Arun Shourie, sekarang anggota parlemen saja
sebelumnya menteri telekom dalam pemerintahan Atal
Behari Vajpayee, memberikan dana pork barrel sebesar
Rs 120 juta (24 milyard rupiah) kepada IIT (Indian
Institute of Technology) di Kanpur.  Biaya itu dipakai
untuk membangun lab lengkap bioengineering. Dalam visi
Arun Shourie, bidang ini adalah teknologi masa depan.

Ada masalah prosedur/birokrasi.  Berdasar ketentuan
parlemen, setiap anggota parlemen hanya berhak memberi
Rs 1 juta (200 juta rupiah) per proyek.  Biaya ini
hanya cukup untuk membangun sepotong jalan atau satu
taman kecil saja. Tidak cukup untuk proyek yang
berdampak lumayan.  Untuk mewujudkan niatnya, jauh
hari Arun Shourie sudah meyakinkan bossnya waktu itu,
PM Atal Behari Vajpayee, dan ia mendapat otorisasi.
Persoalan selanjutnya, kemana dana itu harus
dibelanjakan?

Pilihannya jatuh pada IIT-K, sebagai salah satu
centres of excellence.  Ada satu syarat yang harus
dipenuhi: gedung lab harus berperlengkapan modern dan
hemat energi.  Hasilnya adalah 16 ruang lab dengan
kwalifikasi demikian di departemen BSBE (Biological
Science and Biological Engineering) yang mampu
melakukan riset DNA, molecular biology dan
bio-informatics.

Salam,
RM

rediff.com   

Shourie gives Rs 12 crore to IIT-Kanpur!

Smita Tripathi | October 18, 2004


It's a problem of plenty for many members of
Parliament. How should they spend the Rs 12 crore (Rs
120 million) given to them as part of MPLADS -- the
Member of Parliament Local Area Development Scheme?

Most spread it on a mix of roads, children's
playgrounds and other do-good projects. Former
minister and journalist and sitting Rajya Sabha member
Arun Shourie, however, had a completely different idea
about what should be done with the money.

For starters, he wanted to spend all the money he
received over a five-year period on one multi-crore
mega project. The only question was identifying the
recipient.

"People just spend Rs 10 lakh (Rs 1 million) or so, on
each project and the money is just frittered away," he
said. "I didn't want to do that."

But the former telecom minister also had a few more
pre-conditions. Turning his eyes to the future, he
wanted to put the money into an area of frontier
research. He wanted to tie up with an 'institute of
excellence' and he wanted the money handed over
directly.

"I didn't want to be involved in the handling and
distribution of the money. The institute had to be one
which had such a clean reputation that it was above
question," Shourie said.

Finally Shourie had one more condition -- he wanted
the building to be modern state-of-the-art
construction with energy saving features. "I was very
clear that if a building was involved, then it should
be an education by itself."

The result is the new Biological Sciences and
Bioengineering (BSBE) department at the Indian
Institute of Technology in Kanpur. The 16-lab
department is housed in a 64,000 sq ft building
equipped with the latest research tools needed for
molecular biology and other types of bio-engineering.

Inside the BSBE's portals a faculty of eight and about
75 students are carrying out research in a range of
cutting-edge fields like DNA sequencing, tissue
restructuring (which involves creating artificial
human skin), bioinformatics and computational biology.

There have been hiccups along the way, from the time
that Shourie began confabulations with IIT-Kanpur. For
a start, there was a problem of scale.

When Shourie first approached the institute, the dean
and the top professors assumed he would be writing a
cheque for around Rs 10 lakh. Accordingly, they put
forward a proposal to develop software for the
visually handicapped which would have cost around that
much.

But, once they understood what Shourie had in mind,
the top brains of IIT-Kanpur didn't find it tough to
come up with a proposal to fit the price tag. In fact,
they already had one or two at the blueprint stage.
There was the bio-engineering department which was a
high priority and there was a proposal for a
management school.

