tv Direct Impact RT September 24, 2024 11:30am-12:01pm EDT
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and politician was served as india as permanent representative to united nations and had 4 administrative positions today. subbing of india a mean this truck petroleum and natural gas. they've come part of the police are the party was born in delhi in 1952. he got his masters in history from delhi university and joined and used for in service in 1974. during his remarkable diplomatic career, she has served his joint secretary to the government of india in the ministry of external affairs and ambassador to brazil. pardeep corey also served as indians permanent representative to the you and in geneva and in new york, he joined the bgp in 2013 and was 1st appointed the minister of housing and urban affairs in just 4 years time. from 2019 to 2021. he held 3 ministerial positions at the same time. he is currently serving, administered petroleum and natural gas. thank you. it's an honor to speak to a i post. i met you in new york, and now we had,
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here's chatting about life. you come from a diploma family depot disability, not to a joyce that you need to get into this. i don't think i ever exercise that choice as a 12 in terms of career. and i wanted to be a diplomatic because my father was in the industry based on the 1st. so that's a life i was born in to me as a 4 year old child. i accompanied my father when he went and his 1st posting to barn in germany me. when i was 16 years old and joining the university. i was exposed to student politics. i floated with both the left and the right. as we understand it, the normal language. yes, i was elected student leader in 1971. so after i finished my diploma,
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that could be a of 39 years and it's not that i exercise. that's always, it goes on most of that sort of lisp into the next phase of my life, which was the visa p. uh, i had made my intentions very clear. there was in fact an instance uh in 2008. uh, when i just come back from brazil, but i was an advisor to and i was secretary and daily. and i wanted to consider joining politics even then. i remember i went to the leadership of the 5 d and expressed an interest in uh, of contesting the 2009 elections from bailey, the party, for whatever reason. very difficult to say with the benefit of hens. hindsight, they decided not to give me a ticket. that was a good thing then i went on to new york where i became permanent representative and
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i had the privilege of presiding over the security council. and then there was elected to the council of in 2011 and 12. and i remember when you and women was established, my very distinguished host was one of the 1st he for she's yeah, was appointed time of the planet of the brand best design advisor that also so it was a very fulfilling of nearly 5 years in new york when, when i came back in 2013, uh, what i had wanted to do, i almost fell into a slot again in 2014. i wanted a little extra, a ticket to fight the looks of i election. i would have thought it did not find it right. they didn't, didn't give me a ticket, but i didn't also know before that i just expressed it comes up. but then before i knew what was happening, i was pointed to the council of ministers in 2017. and it's been nearly 7 years plus the main difference between being a diploma and
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a politician bigger. but i'm just, i'm more the and as a cabinet, as unbelievable. lee, brilliant diplomats done into ministers. and it speaks about his acumen also to choose such a loan as people. but what is the difference between that i, i don't know, and i perhaps have not been able to find the answer. i agonize about this, i usually get nice carefully, not just into the, i agonize about it, what mix a bus and able to navigate a diploma is just a look at it that i use ition. but i think a lot of civil 7 audio than academic audio, or if i may respectfully submit a highly successful person in the world of and the clear there was a scene of this on the street that which is a fundamental requirement which has to be able to get on with people, put your point of view across, set them that have to reach out to your audience. that's part of the problem is
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what that's also part of what it takes. i mean, i was reminded when i was very young as a 77 and we lost a very serious, it was 7. and he said, you know, that my knew how to navigate when he sideboards politicians. he could use his skills as a civil servant done as a diplomat to talk to them. and yet when he was with the dye, had bureaucrats, he could also use his skills as a politician to navigate to. so i think these are interchangeable. these are the other facets of the same personality as to some people never make the funds which defined seen, you know, somebody. but i think if you will been in any profession for 39 years, i was shortly. there must have been something we have to learn by way of knowing how to relate to people knowing how that. and the wonderful politics brings a logic and what's that's all i mean is a diploma you had accredited from one country to another. or if you want in the u. n, you are dealing with the member states,
