EPFO has mooted a group housing scheme which will enable members to form cooperative housing societies and use their entire provident fund savings towards buying land, constructing homes or paying housing loan instalments.
In its recent proposal to the Labour Ministry, EPFO has proposed addition of a “new paragraph 68BD as a group housing scheme so that Employees’ Provident Fund members forming a cooperative society of 10 or more employees may be given not only a one time Employees’ Provident Fund withdrawal.
It also has an option to pay loan instalments towards housing loan to banks from the monthly contributions received in Employees’ Provident Fund Scheme, 1952.
Employees with at least 3 years’ subscription to Employees Provident Fund scheme will be allowed to withdraw their savings for housing purposes, including repayment of loans from their monthly contributions.
There will be no cap on the amount of Employees’ Provident Fund savings that can be drawn for purchasing land, constructing a house or repaying housing loans, under the proposed scheme.
Members of an existing cooperative society formed under any present law can avail this scheme, provided at least 10 members of the housing society were subscribers to the Employees’ Provident Fund scheme.
At present, an employee who has completed five years of service is allowed to withdraw Provident Fund savings equivalent to 36 months of the member’s salary for construction of a flat or 24 months of the salary for purchasing land.
New ‘smart glasses’ developed by scientists, including one of Indian origin, that can automatically adjust the focus on what a person is seeing, whether it is far away or close.
The glasses developed by researchers at University of Utah in the U.S. contain lenses made of glycerin, a thick colourless liquid enclosed by flexible rubber-like membranes in the front and back.
The rear membrane in each lens is connected to a series of three mechanical actuators that push the membrane back and forth like a transparent piston, changing the curvature of the liquid lens and the focal length between the lens and the eye.
When the wearer looks at an object, the meter instantly measures the distance and tells the actuators how to curve the lenses.
If the user then sees another object that is closer, the distance meter readjusts and tells the actuators to reshape the lens for farsightedness. The lenses can change focus from one object to another in 14 milliseconds.
A rechargeable battery in the frames could last more than 24 hours per charge, he added.
The human eye has a lens inside that adjusts the focal depth depending on what you look at.
However, as people age, the lens loses its ability to change focus, which is why many people ultimately require reading glasses or bifocals to see objects up close and regular eyeglasses to see far away.
Having pipped Japan to become world’s third-largest oil consumer, India’s oil consumption growth will be the fastest among all major economies by 2035, BP Statistical Review of World Energy.
India, Asia’s second-biggest energy consumer since 2008, had in 2015 overtaken Japan as the world’s third-largest oil consuming country behind US and China.
India’s energy consumption grows the fastest among all major economies by 2035. As a result, the country remains import dependent despite increases in production.
While energy consumption will grow by 4.2 per cent per annum faster than all major economies in the world India’s consumption growth of fossil fuels would be the largest in the world.
India, will overtake China as the largest growth market for energy in volume terms by 2030.
Oil consumption will rise beom 4.1 million barrels per day in 2015 to 9.2 million bpd in 2035.
Natural gas consumption would jump from 4.9 billion cubic feet per day to 12.8 bcfd while coal consumption is project to more than double to 833 million tons.
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India’s energy demand growth at “129 per cent is more than double the non OECD average of 52 per cent and also outpaces each of the BRIC countries as China (47 %), Brazil (41 %), and Russia (2 %), all expand slower.
Its share of global energy demand increases to 9 per cent by 2035, accounting for the second largest share among the BRIC countries with China at 26 per cent, Russia at 4 per cent and Brazil at 2 per cent.
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