Indian solar power prices hit record low, undercutting fossil fuels

Last year we were talking about solar energy growing 10x with a corresponding 90% drop in costs. 

I’d talk often with people still thinking that solar needs subsidies from tax breaks. They also would point out that solar was only a small part of the energy economy. 

I’d smile and remind them that it meant there was still enormous opportunities for growth and an unlimited supply of sunshine hitting the planet each day.

Still, I’d have a tough time taking in these exponential growth numbers. I’d read about a breakthough  that would half the costs again or double the output efficiency of solar cells. Just so amazing how there’s still more to come. 

Then I read this and my mind is blown again. I know itl I preach it. Still amazed to see it.


Indian solar power prices hit record low, undercutting fossil fuels

Wednesday 10 May 2017 08.29 EDT Last modified on Wednesday 10 May 2017 18.21 EDT

Wholesale solar power prices have reached another record low in India, faster than analysts predicted and further undercutting the price of fossil fuel-generated power in the country.

The tumbling price of solar energy also increases the likelihood that India will meet –and by its own predictions, exceed -the renewable energy targets it set at the Paris climate accords in December 2015.

India is the world’s third-largest carbon polluter, with emissions forecast to at least double as it seeks to develop its economy and lift hundreds of millions of citizens out of poverty.

Ensuring it generates as much of that energy as possible from renewable sources is considered crucial to limiting catastrophic global temperature increases.

At a reverse auction in Rajasthan on Tuesday, power companies Phelan Energy and Avaada Power each offered to charge 2.62 rupees per kilowatt-hour (kWh) of electricity generated from solar panels they hope to build at an energy park in the desert state. Last year’s previous record lowest bid was 4.34 rupees per kWh .

India plans nearly 60% of electricity capacity from non-fossil fuels by 2027
Read more

Analysts called the 40% price drop “world historic” and said it was driven by cheaper finance and growing investor confidence in India’s pledge to dramatically increase its renewable energy capacity.

It reduces the market price of solar tariffs well past the average charged by India’s largest thermal coal conglomerate, currently around 3.20 rupees per kWh . Wholesale price bids for wind energy also reached a record low of 3.46 rupees in February.

Kanika Chawla, a senior programme lead at the Delhi-based Council for Energy, Environment and Water (CEEW), said it was encouraging that Rajasthan project bidders were “new players, not the same old market leaders”.

“It shows there is enough happening to attract investment, attract interest from companies who have otherwise been cautious,” she said.

Prices were likely to drop further if the cost of borrowing money continued to fall -which she said was one of the major drivers in the record low prices this year.

“Any future incremental gains in prices will not come from the decline in technology prices, they will come from declines in the cost of finance,” she said.

Investors were also likely encouraged by a recent move to allow the state-backed Solar Energy Corporation of India to act as a guarantor in agreements between energy developers and India’s debt-ridden power distribution companies.

Tim Buckley, a director at the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis, said the most important factor driving a rush of international investment in Indian renewables was the “transparency, longevity and certainty” of the country’s energy policy.

“That is absolutely critical because when you invest for 25 to 35 years, you need certainty and clarity of policy,” he said.

“India has prime minister [Narendra] Modi saying this is his number one objective, you have energy minister [Piyush] Goyal talking about it every day. There is no doubt in anyone’s mind about Goyal’s commitment to this program and Modi’s endorsement of what Goyal’s doing,” he said.

How to Be Unstoppable in 30 Behaviorial Steps

I admire life/psychology/behavior hackers. They’re ever-testing, always-growing and often are happy to prolifically share their findings. I’m all for optimizing life, so I often find myself reading posts from notable writers and experimenters like Benjamin hardy. In his recent Thrive Global post, Benjamin draws you in with a headline you just can’t help but click (30 Behaviors That Will Make You Unstoppable), and psychological analysis so convincing, you just might believe that you too, can become irrepressible. 

As he states, a select few are “unstoppable” are in their own world. 

It is compelling though, isn’t it? Just a few tweaks to your thinking and over time, your behavior will follow. “Owning” your life, and bucking mediocrity is a calling that many discuss, but few achieve. 