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but political gotten this is much larger. so i think it also provides good training now. but i'm going to some movies in the i can become energy independent by 2047. how do we get there? i think the probably when this does vision of india, the exhibiting board and how many alicia's rubin, because he also wants india to be a developed country by 2047. so what the, what, what you're talking about is india with an economy of $25.00 trillion dollars as against. busy trillion the fortunately and all that. now, no energy is a fundamental indicator of how well you are going to be doing. i know from g, if you ask anyone a question on any countries, consumption goes on energy rising, audit, declining at this table. even give you a fairly good idea of how the economies in india today. i've been,
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this is show rapid consumption, please. i don't want to start early with the facts, but we are today consuming 5000000 barrels of crude oil in a day, which is going into other science, 5000000 bottles in a day. this sort of figured in about a few days ago, yesterday or day before i had to appear on a show like this. and i did my homework and the figured have come up to 5330000. that is, you know, it's, it's a mass of how we are going to, in the next few years to look at them in google and consumption of $6000000.00 barrels per day, plus us in the next to tickets. next 20 years, 25 percent of the increase in global demand is going to come from india. so your question is a very specific pointed question and i apologize for giving you a long waiting it on so it will come from several things. one,
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a massive increase in explanation and production. what happened is, for a long period, we just taught that if crude oil is available at reasonable rates all over the world, why do you want to know explanation and production? even when i joined this one is 33 years ago, a lot of people in well place safety. why do want to import? oh, i do want to spend money on prospecting, but no, i think the more the government thinks that up and we have released out of the 3500000 square kilometers of sediment tribute soon would to be at 1000000 square kilometers, which was no go area has been released for prospecting. we've taken all the data and put it on a repository in the university of texas. all the major oil companies in the world are now coming. one thing to invest here in the job was, you know, you come invest and if you find the oil and then we have started to solve and right
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. this is ours. so the investor would say, why should i come in reason? now we're really in incentivize the invest upcoming and we're willing to even go finance the the, the, the, you know, the operation to look for it. we're going into biofuels and a very big we list them all the assumed responsibility. our total biofuel blending in our energy mix was 1.4 percent of that about today we are doing 15 percent last month. we need 50 percent. we had a thought of april 20 percent by 2030. we're going to do it by 2025. we're going to go with the green hydrogen in the big way. but having said all this, it's my understanding that at least for 20 years from now, you will also be dependent on fossil fuels, which is, i mean, they got got into if you're doing 5 and 5000005330000 bottles a day. it will go up to even save and all that about is it going to be all done
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domestically? domestic production will go up. the rest will be important and they are limited, but the self sufficiency is that you will not be dependent on external sources. now one good thing that does happen is that because you're allowed to buy, it also gives you some leverage in terms of how much you buy at what price you buy, et cetera. i think the 2047 and it is self sufficiency coming from solar a big with green hydrogen. like i think green hydrogen is a feel of the future. now what do you need for? what do you need to get green hydrogen? you need to be able to use clean energy at a reasonable price that to solar. we've already demonstrated that from $0.25 a unit, we brought the price of solar down to $0.03 a unit and then you'll need an electrolytes that we put that on the p l. i scheme.
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so today i would say that all out estimates of green hydrogen for the next 5 years . success rate to put the ad on the estimates. i see green hydrogen exploding. i see biofuels with a 20 percent target. i see that going to put the 40 percent 40 percent in mall. so your energy will be interesting. you will be able to solve your aggregate for a problem of 12 and with a 10 percent blending. we give off almost $41400.00 gross because you save that money due to impulse. now, when you do 20 percent blending, depending on the global price, it will give you a promise more. today the biofuels at the low feed is coming from sugar. okay, and it's coming from is it's coming from broken food green, it's coming from agriculture, the waste. so be self sufficient. energy in the part of the prime minister and this site is it's a large gun was including all this. what is it that you think is right now happening in part of that is making audits or why?
