This might well be possible, and without bribes, but how large should the body 
of water be? South India is largely a water deficit area, except for patches in 
Kerala and Karnataka. It seems unlikely that anybody would get permission to 
add chemicals, even with assurances of subsequent clean-up, to any significant 
body of sweet water in this part of the world.

Eugen Leitl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:  On Thu, Mar 22, 2007 at 04:33:24PM 
+0530, Aditya Kapil wrote:

> http://www.ablbiotechnologies.com/.
> We considered these guys, at one time, for an investment but ..... So you
> may have to approach them yourself. Having said that they have a fairly
> impressive organism library and culture techniques (at small and large
> scale). They also have good links with marine biology academia.

Thanks.

Another question: assuming one wants to do a large-scale pilot somewhere
in South India, which requires controlled eutrophication of a body of
water (ordinarily quite safe, but you *can* get an uncontrolled toxic algal 
bloom,
of course) -- getting this approved though the regular channels without 
bribes is out of question, right?

-- 
Eugen* Leitl leitl http://leitl.org
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