For a quick checklist on what these imitable behaviors are, I’ll curate Benjamin’s 30 traits below. For the full guide, complete with pithy quotes and real life examples, read his article at Thrive Global or on his website

1. Don’t think — know and act.

2. Always be prepared so you have the freedom to act on instinct.

3. Don’t be motivated by money or anything external.

4. Never be satisfied.

5. Always be in control.

6. Be true to yourself.

7. Never let off the pressure.

8. Don’t be afraid of the consequences of failure.

9. Don’t compete with others. Make them compete with you.

10. Never stop learning.

11. Success isn’t enough — it only increases the pressure.

12. Don’t get crushed by success.

13. Completely own it when you screw up.

14. Let your work speak for itself.

15. Always work on your mental strength. 

16. Confidence is your greatest asset.

17. Surround yourself with people who remind you of the future, not the past.

18. Let things go, but never forget.

19. Have clear goals.

20. Respond immediately, rather than analyzing or stalling.

21. Choose simplicity over complication.

22. Never be jealous or envious of someone else’s accomplishments.

23. Take the shot every time.

24. Don’t get caught up in the results of your success.Always remain focused on what got you those results: the work.

25. Think and act 10X.

26. Set goals that far exceed your current capabilities. 

27. Make time for recovery and rejuvenation.

28. Start before you’re ready.

29. If you need permission, you probably shouldn’t do it.

30. Don’t make exceptions.

Want more? Get Benjamin’s morning checklist for a better day. Ready. Set. Go! 

Mossberg: The Disappearing Computer

“Personal computers are just too hard to use, and it’s not your fault.” It was true then, and for many, many years thereafter. Not only were the interfaces confusing, but most tech products demanded frequent tweaking and fixing of a type that required more technical skill than most people had, or cared to acquire. The whole field was new, and engineers weren’t designing products for normal people who had other talents and interests.

But, over time, the products have gotten more reliable and easier to use, and the users more sophisticated. You can now hand an iPad to a six-year-old, and, with just a bit of help, she will very likely learn how to operate it quickly. That’s amazing, given that the iPad is far more powerful than any complex PC I was testing in the 1990s. Plus, today’s hardware and software rarely fails catastrophically like PCs did so often in the old days.

So, now, I’d say: “Personal technology is usually pretty easy to use, and, if it’s not, it’s not your fault.” The devices we’ve come to rely on, like PCs and phones, aren’t new anymore. They’re refined, built with regular users in mind, and they get better each year.

Anything really new is still too close to the engineers to be simple or reliable. Many people aren’t going to be able to hook up a dedicated virtual reality system, or want to wear the headset. And most of us can’t yet trust Siri, Alexa, or Google Assistant for an accurate, useful answer much of the time. But it’s early days for those technologies.

So: where are we now, and what’s coming?

The big software revolutions, like cloud computing, search engines, and social networks, are also still growing and improving, but have become largely established.

a strange kind of lull has set in

Consumer drones and robotics are in their infancy, a niche, with too few practical uses as yet.

The biggest hardware and software arrival since the iPad in 2010 has been Amazon’s Echo voice-controlled intelligent speaker, powered by its Alexa software assistant. It arrived in 2015, and was followed last year by the similar Google Home device. I expect others.

But the Echo and Alexa are just getting started. Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos told me in an interview last year that artificial intelligence was not just in the first inning of a long baseball game, but at the stage where the very first batter comes up. And, while Amazon doesn’t release sales figures for the Echo family, third-party estimates say that, while they are growing fast, they were still well below 10 million units last year. For comparison, even in a relatively weak period, Apple sold 50 million much costlier iPhones in just 90 days last quarter, and the combined total sales of the far more prevalent Android phones no doubt were much greater.

Google just announced that there are now 2 billion Android devices in active monthly use globally, and Apple announced a year and a half ago that there were over 1 billion iOS devices in active use. These are mostly smartphones, and they are no longer novel.

Wait for it

But just because you’re not seeing amazing new consumer tech products on Amazon, in the app stores, or at the Apple Store or Best Buy, that doesn’t mean the tech revolution is stuck, or stopped. In fact, it’s just pausing to conquer some major new territory. And, if it succeeds, the results could be as big, or bigger, than the first consumer PCs were in the 1970s, or even the web in the 1990s and smartphones in the first decade of this century.