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but i think what is happening in the product is something which is a combination. if i'm, if it's the submit of 3 factors, we have gone from being apologetic about our development to space we will under develop, bieber wondered, looked at it devices for and there's something remarkable that this happened. is that the boss, the honorable prime ministers in spirit, in us? a pride in our historical and civilizational bost as a thing to say. and i think he believes that it's only countries which have free of 10 bride in them says japan being a case in point of have the ability to grow. and i is severely and strongly believing that because, you know, if you are going to buy into the wisdom that at the one that's an additive, i was brought up on a new budget. and i, when i went to school, when i went anywhere, you know, they would look at india as a, as, as a country,
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which is, you know, maybe to be with the different art despise and the other long way to go. maybe we had people who were displaying and just as a snake country upside smith. i'm live in elephant and angelo divided up peoples by the way up in the high position. absolutely. so then came along mr. i totally had a bunch, but i do my them a great respect. i had the privilege of knowing and for a long time, and we couldn't get it out. the nuclear tests, which gave you a sudden edge in terms of once you have a new cleared attendance before they just like me. mostly it is. but then the last 10 years have been remarkable in terms of the kind of b cannot make product. the forces which have been unleashed is a government can only provide a small catalyst. they can provide some ideas. i don't, no matter which way you would add. what used to happen is there is to say that that i'd say, but i'm in the as out that there is the a flow under india,
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which is um, you know, very way to do. and then that is a very poor and i, they wouldn't be more deep than yours have succeeded in doing this realization is we not been able to get that negative across the key is that the, as i said, the good governance is also good politics. so, side of all the i until guy, and he's taken the develop the folks of development or the benefits of development to the fullest, to the farthest by which was by the way, the agenda of the sustainable development goes 2030, which came into being, i think the 2016, but more the need only started in 2014, which means what ford could order for the 13 of us who is not. and i was saying version another 3 cro. if paper didn't have cool thing guys, he would give them cylinder and we'll draw out 10 grow. busy 28 black cylinders given under that would you are asking the metro system. know india is a country on the moon today i metro system is guiding one drawer people, passengers,
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but they but today are open. population is just over 30 percent. and we had 1400000 people is a 30 percent. by the time we don't 50 percent of a population that will be 800000000 people living in india. so you would need an open transport system. so the metro system in the next few years will be the 2nd largest in the world, a little bit take to south korea, japan and the united states, which is that 1560 kilometers. the point i'm making is it's not one thing. you bring an ecosystem, and today look at this digital image or him financial intrusion. and we can, let's go, was all segments of society. i mean, look at the legal defend to me in and of itself. we have one country in the word which declared the log done quickly also, because if it's a choice between life and livelihood, your con, the end of it will save lively, will do congress light. and then we came out of it also quickly, but it was like all indigenous to be manufactured vaccines. not only provided what
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something like 220 or the vaccine. those as 2 people in india motor most feet. but you also supply to 100 other countries. so today, you're not only doing this, but what you're doing yet. i know, but g is a replica both on a larger scale in the global south, in so in africa, in latin america, even in parts of centrally shots such as and central europe also. so india has come up, you look at your automobile and doing it, but more than that, i would say you come to the cutting edge technologies when it comes to the nitrogen, we don't need it because so in all these areas, these are the 3 things. civilizational fast, they think development now and then embracing technology, digital and all that with a religious, well, i'm facing. do you feel that in the see the list and the word from a huge economic might have done in 2022? absolutely. how you see when the military operations to friday. so if you're
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talking about 5 of the $22.00, let's look at the hard fact. some the hot facts that these actions reservation produced, 13000000 bottles off accrued light in a day. if you, what i'm gonna say, hope of hypothetically, if you were to pick the position that a little bit annoying boards or purchases from the shop. that expensive reason that been thought of putting william by those which was being produced and consumed. whatever to be purchased from somewhere else, right. or whether it would have been purchased from, from the other supplies. so just imagine if the doors were supplying the global total was about a $120000000.00 bottles of it would that could be a 1000000 barrels off. it is the other matters. it will be a more pressure on that, which means the price went up sort up to $25300.00. so one popular misconception was that, you know, people have said that, uh, you cannot buy uh, oil from russia. so i was one of those upfront,
