PGs are instructed to serve meals twice a day
PG Owners Welfare Association urged facilities to avoid serving dosa, poori, chapati and similar dishes that need more gas to cook.
Salar News
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The advisory asking PGs to serve only two meals on weekdays may affect lakhs of residents, including students (Mohammed Asad)
Bengaluru, 11 March
The
Bengaluru PG Owners Welfare Association has issued an advisory urging paying
guest (PG) accommodations to serve two meals a day during weekdays
(Monday-Friday) amid the LPG shortage in the country. Three meals can be served
as usual on weekends, it said.
It has
also urged facilities to avoid serving dosa, poori, chapati and similar dishes that need more gas to cook and suggested prioritising electric rice cookers and
sharing cooking between nearby PGs.
This
will likely affect lakhs of people, including students, who reside in PGs
across the City.
Midday has not hit yet
The LPG
crisis has not affected the mid-day meal programme for government school
students yet, though there was a meeting in the Education Department to find
ways to tackle the crisis, sources said.
The
largest partner of the Midday meal programme in the country is Akshaya Patra.
The NGO said they do not depend much on LPG gas cylinders and use electric
steam boilers. Akshaya Patra feeds 23.5 lakh children across more than 24,000
schools across India.
Schools
will be closing for the summer holidays in one or one-and-a-half weeks.
Temples shift to wood
Temples
in Karnataka have started preparations to stock wooden logs, fearing that the
LPG shortage could hamper the ‘Prasada’ preparation and distribution to the
devotees.
“We have
LPG cylinder stock that can last for a week, but if this scarcity continues, then
there will be a problem in serving prasada to the devotees,” said Akhila
Karnataka Hindu Temple Archakas Federation (AKHTAF) President MS
Venkatachalaiah.
Disruption in Mysuru
Several
small hotels in Mysuru shut down following the shortage of commercial LPG cylinders on Wednesday. More hotels will suspend operations starting Thursday.
“With
supply almost zero, many hotel owners are forced to shut down,” said Mysuru
Hotel Owners' Association President C Narayana Gowda. “If the situation doesn't
improve, more hotels will be forced to shut down in the next couple of days.”
Govt mulls policy for data centres over environmental impacts
Karnataka IT/BT Minister Priyank Kharge on Wednesday said the State government is considering a "sustainable data centre policy" amid concerns over environmental costs associated with water and energy consumption.
Responding
to a question by Doddaballapur BJP MLA Dheeraj Muniraj during the Question Hour
in the Assembly, he said, “We have 32 private data centres functioning in the
state. We already have a data centre policy, which is under review."
Calling
the data centres ‘necessary evil’, he said they are needed for AI, machine
learning and emerging technologies.
The
Minister said the government's focus is shifting beyond Bengaluru to coastal
areas like Mangaluru.
Pointing
out that hyperscale data centres will not be suitable for Bengaluru due to the absence of a port and water constraints, he said, "…So our focus is on
edge, small, medium and large data centres, rather than hyperscale that
requires above 40 megawatt power."
Earlier,
Muniraj urged the government to set up data centre parks in his Doddaballapur
constituency.
Man held for hoarding over 4,000 litres of diesel
Police
have seized more than 4,000 litres of diesel that was allegedly illegally
stored by a man anticipating a rise in fuel prices due to the Israel–Iran
conflict.
The raid
was conducted on Tuesday night at Mudalthiyar in Kaniyooru village of
Beltangady taluk at the shed near the residence of Jagadish, 35, where police
found a large quantity of diesel stored in drums and cans.
Officials
said a total of 4,175 litres of diesel was recovered from 20 drums of 200-litre
capacity each and five cans of about 35-litre capacity.
Several
empty drums and cans were also found at the site.
The
seized diesel is estimated to be worth around ₹3.5 lakh.
According
to police, the accused had hoarded the fuel anticipating a price rise triggered
by the West Asia conflict.
Police
said Jagadish had stored the fuel without obtaining the required licence and
without following safety norms.
During
questioning, he reportedly told investigators that he had purchased the diesel
from a friend about a week ago and stored it for commercial purposes.
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