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

    NATO Allies Deem Islamic State A Significant Threat, Agree On Coalition To Take On Militants

    NATO Allies Deem Islamic State A Significant Threat, Agree On Coalition To Take On Militants
    NEWPORT, Wales - The U.S. and 10 of its key allies agreed Friday that the Islamic State group is a significant threat to NATO countries and that they will take on the militants by squeezing their financial resources and going after them with military might.

    NATO Allies Deem Islamic State A Significant Threat, Agree On Coalition To Take On Militants

    WHO: Blood from Ebola survivors should be used to treat patients, 2 promising vaccines found

    WHO: Blood from Ebola survivors should be used to treat patients, 2 promising vaccines found
    LONDON - Desperate to restore hope amid the Ebola crisis, the World Health Organization said Friday it would accelerate the use of experimental treatments and vaccines to contain the expanding epidemic in West Africa.

    WHO: Blood from Ebola survivors should be used to treat patients, 2 promising vaccines found

    Trial Of Mountie In Jail-sex Case To Proceed In B.C. Supreme Court

    Trial Of Mountie In Jail-sex Case To Proceed In B.C. Supreme Court
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. - The trial of a Mountie charged with breach of trust for allegedly watching two female inmates have sex in a jail cell will proceed despite a judge's skepticism that the officer should even be prosecuted.

    Trial Of Mountie In Jail-sex Case To Proceed In B.C. Supreme Court

    B.C. Teachers Call For Binding Arbitration To End Strike, Get Students In School

    B.C. Teachers Call For Binding Arbitration To End Strike, Get Students In School
    VANCOUVER - The head of B.C.'s teachers' union is calling on the provincial government to agree to binding arbitration to end a strike that would get students back to school.

    B.C. Teachers Call For Binding Arbitration To End Strike, Get Students In School

    NewsAlert: StatsCan says 11,000 jobs lost in August

    NewsAlert: StatsCan says 11,000 jobs lost in August
    OTTAWA - Statistics Canada says the economy lost 11,000 net jobs last month, with unemployment remaining unchanged at 7.0 per cent.

    NewsAlert: StatsCan says 11,000 jobs lost in August

    B.C. To Address Supreme Court Ruling, Chiefs' Hangings: Premier Christy Clark

    B.C. To Address Supreme Court Ruling, Chiefs' Hangings: Premier Christy Clark
    VANCOUVER - British Columbia's government says it is addressing a recent high court decision and a historic wrong dating back 150 years with the Tsilhqot'in (sill-KOH'-teen) First Nation in the province's Interior.

    B.C. To Address Supreme Court Ruling, Chiefs' Hangings: Premier Christy Clark