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but i see that with great uh price i question, does it wait a minute, wait a minute? what are we discussing? the oil, which comes through a pipeline from the russian for division to hungry, is exempt from any such stock. the oil, which goes in a pipeline from the russian federation to china, is exempt sales from the cycling to japan and the parties that exam. so why this intended again then slowly everybody said no, no, it's not that it's that said, usually by then they impose the price gap. i have been saying to a lot of my friends all over the world, i don't want to name any country. you said you're buying a so much i said, do i buy from whoever sends me at the most competitive price, because my or marketing companies. so they provide 19 percent of the country store revenue. so they will be short and up. and they will say, we want to disagree with the line. anyone wants to compete, couldn't complete them, but then the in february, the 22, our purchase is of a good eyes on rest. so that only 0.2 percent me only 0.2 percent from today. last
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month it was $135.00, nearly 40 percent. but why does it bother the i don't think it does the rest. it doesn't bother the bank. $20000000.00 in the us. why, how come? nobody mentions that please. the political diplomacy move or is know that excite it's already made the best move. i have been saying, if you have a large farm and let them america lodge oil farm and who have suddenly find toys that we know. and if you can provide it cheap, we will so know these things will go up and down our imports to a large lead from saw the end. it'd be, uh, the minutes go with it. ok, well i think that keeps coming up and down. i don't think it's really bothering anyone what they have their problem solved. i. they would say that i wanted us to buy an oil at the competitive rates, but that's an entirely different discussion. and i know the construction is on the, for the new, the actors in contact with them. how important is this cooperation that i show any
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reading i can tell you, we've been to a very fascinating phase in our approach to imagine doing them. one more thing is we had the, you know, this design because new nuclear energy ideally shouldn't be a source of providing a very significant portion of your requirements. we signed an india specific safeguards agreement. we did all these things, etc. but it's always never took off and that or not, but idea of the russian federation cooperation is an exceptionally important of cooperation with the slide soviet union in many freezes. i mean defense, this is, you know, energy now the nuclear etc is extremely important. then be great. to evaluate, so what are the key objectives hold its engagement in the categories and in terms of energy, energy, as defined in the broadest possible, um, as broad as possible to thousands. i mean,
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new look forward. whatever energy you can get, we can all but today, you know, the new and you mix, you're going to be looking at, read some of those, all that. so like any country, but you know, this is a game in which some countries going off the mark earlier. but i certainly believe that there's enough around everywhere. and we've actually, nobody's vision production and supply lines with industrialized and countries which have large markets. whoever has the, the saw, so we'll also need to say, no buttons and give you an idea of where to stop buying, say, what 5 or 6000000 barrels a day. you know, how much a while it would be, and where would be the organ advised me? i mean, do i own large biased or did china and india i knew about us. but, you know, with the advent of electric vehicles coming in would be able to take advantage of either the hybrids biofuels coming in, green hydrogen, etc. the world is changing, but i still think for the fuel foreseeable future, this kind of energy mix is something we will need to be anchored in photo wise. how does, how do they put a, relax,
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a very good question. the question may have some really of oh, why doesn't have the ability to learn? so i mean i've, i've, no, i, i do that if i go to the next person venue, i'm relaxed otherwise, but the know by relaxed i think you had a very positive construct on, relax him. is this switch off the switch off today? we've all become victims. of the technology before you sleep, but felt happy and one at night you're looking at the messages when you get up in the morning. first thing is you're looking at amazon. so i think taking your time off, well, that's not going to happen this now because you have a boss was completely dedicated to look. i don't think he is bigger than a 100 in uh, did you want? does it task master done that's up to you. i mean, he has a lot of lot lot a lot of people working for him. i don't think everyone shows what drives through this phone like that. lucas, older than me. i don't think i've heard him take a holiday and see what a steven is through rather than i received him in the and in geneva when i was loan