"Since Arun Shourie wanted to contribute towards
frontier research he selected the bio-engineering
project," says N Sathyamurthy, dean, faculty affairs,
IIT-Kanpur, who was the coordinator of the National
Advisory Committee set up to respond to Shourie's
proposal.

Shourie immediately okayed the bio-tech proposal.
After all, India has already firmly established itself
in biotechnology and it is ranked 12th globally in
this field. And the statistics are encouraging: The
industry is growing at around 25 per cent annually.

What's more, India should generate around $5 billion
from the field by 2010. Crucially, the biotech sector
is expected to create more than 1 million jobs in
India in the next five years. Says Shourie:
"Pharmaceutical research and bio-engineering is the
future."

Even after Shourie had given IIT-K the thumbs up,
there were other impediments. Under MPLADS rules, an
MP is allowed to spend only Rs 10 lakh per project.

Shourie had to work around the government's red tape
and get special permission from the then prime
minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee to spend all the money
on one project. Once he had Vajpayee's green signal he
had to steer his proposal through committees in both
the Lok Sabha and the Rajya Sabha.

Here a spot of artful jugglery became necessary. The
entire project was divided into eight sub-projects in
order to fit the rules. While seven sub-projects were
related to acquiring infrastructure, the building's
construction was the eighth sub-project.

Construction started in April 2002. Nearly Rs 6 crore
(Rs 60 million) or 50 per cent of the total Rs 12
crore went towards putting up the 64,000 sq ft
building which was completed in 18 months. It has 16
laboratories, a seminar hall, library, classrooms and
teaching labs. Another Rs 6 crore was spent on
laboratory and other equipment.

While the infrastructure was still being put in place,
IIT recruited a faculty of eight professors and
assistant professors, each an expert in his field.
Interestingly, none were ex-IITians. In fact, all of
them were recruited abroad.

Says Dr Pradip Sinha, head of the department,
Biological Sciences and Bioengineering: "These people
were looking for an opportunity to return to India.
However, lack of infrastructure always comes in the
way of research and that is frustrating. Once they
realised that IIT could offer them world-class
infrastructure, they returned to India and took up
jobs here."

Today, the department is working at full swing and has
started PhD, M.Tech and B.Tech programmes. It already
has around 30 students enrolled for PhDs, another 20
students for M.Tech and 25 B.Tech students.

Obviously, Shourie's money has all been spent. But the
department has already tapped into other sources of
funding. It has grants from the Department of
Biotechnology and the Department of Science and
Technology.

Also, two faculty members have each received Rs 2.15
crore (Rs 21.5 million) from the UK-based Wellcome
Trust to carry out research projects for the next five
years.

Then there are the former IITians. Recently $100,000
was donated by an ex-IITian to the BSBE department.
The donor specified that the money should be spent to
build bridges with industry.

So, the money can be spent, for instance, on inviting
experts from industry to the campus. Or, alternatively
it can be spent on sending students to companies for
internship.

At another level, hi-tech giant IBM has recently
donated equipment worth Rs 1.75 crore (Rs 17.5
million) to the BSBE department for use in research
relating to bioinformatics and computational biology.

IIT-K has, in fact, been receiving generous donations
in recent years -- despite the controversies stirred
up by Murli Manohar Joshi. The most generous
contribution has come recently from N R Narayana
Murthy who wrote a Rs 25 crore (Rs 250 million) cheque
for the institution. 

The money will be spent on a new hostel for visiting
faculty and a computer research centre. Then, there's
Satish Kaura, managing director, Samtel Technologies
who has donated Rs 5 crore (Rs 50 million) to build a
Samtel Centre for research in display technology.

However, the top brass at IIT-K are painfully aware
that they must constantly raise more money to keep the
academic programmes at full swing. So, it's planning
an industry-academia meet on bioengineering early next
year. 

Says S G Dhande, Director, IIT-Kanpur, "We would like
to make industry aware of the facilities available at
IIT-Kanpur so that they ask us to undertake research
for them." 

