radiation that space receives. It's very controversial at the moment," Ramit adds, "Because nobody knows what the impact of such measures will be. Say, if something is deployed in the UK (strictly hypothetical), will it impact India?" This end of the spectrum, Ramit explains, and anybody who disappeared into Twitter's rabbit holes can probably confirm, leads to a whole other range of conspiracy theories, like 'chem trails', for instance.  

What's the end goal in all of this? "We're trying to inform policymakers - the problem of energy justice and climate change is very real, as is that of misinformation," Ramit explains. "We also want to work with platforms like Twitter and Google, how do they counter misinformation or climate change deniers?"  

  • Follow Ramit on Twitter and LinkedIn

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Meet Dr Mukesh Aghi: A significant pillar of the US-India ties

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r Aghi has immense love for his native country. Although he was born in India, Dr Aghi has lived around the world to study and work. With a distinguished career spanning both the private and public setors, Dr Aghi has held senior leadership positions in companies like IBM (Singapore and India), Steria (France), and L&T Infotech (USA).  

Indian CEO | Dr Mukesh Aghi | Global Indian

As the President and CEO of the nonprofit organization USISPF, Dr. Aghi has been a vocal advocate for the interests of the Indian American community. He has pushed for policies that benefit Indian companies operating in the United States and has been a strong proponent of initiatives that promote education, innovation, and entrepreneurship among the Indian diasporas. 

The Global Indian has been recognized for his leadership and contributions through various awards and accolades, including the JRD Tata Leadership Award. He was recognized by the New York-based Esquire Magazine as a Global Leader. For his extensive philanthropic work, he received the prestigious ‘Ellis Island Medal of Honor’ in America in 2018. 

Taking US-India strategic partnership forward  

“I believe that the US-India relationship is the most important relationship of the 21st century. This has been stated by President Obama, President Trump and President Biden,” Dr Aghi remarked in a chat show conducted by Business World during his recent visit to India.  

His non-profit, USISPF serves as a platform for dialogue and collaboration between businesses, government officials, and thought leaders from India and USA. 

Established with the goal of enhancing bilateral trade and investment ties, fostering economic growth, and advancing shared interests and values between the two countries, USISPF focuses on various sectors including technology, energy, healthcare, defense, education, and agriculture. “India's demographic dividend, (now as the world's largest populous country) and tech talent, and the robustness of the American tech economy enable a synergy in the tech space,” Dr Aghi remarked in a social media post emphasizing how both countries complement each other.  

 

[caption id="attachment_38609" align="aligncenter" width="443"]Indian CEO | Dr Mukesh Aghi | Global Indian Dr Mukesh Aghi with US President, Joe Biden[/caption]

The organisation acts as a forum for stakeholders to exchange ideas, address challenges, and explore opportunities for economic cooperation. It also organizes high-level meetings, conferences, and events that bring together industry leaders, policymakers, and influencers to discuss key issues and promote business partnerships.  

USISPF also provides research and analysis on important economic and policy issues affecting the U.S.-India relationship. It produces reports and publications that offer insights and recommendations to policymakers, businesses, and other stakeholders. 

Utilizing India’s potential  

In his recent conversation with Business World Dr Aghi said, “India has tremendous resources to build AI, while the US has fantastic algorithms on the AI side. If we merge those algorithms with the data of 1.4 billion people, we can come up with fantastic solutions that will be a win-win. However, it is important for policymakers on both sides to sit down and discuss how they can establish certain fences around AI so that it does not become a threat to society.” 

Fully invested in his purpose of leveraging the high potential of US-India partnership, he remarked that the time is ripe to enhance the two countries’ collaboration in the space sector, and work towards enhancing supply chain resiliency, ‘a focus for Prime Minister Modi and President Biden ahead of the Quad Leadership meeting’.   

Expressing his joy, he added, “India is now becoming a hotbed of innovation which is going to the rest of the world. We have over 326 space startups in India, and they are doing fantastic innovation.” 

[caption id="attachment_38610" align="aligncenter" width="800"]Indian CEO | Dr Mukesh Aghi | Global Indian Dr Mukesh Aghi in a meeting with PM Modi[/caption]

At the top of his game 

Climbing peaks whether as a business leader or as a mountaineer is the Indian-origin leader’s core competency. While Dr Aghi served as chief executive and member of the board at L&T Infotech, he played a key role in tripling the company’s valuation. He expanded the business on a global level, led the company’s commercial growth strategy, established its global services function, and built the global sales leadership team preparing the organization for an IPO.  