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and representative. but the point is that, um, i think its gwen has progressive. what the last few months has been particularly hectic because it's a lot of 85 the election country actually we were working in the election more the one for 6 months earlier. so i think that does it. but i hope to slow down. i think what needs to be forward or uh, i don't think use florida. no, i would. i. i think it is. it's always a noble intent. so do you read or you watch a feeling or do you listen to poetry or do you listen to music? i listen to music throughout the day. i'm in whether i'm in the car or even during meetings i have music playing and all the i'd go to the homes that have on that, that's playing all the time. when it actually was here, i would invariably watch netflix also uh you know what, what a movie and, and uh for both of us and both of us read quite a bit. thank you. have the for like, you the and i guess,
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my dear and thank you for watching you join me next week as we uncovered a new lid. and yet another debate and let's stuff out of the amount of them can good by the look forward to talking to you all. that technology should work for people. a robot must obey the orders given by human beings, except we're so shorter is that conflict with the 1st law show your identification . we should be very careful about our professional intelligence at the point obviously is to great trust rather than fit the various jobs. i mean, with the artificial intelligence, we have somebody with theme and the robot must protect this phone. existence was alexis,
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the wife, of course, do you, i mean, we thought on, i mean i was kind of major, was how your ship was thought of system and obviously a hair dresser, a bus driver, a sales person, anyone could become a victim. that's how private negotiators fast appeared, looking for the desk assist, you know, what i'm going to go to see we started this summer. okay. no, no, no. yes. that's the reason why you'll be up by the name on that on those over those are, i mean, is the only the feasible missing on some of the asked to the studies boys took over
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the series a go for the 0. see these as the monthly news in the middle, that there's a quiz to in the window. this equation. the take a fresh look around is life kaleidoscopic, isn't just a shifted reality distortion by power, tired vision with no real opinions. fixtures designed to simplify will confuse who really wants a better wills, and is it just as a chosen few fractured images presented to this, but can you see through their illusion going underground can the,
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the rapid collapse of the ottoman empire gave the arabs hold for independence but the colonial power, so their future differently. great britain and france agreed on the seizure of the arab lands under the guise of the so called mandate of the league of nations. this bible play caused particular indignation in a rack, which was to get under the control of the british. in may 1921 rest with claim for independence broke out, both assuming and that she took part in it. soon the rallies turned into a real uprising against the invaders. more than 130000 people took up arms. britons urgently began to transfer reinforcements to a rack and used aircraft radius war. secretary winston churchill birds, the use of chemical weapons against the rebels. and general ser i on their hel dane
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bordered the destruction of any village where weapons were found. burning a village properly takes a long time. an hour or more according to sized paulding recalls cynically. in his memoirs, the medieval girl, the paid off, the revolt was crush. however, separate his empire had to make serious concessions. in 1921, it recognized bustle, the 1st as the king of a rack, and gave part of the power to representatives of the local population via rack. the revolt marked the beginning of the national consolidation of the country and became an important milestone on the way to the final independence the i was using. but if i saw last time, that was easier. sure,
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the other thing is to know that was to find a slip through it. there's still looking at the moment we're confused on so we can use the cool dips, but there's somebody for each of the present the special condition here as well. yeah. because a lot of stuff with the bill was covered up. i'm sure economy for us, so it's, it's just move definitely. what you me is suggesting with learning is good news story. now if there was a new film festival, we need to fill in stockton the
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idea of phones, a rouge with a handful of miss selfos colanda allegedly killed the death, told and 11 on the policy is 550 these way the government vows to eliminate the militants threats. our state of the position is that to web a and whoever does not understand this needs to get this right now is that is role is not waiting for the threats. we are preemptive as below interest at least 75. well, kids been to as well, it was close to the idea. so facing some residential building, all set we a seat in exodus and seeing residential areas being targeted. following the massacre of more than 3000 people.
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