However, he's clear that BSBE would be interested
mainly in high-end research. Says Dhande: "If routine
work is outsourced, then the academics are not
excited. We would like the industry to approach us for
high-end research."

Shourie too feels, that industry participation is a
must. "Collaborative research must start." Shourie is
actively involved in ensuring that the
industry-academy meet is a success. 

"When students graduating from IIT join industry they
would be the ambassadors of the institute and industry
will realise the potential of the institute," he says.

IIT also has other plans to ensure research is
commercially viable. It has set up an Intellectual
Property Rights cell through which patents can be
filed. 

Says Dhande, "Indian institutes do not generate
revenue through intellectual property. Across the
world they do. We would also like to earn revenue
through IPs."

Currently, IIT-Kanpur receives 70 per cent of its
funds from the government, 22 per cent from industry
and 8 per cent from alumni and endowments. However,
Dhande would like that to change. 

"We hope that soon we would be able to reduce our
dependence on the government. We would like only 50
per cent of our funds to come from the government,
while we hope industry contribution will increase to
35 per cent and the alumni would contribute at least
15 per cent," he says.

In order to increase industry participation, IIT has
plans to invite leading businessmen in bio-tech to
join its board.

Shourie is pleased at how the project has worked out.
He has recently been elected to the Rajya Sabha for a
second term and once again has Rs 12 crore to spend.

He's planning to give the money to IIT-K once again
this time for a research centre on environmental
remediation where research would be undertaken to find
solutions to various environmental problems such as
air and water pollution.

Once again the IIT top team is putting together a
project report so that he can get permission to spend
the money. "After the success of the BSBE department
at IIT-Kanpur, I'm confident of getting permission to
contribute the entire funds towards the environmental
remediation centre," he says.

Shourie believes environmental remediation is the need
of the hour. "It is a great problem which can be
converted into a great opportunity. Once we have found
solutions to our environmental problems, we can market
these solutions to Europe."

Shourie has made his mark on Indian public life as a
journalist, minister and legislator. But on the IIT-K
campus he has left a memorial in bricks and mortar.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Economising on energy 

>From the outside it doesn't look like an avant garde
construction. You've got to get into the innards of
the BSBE building to understand the differences -- and
it helps if you have an architect or an expert along
for a guided tour. 

One of Arun Shourie's key specifications was that the
building should be a model of its kind, particularly
from the environmental point of view. Keeping
Shourie's directive in mind, the architects have used
every trick and modern device to ensure that the
building is both energy-efficient and
environment-friendly. 

In order to ensure that the temperature inside the
building is maintained, the walls and the roof have
been insulated and the windows have been double
glazed. Also, the roof has been fitted with broken
china mosaic to reflect heat. 

Deciduous trees have also been planted on the south
side so that they provide shade in the summer and once
they shed their leaves in the winter, they allow in
more heat and light. 

Shourie was impressed by the energy-efficient measures
used by the Tata Energy Research Institute and
therefore IIT-K invited TERI's architects to be
consultants for the project. The result was the
construction of an earth tunnel to pre-cool the
outside air, a technology pioneered by TERI. 

Under this system a tunnel is dug four metres below
the surface and all air coming inside the building
passes through this tunnel. At this level the
temperature is nearly constant throughout the year at
28 degree Celsius. 

Hence, the temperature inside the building is
maintained throughout the year at between 26C and 30C.
This does away with the need to air-condition the
corridors and other common areas. 

The labs which are maintained at a temperature of 22C
also require the temperature to be brought down by
only 6C and hence the load on the air conditioning is
reduced. 

"As a result of all these measure we have been able to
bring down the air conditioning load from 200 tonnes
to 142 tonnes -- a saving of 29 per cent," says
Santosh Kumar, superintending engineer and head,
institute works department, IIT-Kanpur. 

Then there's solar power. Building Integrated Photo
Voltaic panels have been installed over the central
atrium to harness solar energy and to convert it into
electrical power for the building. The lighting
installed in the common areas such as the staircase
and corridors is powered with solar energy.
 
 




 


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