Headquarters
The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI)
Darbari Seth Block, Core 6C,
India Habitat Centre, Lodhi Road,
New Delhi - 110 003, India
The government has commissioned a study through TERI to look at the massive water consuming industries such as steel, cement, power, and prescribe benchmarks for each.
Read moreProject team has developed a hybrid solar charging model that ensures continuous flow of electricity to the looms.
Read moreThe mobile application ‘Susthome’, developed by BYPL and TERI will help in tracking energy consumption patterns and will help understand the usage pattern and bring the behavioral change in how consumers use electricity.
Read MoreThe app will track a consumer's energy consumption patterns, analyse them, compare them to that of similar homes in the vicinity and show the energy saving potential.
Read moreThe mobile application 'Susthome', developed by BYPL and TERI will help in tracking energy consumption patterns and will help understand the usage pattern and bring the behavioral change in how consumers use electricity.
Read moreThe south and east corporations have decided to engage TERI to assess the volume of garbage collected in their areas, its disposal and the discrepancies in the implementation of the solid waste management rules.
Read moreDr Pia Sethi, TERI, pointed out that the Ministry of Environment Forests'guidelines for laying transmission lines through forest areas need to be followed so as to avoid a repeat of such situations. According to the guidelines, revised in 2016, the minimum distance between an electrical conductor and a tree needs to be at least 2.6 metres, whereas, in the case of the incident, the power line which killed the leopard was running directly through the tree.
Read moreGRIHA Council, a green building rating body in India, signed six MoUs with the Maharashtra government, regional chief engineers, and public works department to initiate the second phase of the PWD GRIHA green building initiative in the state.
Read moreMore than 60% households in East Delhi's 60 colonies did not segregate their waste last year, while 71% either had their waste collected by the informal sector or disposed it themselves at vacant plots and dhalaos, a study by TERI has shown.
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