All of the major tech players, companies from other industries, and startups with names we don’t know yet are working away on some or all of the new major building blocks of the future. They are: artificial intelligence / machine learning, augmented reality, virtual reality, robotics and drones, smart homes, self-driving cars, and digital health / wearables.

All of these things have dependencies in common. They include greater and more distributed computing power, new sensors, better networks, smarter voice and visual recognition, and software that’s simultaneously more intelligent and more secure.

Examples of all these technologies already exist, but they are early, limited, and mainly attractive to enthusiasts. Compared to what’s coming, they are like the Commodore PET (look it up, kids) or those huge car phones in old movies.

We’ve all had a hell of a ride for the last few decades, no matter when you got on the roller coaster. It’s been exciting, enriching, and transformative. But it’s also been about objects and processes. Soon, after a brief slowdown, the roller coaster will be accelerating faster than ever, only this time it’ll be about actual experiences, with much less emphasis on the way those experiences get made.

As a gadget-lover, this makes me a little sad. But, as a tech believer, it’s tremendously exciting. I won’t be reviewing all the new stuff anymore, but you can bet I’ll be closely watching this next turn of the wheel.

This article originally appeared at: https://www.theverge.com/2017/5/25/15686870/walt-mossberg-final-column-the-disappearing-computer.

Staying Healthy and Hopeful During Drug Abuse Recovery

One of the hardest parts about drug addiction recovery is that the chance for relapse never really goes away. While your body can physically recover through detox and other treatment methods, the psychological aspects of addiction and your cravings can last for the rest of your life. The reality is that the majority of drug addicts relapse at some point.

It takes a lot of patience, emotional resilience, and loving relationships to stay on the path of recovery. Everyone wanting to stay free from drugs and avoid relapse need to make the most out of all the help they can get; whether from their friends, family, or from drug addiction facilities such as the addiction recovery center opening in San Francisco. The good news is that addicts have plenty of help and resources they can count on to keep them healthy and hopeful as they recover from drug abuse.

The Relationship Between Drug Addiction and Stress

An essential part of drug abuse recovery is understanding the connection between stress and drug addiction. People who undergo stressful and traumatic events during their early life -such as child abuse -are more likely to become drug addicts. Health conditions such as anxiety and depression can also cause a lot of stress that increases the risk of opioid addictions. Stress is one of the most common reasons given by people who abuse prescription drugs as the reason they started their pain pill abuse.

The problem is made even worse as opioid addictions alter the areas of the brain that are used to handle stress. The more opioids you take, the more susceptible to stress you become. The damage can last for years, making it even easier for you to become so stressed out you relapse.

Opioid addicts mark stress as one of the biggest stimulus for their drug cravings. The general stress of life is given as the main reason for relapsing and abusing prescription drugs again. This is why fostering stress coping mechanisms and techniques is an important part of drug abuse recovery.

The Role of Family and Friends in Addiction Recovery

Another primary cause of pain pill addiction relapse is being unable to develop an intimate relationship. Nobody is able to recover from a drug addiction by themselves. They need a support network.
Another essential key to drug abuse recovery is to rebuild close connections between addicts and their friends and family. This will often require the addict to recognise the damage their addiction caused and make amends for it; earning the forgiveness of the people they wronged thanks to their addictions.

The family of the addict will be going through their own recovery process alongside the addict. It can take months, and potentially years, to re-establish the mutual trust and respect between friends and family members. There’s nothing quite as healing as spending time with the people you love -and who love you back.

Support Groups for Addiction Recovery

It’s believed by many experts that group therapy is more effective than individual therapy for prescription drug abuse. A group setting allows everyone involved to support and challenge one another, creating a sense of community between all involved.

Narcotics Anonymous (NA) is an international network of local and community-based meetings to help people recovering from drug addiction. As the name implies, the program is based around Alcoholics Anonymous, and includes an abstinence-based 12-step program for overcoming drug addiction. NA has gone on to become a big success, with over 58,000 NA meetings held around the world each week.

Sometimes living with -or even just knowing -a drug addict can cause emotional problems for family members and friends. The people hurt by your addiction could find benefit in attending a support group of their own, sharing their experiences with people in similar situations. The most well-known support group of this kind is Nar-Anon; an offshoot of Narcotics Anonymous.