During his time as CEO at Steria, a European digital services and software development company, Dr Aghi successfully spearheaded the merging of Xansa and Steria into a more than $2 billion business. He managed P&L, sales strategies, service delivery, strategic partnerships, a global workforce of over 6,000 people, and the top 50 global accounts of the organisation. The business leader also directed the building of innovation labs and business solutions and liaised with the World Economic Forum and lobby groups in India and Europe during his time at Steria. 

As the general manager of outsourcing in Asia-Pacific and President of India at IBM, Dr Aghi tripled the company’s revenue in three years and grew the market share, gross margins, and caliber of talent. He helped set up the IBM Lab in India and registered multiple patents from it. 

Fluent in many international languages, as well as an avid marathon and mountaineering enthusiast, the business leader has competed in more than 27 international marathons and climbed some of the highest peaks in North America and Europe. 

[caption id="attachment_38612" align="aligncenter" width="815"]Indian CEO | Dr Mukesh Aghi | Global Indian Dr Mukesh Aghi with Minister of Commerce and Industry, Piyush Goyal[/caption]

Reaping growth 

Dr Aghi is the founding-CEO of Universitas 21 Global, which went on to become one of the world's largest e-learning joint ventures, hailed by global educational bodies as a premier online institution. He was responsible for Building the company from the ground up and spearheading strategies for all aspects.. He also led the board of corporate and academic leaders.

The company's online program became the fastest-growing online program with enrollment growing to more than 7,000 MBA students from 70 countries across the world. Five years after founding Universitas 21 Global, Dr Aghi sold the company to a private equity firm for a profit which was twelve times his investment value. 

“We as individuals must decide on our own what our priority is. You must reflect ‘am I being a parasite in the world or am I being a contributor’. It's ok to create wealth but there must be a balance – a balance between accumulating the wealth and bringing change and contributing to society,” he said in a thought leadership conversation organized by Giggr. 

[caption id="attachment_38615" align="aligncenter" width="779"]Indian CEO | Dr Mukesh Aghi | Global Indian Dr Mukesh Aghi with industrialist Shiv Nadar[/caption]

Giving back 

A noted philanthropist, Dr Mukesh Aghi has been involved with several charitable organisations and supported causes related to education, healthcare and poverty alleviation. He has been at the forefront of relief efforts for issues ranging from the pandemic to the 2018 floods in Kerala. He also works with initiatives aimed at promoting clean energy and sustainability and has served as the CEO of the Association for Democratic Reforms (ADR), a non-profit organization in India that aims to bring transparency to the country’s democratic system.  

He has also been involved with the Pratham Education Foundation, one of India's largest NGOs, which works to provide quality education to underprivileged children in India. 

Indian CEO | Dr Mukesh Aghi | Global Indian

In 2017, Dr Aghi received the Community Leadership Award by the American India Foundation (AIF) for his philanthropic work. “Indian Americans are the most affluent and most philanthropic minority group in the US. It shows that as a community, we are not just focused on enhancing our own lives, but also the environment around us and the different cities we are staying in,” he said at a conference.  

Dr. Aghi holds several degrees, including an advanced management diploma from Harvard Business School, a Ph.D. in international relations from Claremont Graduate University, California, an MBA in international marketing from Andrews University, Michigan and a BA in business administration from the Middle East College, Sultanate of Oman. Though he is based in the US, the business leader extensively travels to India for help power his country's growth.  

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(November 22, 2022) History is being created at the Massachusetts-based Tufts University, as Indian-American academician Sunil Kumar has become the first person of colour to be appointed as its next president. Indian-origin Kumar, who is provost and senior vice president for academic affairs at Johns Hopkins University, will succeed President Anthony P Monaco next summer. Peter Dolan, the chair of the Board of Trustees said that Sunil "brings to Tufts a lifelong commitment to excellence in higher education and an exceptionally strong record as a leader, teacher, and colleague," and is confident that Kumar will "help bolster Tufts' mission to improve the world." Sunil, on the other hand, was attracted to Tufts because of its mission to serve "not only the people within its confines — its students, faculty, and staff — but the society at large," and he is keen to take up the presidency on July 1, 2023. [caption id="attachment_31977" align="aligncenter" width="666"] Sunil Kumar will be Tufts University's next president[/caption] Born in Bengaluru to a father who served in the police, Kumar often moved around the country, and it taught him to view "change as exciting and welcoming." This set the foundation for Kumar as a young lad

