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	<title>Comments on: What is pointReturn?</title>
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	<link>http://goodnewsindia.com/pointreturn/online/what-is-pointreturn/</link>
	<description>...the point is to return</description>
	<pubDate>Sat, 19 Jul 2008 23:47:55 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>By: Ragunath</title>
		<link>http://goodnewsindia.com/pointreturn/online/what-is-pointreturn/#comment-2409</link>
		<dc:creator>Ragunath</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 08 Jul 2008 03:26:03 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>Well, well... we are couple recently moved to Alandurai, a village 22 Kilometers from Coimbatore. We are setting up an organic farm (with some permaculture design) and are building a community center to offer a few services like Yoga and Ayurveda on a 10 acre land that we bought along with 6 friends. Right now we are talking to the people from COSTFORD, an institute founded by the Gandhian architect Lauri Baker to construct a house for us on the farm and a community center. Our intentions are identical to Sridharan and Shivaraja. Check www.greenlocal.org for more details.

Perhaps all three of us and other interested people could meet sometime soon to exchange ideas and resources? Shivaraja, do write to me at: howcani at gmail dot com. Since you are local to Coimbatore, we could meet first. May be both of us could travel together to meet Sridharan.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Well, well&#8230; we are couple recently moved to Alandurai, a village 22 Kilometers from Coimbatore. We are setting up an organic farm (with some permaculture design) and are building a community center to offer a few services like Yoga and Ayurveda on a 10 acre land that we bought along with 6 friends. Right now we are talking to the people from COSTFORD, an institute founded by the Gandhian architect Lauri Baker to construct a house for us on the farm and a community center. Our intentions are identical to Sridharan and Shivaraja. Check <a href="http://www.greenlocal.org" rel="nofollow">http://www.greenlocal.org</a> for more details.</p>
<p>Perhaps all three of us and other interested people could meet sometime soon to exchange ideas and resources? Shivaraja, do write to me at: howcani at gmail dot com. Since you are local to Coimbatore, we could meet first. May be both of us could travel together to meet Sridharan.</p>
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		<title>By: shivraja</title>
		<link>http://goodnewsindia.com/pointreturn/online/what-is-pointreturn/#comment-835</link>
		<dc:creator>shivraja</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 26 Apr 2007 11:39:37 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>Dear Mr. Sridharan, as a regular viewer of goodnewsindia.com, I was disappointed when I did not see any new articles recently, till I learnt that you were taking a break to attend to pointReturn. Those amazing articles that you have published so far have been a source of hope and inspiration for me.
I am following your experiment of pointReturn, and waiting for the success that will surely come!
I am a software engineer based in Coimbatore. In my own small way, I am engaged in an experiment in sustainable living, for which I drew inspiration from some of the stories in goodnewsindia. It is a much smaller version of pointReturn, about half an acre, located on the periphery of urban Coimbatore. The objective is to prove that it is very much possible to live in a sustainable and comfortable manner in an urban setting for a nuclear family, using solar energy and rain water as the main external inputs. The harnessing of solar energy was the weak link in this plan, till Moser Baer recently realized what a goldmine this country is in terms of solar energy, and put Rs. 2600 crore of funding into building new capacities and new technologies in this area. (They have tied up with a couple of US based companies that you have already written about in goodnewsindia. Clever chaps!).
Now I am fairly confident that the basic ingredients are in place to achieve such a sustainable manner of living even in an urban setting that is already built up and congested for space, as most Indian cities are.
The main elements in my experiment are :-
1)The use of solar energy - For electricity (including charging a vehicle like the Reva electric car) and heating.
2)The optimal use of water - Harvesting the rainwater; and the use of recycled water
3)The production of organic food for the family
4)Material for construction - the house is to be built from the material available on the land (mostly the soil itself). I am trying to get hold of Chitra Viswanath of Bangalore (http://www.inika.com/chitra/) who has mastered this technology, but she's hard to reach!
Once these main points are addressed, I will turn my attention to other aspects such as the use of steel and other materials that are energy-intensive to produce.
Even if we ignore for the time being the materials used (including the material and energy that goes into the creation of solar panels and electric storage equipment), and just achieve sustainability in the day-to-day use of energy and water, that’s a huge leap! And it looks possible!
Since we have just started out on this road (we’ve only purchased the land so far), I don’t have a report card yet, but will keep you posted as we cross major milestones. And if you know of anyone who has already done a similar experiment, do write… oh, but then you would have published it already!!!!</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Dear Mr. Sridharan, as a regular viewer of goodnewsindia.com, I was disappointed when I did not see any new articles recently, till I learnt that you were taking a break to attend to pointReturn. Those amazing articles that you have published so far have been a source of hope and inspiration for me.<br />
I am following your experiment of pointReturn, and waiting for the success that will surely come!<br />
I am a software engineer based in Coimbatore. In my own small way, I am engaged in an experiment in sustainable living, for which I drew inspiration from some of the stories in goodnewsindia. It is a much smaller version of pointReturn, about half an acre, located on the periphery of urban Coimbatore. The objective is to prove that it is very much possible to live in a sustainable and comfortable manner in an urban setting for a nuclear family, using solar energy and rain water as the main external inputs. The harnessing of solar energy was the weak link in this plan, till Moser Baer recently realized what a goldmine this country is in terms of solar energy, and put Rs. 2600 crore of funding into building new capacities and new technologies in this area. (They have tied up with a couple of US based companies that you have already written about in goodnewsindia. Clever chaps!).<br />
Now I am fairly confident that the basic ingredients are in place to achieve such a sustainable manner of living even in an urban setting that is already built up and congested for space, as most Indian cities are.<br />
The main elements in my experiment are :-<br />
1)The use of solar energy - For electricity (including charging a vehicle like the Reva electric car) and heating.<br />
2)The optimal use of water - Harvesting the rainwater; and the use of recycled water<br />
3)The production of organic food for the family<br />
4)Material for construction - the house is to be built from the material available on the land (mostly the soil itself). I am trying to get hold of Chitra Viswanath of Bangalore (http://www.inika.com/chitra/) who has mastered this technology, but she&#8217;s hard to reach!<br />
Once these main points are addressed, I will turn my attention to other aspects such as the use of steel and other materials that are energy-intensive to produce.<br />
Even if we ignore for the time being the materials used (including the material and energy that goes into the creation of solar panels and electric storage equipment), and just achieve sustainability in the day-to-day use of energy and water, that’s a huge leap! And it looks possible!<br />
Since we have just started out on this road (we’ve only purchased the land so far), I don’t have a report card yet, but will keep you posted as we cross major milestones. And if you know of anyone who has already done a similar experiment, do write… oh, but then you would have published it already!!!!</p>
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