No matter how you choose to get the drug addiction help you need, what matters is that you stick with it. Build a support network and get people in your life that will love and support you on your journey.

The First Few Hours of Your Day Have a High Impact on Your Life

The alarm clock goes off and what do the majority of us do? Grab our phone and get the day’s updates in email, news and social media. Whether we realize it or not, we’ve just give over our most valuable time to responding to demands and thoughts of others. 

Even if you’re not a very early riser, protecting and prioritizing the first hours of your day can make a major impact on your health, creativity, productivity and eventually, life’s work. 

Here are some reasons why your first hours can impact the rest of your day. 

1.Your Willpower is at its Highest

Throughout our day we make 100’s of decisions which reduce our willpower. When we wake up in the morning we usually haven’t made any decisions, so our willpower is the highest it will be at any point in the day.

It’s an ideal time to do deep work because you’re less likely to give into distractions. Willpower is a valuable commodity which you don’t want to waste on pointless shit you don’t care about. Treat it accordingly.

2.Your Mind is Less Scattered

By the time most of us get through a day we’ve read emails, clicked links on the internet, and received a half a dozen text messages. Our minds become quite scattered after all that. This kind of excessive consumption limits our creativity and makes it difficult to focus.

But when we wake up in the morning, our minds are calm. We haven’t taken in a firehose of information, which makes it easier to consume less and create more. An added benefit- I’m able to hack flow states more easily.

3.You’re Less Likely to Be Interrupted

There’s a great deal of power to uninterrupted creation time. But as any day progresses the likelihood that your work will be interrupted by meetings, phone calls, or screaming kids goes up significantly. When you’re up at the crack of dawn, you’re far less likely to be interrupted by a thousand things.

4. You Increase The Availability of Time

Time is the most valuable asset at our disposal. While we can’t add more than 24 hours to a day, we can add to the hours we get value from. Let’s say you wake up an hour earlier than you normally would each day. That means you’d get 7 hours a week and 364 hours a year just from waking up an hour earlier.

5. You Start Your Day With a Sense of Accomplishment

Imagine getting to the end of the day and realizing you didn’t do a damn thing that made your life better. It sucks. If you’ve ever spent an entire day swiping on Tinder, messaging people on Facebook, checking email, and wasting time online, you know how shitty you feel at the end of it. Waking up early allows you to start the day with a sense of accomplishment. When I start a day by reading 50 pages and writing 1000 words, that carries into the rest of my day and creates momentum.

Short side note- if you aren’t sure what activities to start your day with, you’ll love this swipe file I’ve put together. You’ll find my best tips on honing your productivity & creativity, and finding the courage to carve your own path, rather than following someone else’s footsteps. Get it here.

You might have just read all that and thought “this is great, but I’m not a morning person.” So let’s talk about how you actually become a morning person. Each of these steps individually will seem really simple. But when you combine them they become very effective.

For more tips and insights, read Srinivas Rao‘s article at The Mission

5 Avoidable Mistakes Many Entrepreneurs Make

Millions of people across the world dream of launching their own business. And every year, hundreds of thousands of these entrepreneurs do just that. In fact, more than 450,000 businesses are launched in the U.S. annually, according to CNN.

Many entrepreneurs start their own business because they want to be their own boss, build a legacy, and increase their earning potential. Launching a business is great, but the real goal is to succeed. Surviving as a startup is much more difficult than launching one. It’s estimated that roughly one-third of all businesses fail within two years and less than 5%  make it to ten.  

With the survival rate of entrepreneurs being so low, it’s important to optimize businesses as much as possible. If you’re a first-time entrepreneur, here are a few tips to increase the survival chances of your startup.
1. Don’t Fall into a Culture Trap
Startups are known for their casual dress code, flexible work hours, unlimited coffee and snacks, and relatively laid back atmosphere. Don’t get me wrong, I love a shot of espresso as much as the next guy, but there is more to a company culture than shallow benefits.

As an entrepreneur, you will play a vital role in forming your company’s culture. You should relish in this opportunity. Before you ever launch a business or start hiring employees, you need to create a clear and descriptive vision for your company. With your vision in mind, create values and practices that align with your vision.