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n Bengaluru to a father who served in the police, Kumar often moved around the country, and it taught him to view "change as exciting and welcoming." This set the foundation for Kumar as a young lad who ended up graduating in 1990 with a bachelor’s in engineering from Mangalore University. Later, he enrolled in the Indian Institute of Science in Bengaluru for a master's degree in computer science and automation. It was here that he met a visiting professor from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, who recruited him for a doctoral program in electrical engineering. After receiving his Ph.D. from the University of Illinois in 1996, he dipped his toes into the world of academia by teaching at the Stanford Graduate School of Business. "When I was a rookie assistant professor at Stanford, it took me a couple of years to get used to the fact that they would pay me to do that stuff. And I have never lost that kind of awe and wonder about the academic enterprise, and I'm the happiest in it," he told Tufts.

After spending a considerable amount of time at Stanford, he was named dean of the University of Chicago Booth School of Business. Almost six years ago, he became provost and senior vice president at Johns Hopkins.

Sunil Kumar, provost and senior vice president at @JohnsHopkins, has been appointed Tufts University’s next president, starting July 1, 2023. https://t.co/sUMZEr8j0l pic.twitter.com/wNHuiIhFWP

— Tufts University (@TuftsUniversity) November 17, 2022

Now with a few months left to officially take over the president of Tufts University, Kumar says that certain exciting challenges keep him awake, including, "how to make the Tufts experience available and accessible to more people, how to make Tufts research even more impactful and how do we help society more, here and now."

For someone who moved from Bengaluru to Illinois, he understands the importance of making Tufts affordable, as he knows the value of financial aid in higher education. He received generous financial support for his graduate studies at the University of Illinois, and added, "It would not have been possible for me as a son of a police officer to do anything else," adding, "Affordability is not a theoretical concept for me. I hope I represent an example of somebody who benefited from an institution opening its doors wide and I would like even more people to have the same opportunity."

Being the first person of colour to lead Tufts University, he calls "diversity and inclusion" indispensable values, and says that it's not enough to talk the talk. "We also have to make sure that we operationalise our values, and sufficiently resource them so that we can execute on those values and make sure that Tufts is indeed as inclusive as it can be," the Global Indian added.

[caption id="attachment_31978" align="aligncenter" width="625"] Sunil Kumar tufts Sunil Kumar is an Indian-origin academician[/caption]

Kumar, who will take over as the 14th president of Tufts University coming July, knows that his mission is to produce well-rounded individuals - something he missed out on being an engineering student. When he moved to Illinois, he discovered through the library what he had missed by not having a liberal arts education. "What matters is to develop the mind and to strengthen the heart. And for that liberal arts education is essential," he added.

 

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declared me as the man with the ‘largest negative carbon footprint’ due to the impact of IGBTs on the energy systems and power electronics. Each of these is special in their own right. This latest one credits me as the sole inventor of IGBTs, and hence it is special," Dr. Baliga shared in an interview.

The scientist's most famous invention is used worldwide in various applications such as air conditioning systems, household appliances like dishwashers, mixers, and refrigerators, factory automation including robotics, medical equipment like CAT scanners and uninterruptible power supplies, public electric transport and hybrid cars, engine control systems, vehicle electronics, as well as in mobile phones, laptops, and server CPUs.

Born for science

Born in Madras, India, in 1948, Dr. Baliga grew up in various cities. His father Bantwal Vittal Manjunath Baliga, was one of India's first electrical engineers in the days before independence and founding President of the Indian branch of the Institute of Radio Engineers, which later became the IEEE in India. Remembering the time when the first Indian TV was broadcast from his house, the scientist shared, "My father, was chief engineer of All India Radio after Independence. There was an exhibition in Delhi in the 1950s where they were using All India Radio’s setup of a camera and a transmitter to show a TV telecast within the exhibition premises. My father wanted to test if the signal could be received at a farther distance." He had a television set installed at his house at Teen Murti Marg. “It caused quite a sensation in the neighbourhood,” he added.

