Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canada to help India in building smart cities

Darpan News Desk IANS, 15 Oct, 2014 11:16 AM
    Canada will help India in building smart cities and achieving its target of housing for all by offering wooden multi-storey housing technology, officials said here Wednesday.
     
    In a meeting with Housing and Urban Poverty Alleviation (HUPA) Minister M. Venkaiah Naidu here, Canadian Minister of International Trade Ed Fast said his country's "expertise in wood-based housing technology that enables multi-storey construction and India can consider it to meet its ambitious housing targets".
     
    He said life span of such houses is about 60 years and is amenable for renewal.
     
    The Canadian minister told Naidu that Toronto, Vancouver and Calgary figure among the world's top 10 smart cities and his country was keen to partner with India in building smart cities.
     
    Naidu directed the secretaries of HUPA to "examine Canada's offers and firm up areas of cooperation before Prime Minister Narendra Modi's meeting with his Canadian counterpart during the forthcoming G-20 Summit".
     
    Affordable housing for all by 2022 and creation of 100 smart cities are the big-ticket projects of the central government.
     
    Naidu gave a detailed account of various initiatives and suggested cooperation in respect of affordable housing, waste water recycling, sanitation and public transport infrastructure in urban areas and building smart cities.
     
    Besides, Canada will offer technology for waste water recycling.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    No element of Canada's new prostitution law should target women, advocates say

    No element of Canada's new prostitution law should target women, advocates say
    No element of a proposed new prostitution law should criminalize prostitutes themselves, a coalition of women's groups said Wednesday.

    No element of Canada's new prostitution law should target women, advocates say

    Federal program focuses on "root causes" of missing aboriginal women

    Federal program focuses on
    One of the Conservative government's key programs on missing and murdered aboriginal women includes a focus on "addressing the root causes," despite the prime minister's suggestion that sociology isn't the right lens to use.

    Federal program focuses on "root causes" of missing aboriginal women

    BMO offers five-year, fixed mortgage rate of 2.99 per cent - again

    BMO offers five-year, fixed mortgage rate of 2.99 per cent - again
    The Bank of Montreal has slashed its five-year, fixed mortgage rate to 2.99 per cent, a level that had previously raised concerns about it leading to an overheated housing market.

    BMO offers five-year, fixed mortgage rate of 2.99 per cent - again

    New regulations must balance consumer, broadcaster needs, says BCE

    New regulations must balance consumer, broadcaster needs, says BCE
    Consumers will get less and pay more, and jobs will be lost, under proposals being debated this week to modernize television program delivery, the country's broadcast regulator has been told.

    New regulations must balance consumer, broadcaster needs, says BCE

    Stock up on ramen noodle: cost of university to rise 13 per cent over four years

    Stock up on ramen noodle: cost of university to rise 13 per cent over four years
    Students will need deeper pockets to study at Canadian universities over the next four years with annual fees projected to rise 13 per cent on average to $7,755, having almost tripled over the past 20 years, according to a new report.

    Stock up on ramen noodle: cost of university to rise 13 per cent over four years

    To Harper, finding Franklin ships as much about sovereignty as solving a mystery

    To Harper, finding Franklin ships as much about sovereignty as solving a mystery
    There are few things that turn Stephen Harper's crank as much as Canada's North.

    To Harper, finding Franklin ships as much about sovereignty as solving a mystery