| India
Pours Funds into Climate, Space Research
India's efforts
to improve its climate change research and upgrade its weather
data observatories will receive a boost in the new budget
which has also hiked up funds for planning its manned
moon mission.
The overall science allocation has risen
by more than a fifth in the country's 200809 budget
announced by finance minister Pranab Mukherjee this week (6
July).
Funds for the Ministry of Earth Sciences,
which oversees the country's climate change and ocean and
weather research, have almost doubled to more than 12 billion
Indian rupees (US$249 million). But this is dwarfed by the
Department of Space's total funds of US$1 billion.
Shailesh Nayak, secretary of the Ministry
of Earth Sciences, told SciDev.Net his ministry's focus will
be on crucial work to upgrade the network of observatories
that gather data on rain, atmospheric pressure and wind, for
example. Such information supplements Indian satellite data
to more accurately model and forecast the weather, says Nayak.
Three Indian satellites in the pipeline
are also being designed to provide an array of weather and
climate-related data.
Nayak says the ministry also plans to
take up research on cloud physics the physical processes
that lead to the formation, growth and precipitation of clouds
to understand the impact of cloud variability on global
warming as well as the Indian monsoon.
The trends in India's overall science
spending have remained largely unchanged in recent years,
with overall increases of about 20 per cent and the strategic
departments of atomic energy, space and defence research cornering
almost half the total research outlay (see India increases
science spending by 21 per cent).
Following this trend, the overall science
and technology sector, including agriculture, health, renewable
energy, space, atomic energy, defence, and environment and
forests has seen a rise of 22 per cent to US$6.4 billion this
year.
Funds for human space flight initiatives
from India's Department of Space have been hiked almost five-fold,
from US$8.6 million last year to US$47.4 million.
S. Sateesh, spokesperson for the Indian
Space Research Organisation (ISRO) part of the Department
of Space told SciDev.Net that the government is yet
to formally approve the US$2.5 billion sought for the manned
moon mission. Meanwhile, the 200910 allocation will
be spent on starting research towards this goal.
But several development-impacting research
sectors are lagging in funding. The departments for crop research
and health research have seen meagre increases of about five
per cent.
Source: SciDev.Net
Date: 8 July 2009

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