vimarsana.com

Page 294 - ஒன்றுபட்டது நாடுகள் கட்டமைப்பு மாநாடு News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Mini-Grids Making Electricity More Accessible

Follow Us We are first in your inbox with the most important news in the industry―keeping you smarter and one-step ahead in this ever-changing and competitive market.Start your free subscription Mini-Grids Making Electricity More Accessible Mini-grids smaller off-grid electricity distribution networks are being recognized as a cost-effective solution to bring power to rural communities that often have no access to a traditional power grid. They also are being used as proving grounds for new configurations of power generation technologies. Though the generation parameters for mini-grids vary, the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change defines a mini-grid as having fewer than 15 MW of generation capacity, and as an installation disconnected from a larger power grid.

Meet Kautilya Katariya, a Seven-Year-Old Genius Who is Now World s Youngest Coder

30 January 2021, 5:10 am EST By Numbers and codes are Kautilya Katariya s breakfast.  ( Screenshot from YouTube/ Programming With Mosh ) Believe it or not, Kautilya Katariya exists as the world s younger coder at the age of seven. Kautilya Katariya is Inhuman in his Feat Kautilya Katariya is not your ordinary kid in the neighborhood. Kids of his age might be playing hide-and-seek or tag outside, and even immersing themselves in computer video games. Kautilya, however, has a strange interest for his young age. Katariya is an Indian child prodigy who already has a grasp in computer programming. He became the world s recognized youngest coder last year when he was still a six-year-old genius. The Guinness Book of World Record hailed him as the youngest child to receive an AI certification from the IBM, Eye Rys reported.

Welcome back to the Paris Accord, America

QFFD signs Contribution Agreement with Adaptation Fund

QFFD signs Contribution Agreement with Adaptation Fund  30 Jan 2021 - 9:46 The Peninsula Doha: The Qatar Fund for Development (QFFD) has signed an unearmarked Contribution Agreement with the Adaptation Fund that will go towards funding adaptation and resilience programs for the most vulnerable countries to climate change. The new contribution aims to finance climate change adaptation projects in developing countries that are particularly vulnerable to the adverse impacts of climate change, including those in least developed countries (LDCs) and small island developing states (SIDS).  The new partnership between QFFD and the Adaptation Fund will focus on helping the most vulnerable countries adapt and build resilience to climate change and will be strongly aligned with climate change integration guidelines between both parties. 

© 2025 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.