[caption id="attachment_50143" align="aligncenter" width="750"]Scientist | Dr. B. Jayant Baliga | Global Indian A young Dr. Baliga soon after shifting to the USA[/caption]

This experience pushed him to pursue a career in engineering, and after completing his school, the scientist enrolled at the Indian Institute of Technology (Madras), for a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering. Speaking about his experience at the institute, the scientist said, "IIT is a phenomenal place to give you a foundation, where you are given a broad coverage of topics in every branch. Back in my time, there were no electives, and every batch had to go through a compulsory set of courses. But they were so chosen that we received an all-round training in materials, electronics, maths, physics, chemistry, etc. And this really helps when you work in research by enabling you to think in an interdisciplinary way. So, this helped me a lot when I went to the US."

ALSO READ | Dr. Kaushik Rajashekara is working on futuristic machines

The scientist has always credited the institute for his success in the field. And thus, years later, he made some significant donations to IIT, Madras. "IIT Madras is always a special place and has helped me greatly. To give back to it, I have donated it to the institute to give scholarships to students from the money I received along with the Global Energy Prize and other such prizes," he said.

Scientist | Dr. B. Jayant Baliga | Global Indian

After his graduation, Dr. Baliga moved to the United States of America to pursue higher studies. Interestingly, the scientist had trouble getting financial aid while pursuing his graduate studies and was very apprehensive about his abilities to cope with the academic rigours in the USA. "I ended up proving them wrong by scoring a perfect 4.0 GPA and getting the best Ph.D. medal from the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in New York City.

The genius

From 1974 to 1988, Dr. Baliga conducted several research projects at General Electric's R&D Center in Schenectady, New York. Leading a team of 40 scientists, they focused on power semiconductors and high-voltage integrated circuits. At that time, the transistor, which is essential for computers, had already been discovered and put into use. Dr. Baliga aimed to create a semiconductor device capable of controlling heavy-duty equipment such as compact fluorescent lights, air conditioners, and electric motors.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YkvrcXF9ooE

During that period, companies such as GE and Westinghouse were advancing their bipolar transistors for high-power applications. Meanwhile, another group, spearheaded by Siliconix and International Rectifier, was working on a different type of transistor known as the power MOSFET. And it was the scientist who thought of combining the physics of the two. “There was a vice president in GE who was developing a heat pump for air-conditioning applications. He was frustrated that the exiting transistors were failing and that the circuit needed to drive the motor pump was too big, expensive, and very cumbersome to assemble,” the Global Indian said.

ALSO READ | Meet the Gordon Prize winner, Indian-American scholar Dr. Azad Madni

The legend

The scientist is single-handedly responsible for cost savings of over $15 trillion for consumers. “Because of the IGBT the world has not had to build at least 600 hydroelectric dams of the size of the Hoover Dam in Nevada," shared the scientist. His contributions in the field have won him many recognitions including the 1991 IEEE Newell Award, 1993 IEEE Morris N Liebmann Memorial Award, 1998 IEEE JJ Ebers Award, and 1999 IEEE Lamme Medal. In 2011, the scientist was awarded the National Medal of Technology and Innovation, the highest award for an engineer in the USA by US President Barack Obama.

Scientist | Dr. B. Jayant Baliga | Global Indian

"Something I never dreamt of as an immigrant coming here with, as I said, about eight dollars in my pocket and a suitcase. To end up in the White House with the President honouring you is just incredible. Unfortunately, my parents were not alive when that happened. And also the IEEE Medal of Honor, for example, that’s much later, 2014. They passed away in the 1990s," the scientist expressed.

Currently serving as the Distinguished University Professor of Electrical Engineering and founding director of NC State University’s Power Semiconductor Research Center, Dr. Baliga is also the founder of three companies, that aim to license and commercialise his inventions: Giant Semiconductor Corporation, Micro-Ohm Corporation, Silicon Wireless Corporation (later renamed to Silicon Semiconductor Corporation).