With these core principles in place, you can start finding employees that share your vision and build a workplace environment that is cohesive with your values and practices. A company’s culture doesn’t just happen overnight.  It needs to be iterative and molded over the life of your business. Don’t get caught up chasing the idea of what a startup’s culture should be.
2. Don’t Grow Too Quickly
Obviously, growing too quickly is a good problem to have. With that said, you need to focus on growing smarter rather than faster. There are a lot of startups who failed because they couldn’t sustain their early success.

Some examples of growing too quickly:

  • Accepting an order that puts you above or near your output capacity
  • Launching a product before it’s ready
  • Hiring more employees than is absolutely necessary
  • Expanding into new, unfamiliar markets

Sujan Patel wrote about the dangers of growing too quickly and described a company, Crumbs Bake Shop, which saw tremendous growth in its early years as a specialty cupcake shop. As a result, it expanded operations into several new markets, focusing entirely on cupcakes.

Unfortunately, cupcake sales have seen a steady drop in recent years and so too has Crumbs’ value. If Crumbs had taken a slower approach to expansion or a more strategic look at consumer trends, they might have made better growth decisions.

If your startup experiences immediate success, enjoy it, but also take a step back before making any crucial decisions. Growing too quickly can be the ultimate wolf in sheep’s clothing.
3. Keep a Focus on Finances
This may seem obvious, but maintaining healthy accounting practices can vastly improve your startup’s success rate. Whether this means updating your books regularly to find clients with outstanding payments or using tax deductions to save your business money, a financially-minded business partner can help keep your startup afloat.

Karl Swan is a tax specialist at Rivero, Gordimer and Company, a Tampa CPA firm. He says: 
Small businesses and new entrepreneurs must take advantage of the opportunities for tax deductions in their businesses. From claiming a home office to understanding how to depreciate office furniture, there are many ways to prepare business taxes for optimal deductions. Entrepreneurs can save a lot of money with appropriate tax strategies, but many fail to take full advantage of their deductions.
Practicing financial management as a startup will help build positive habits that will keep your business thriving long after its infancy.
4. Practice Smarter Marketing Habits
Most newly launched businesses are bootstrapping, meaning they don’t have a lot of excess resources to devote to marketing. This is a catch-22 because marketing is how you generate leads, leads are how you generate revenue, and revenue is what keeps your business alive.

Therefore, it’s critical that entrepreneurs practice smart marketing.

Marketing smarter means asking the right questions before you engage in a marketing initiative. Some important questions to ask yourself are:

  • How will this marketing activity lead to more conversions?
  • Are we highlighting our core competencies?
  • Does this marketing message align with our brand image?
  • Will this generate an ROI that I’m satisfied with?

Marketing smarter also means recognizing when it’s time to outsource. If your team isn’t familiar with email marketing, SEO, content marketing, direct mail, or other marketing initiatives, then you’re likely to see a relatively low ROI compared to outsourcing. Companies like CopyPress have specific packages for startups, targeting optimal ROI.
5. You Can’t Make Everyone Happy
There’s an adage in business: “The customer is always right.” That simply isn’t true. Yes, it’s important to focus on customer satisfaction, but not at the expense of your company’s greater good. Look at every customer service complaint independently and create a process for tracking repeated complaints or flagging frequent complainers.

The sooner you realize you can’t please every customer, the more stable your customer service will become. Alexander Kjerulf writes on the Huffington Post that practicing “the customer is always right” can lead to an unfair advantage for abrasive customers, worse customer service, and dissatisfied employees.

It’s not just customers that you can’t always please, but it also relates to employees. Startups are inherently tough environments. From long hours and stressful deadlines to late paychecks or lofty promises, life at a startup can be difficult. This flux isn’t for everyone and entrepreneurs running a startup need to prepare for dissatisfied employees. It’s important to be transparent with your employees and outline expectations during the hiring stage. Startups that can get buy-in and commitment from their employees are the ones that stand the best chance.

Being a successful entrepreneur isn’t easy, and if it’s your first business, your chances of success are even slimmer. That doesn’t mean it’s impossible to succeed. Rather, you must cautiously grow your business. It’s important to learn from the mistakes of other startups as you try to maneuver the minefield that is running a startup.  

https://www.influencive.com/avoidable-entrepreneur-mistakes