  • Follow Dr. B. Jayant Baliga on his blog

Reading Time: 6 mins

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Conservationist Suprabha Seshan is creating a rainforest at the Gurukula Botanical Sanctuary

(August 22, 2022) At dawn, the heavy trapdoor to the roof groans as it is hauled open and the slight figure of Suprabha Seshan emerges, to survey the acres of rainforest that surround her, as far as the eye can see. This is the Gurukula Botanical Sanctuary in Wayanad, in the middle of the Western Ghats and conservationist Suprabha Seshan's home for over two decades. The sanctuary is flanked by the Banasuramala, rising 2000 metres above sea-level, and the Brahmagiris, famous for their shola grasslands. These days, Suprabha remains more or less off the grid, lost in what she calls "the rewilding of habitat", far from the rampant consumerism of urban life. To those in the know, however, Suprabha is a towering figure among India's conservationists - her efforts have been an integral part of restoring some 50 acres of forest land, "nurturing forest beings," as the Gurukula Botanical Sanctuary website would have it. In 2006, Suprabha received the UK's top environmental prize, the Whitley Award, also known as the Green Oscars. Her writing has also been published in Scroll and the Economic and Political Weekly. Global Indian takes a look at the remarkable life of one of India's leading

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om//" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Global Indian takes a look at the remarkable life of one of India's leading conservationists.

"Plants are doing the hardest work, keeping the planet going," she says, as she shows a group of visitors around the Gurukula Sanctuary. Five acres out of the 50 are open to visitors, usually environmentalists, conservationists, and school kids. "Anything that we can do to serve the plants is a good thing. And plants should not just be seen as 'plants for edible purposes' but as creators of environments."

The Gurukula Botanical Sanctuary was founded by Wolfgang Dieter Theuerkauf, who was trying to regrow the rainforest. "We're a small group of people, who have been concerned with the rapid disappearance of biodiversity," she says. We believe that plants are the basis of all existence. Without the plants you can't have animals, without the plants you can't have human life. Without plants, you don't have the biosphere."

Theuerkauf's approach, Suprabha explains, was a different one, more so when he began his work 40 years ago. "Even now, when we think of reforestation, we do so in terms of tree cover," Suprabha says. "Yes, it is a tree-based biome of course. But to think of it as only trees is like saying there are only tigers in the forest and no tree frogs," she told The Kodai Chronicle. GBS looked at orchids and ferns and tender herbaceous plants as well. They asked questions about diversity, evolution, and biogeography. Their approach was through the lens of cultivation, rescue, and restoration."

The Krishnamurti Foundation, UK to the prairies of the Midwest

Suprabha was born in Delhi, in the heart of India's urban chaos but even as a child, was close to nature. She grew up with people who loved nature, and who lived rural lives. Her first turning point came when she went to study at Brockwood Park Centre, owned by the Krishnamurti Centre in England's South Downs National Park in the UK. Run in accordance with the teachings of J. Krishnamurti, it was here that Suprabha first heard of the Gurukula Botanical Sanctuary. She also became fascinated with the constantly changing ecology of the land and the role of human intervention in this transition.

After this, she moved to the United States, where she continued to experiment with her own approach to conservation. She studied the annual wheat monoculture, and the topsoil of the grasslands and learned about the indigenous communities of the Midwest.

The rewilders

What does re-growing a forest actually entail? As she walks visitors through the sanctuary, she pauses beside a tree to explain. "These small plants," she gestures, "are in high danger of being extinct, especially now. We run a search-and-rescue operation'. We go all over the mountains to find them, pick them up and bring them back." These are around 2000 species in total, accounting for nearly half of the flora of the Western Ghats.

The plants are then brought back for cultivation in the sanctuary's greenhouses, overseen by the sanctuary's experts : Laly Joseph, Suma Keloth, Leelamma and Purvi Jain. "We deploy a range of methods, from intensive care nurseries to outdoor habitats rich with herbs, tubers, succulents, shrubs, trees creepers, climbers, epiphytes (plants that grow on other plants) and lithophytes (plants that grow on rocks)," Suprabha writes in Scroll.in.

This process of rewilding is a delicate one, requiring just the right amount of human intervention. Sometimes, it's as simple as putting plants in a pot, at other times, the trick is to let the land rewild itself. "it's the greatest joy to see land that's been completely decertified come back to life. That's when you realise the true power of natural life, that it can heal."

Suprabha has also been involved with work on upland ecology, along with Vasanth Godwin Bosco and Sandilya Theuerkauf, Wolfgang's son. This became part of an effort to restore the shola-grassland species.

  • Follow Suprabha and the Gurukula Botanical Sanctuary on Instagram 

Reading Time: 6 mins

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About Global Indian

Global Indian – a Hero’s Journey is an online publication which showcases the journeys of Indians who went abroad and have had an impact on India. 

These journeys are meant to inspire and motivate the youth to aspire to go beyond where they were born in a spirit of adventure and discovery and return home with news ideas, capital or network that has an impact in some way for India.

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