Indian-Origin Professor To Lead “Best And Brightest” Scientists In US’s Texas

Indian-Origin Professor To Lead “Best And Brightest” Scientists In US’s Texas


Dr Ganesh Thakur, currently vice president of TAMEST, will be named the president in 2025

Houston:

Ganesh Thakur, an Indian-origin professor in the US, has been appointed as the vice president of the Texas Academy of Medicine, Engineering, Science and Technology (TAMEST), an organisation that brings the state’s top scientists and researchers to advance research, innovation and business in Texas.

The TAMEST board of directors on Tuesday appointed Dr Thakur, a Distinguished Professor of Petroleum Engineering at the University of Houston (UH), vice president alongside Brendan Lee, who will serve as the president.

Originally from Jharkhand, Dr Thakur is the first UH faculty member to lead TAMEST.

During his two-year term as vice president, he will help coordinate and guide the board of directors with strategic planning, programmes and communication.

He will eventually be named the president of the organisation in 2025.

“Texas is home to some of the most brilliant minds in the world, and I’m honoured and excited by this opportunity to strengthen collaboration and advance innovation across the state in fields critical to our continued growth and development,” said Dr Thakur, who has been a member of the organisation since 2016, most recently serving as treasurer.

“TAMEST is a scientific and biomedical intellectual engine for the state, and I am passionate about its mission to benefit public good and business,” he added.

A member of the National Academy of Engineering and the National Academy of Inventors, Dr Thakur is a globally recognised pioneer in Carbon Capture, Utilisation and Storage (CCUS). His patent on forecasting the performance of water injection and enhanced oil recovery (EOR) using a hybrid analytical-empirical methodology provided a much faster approach that served as an alternative to more time-consuming reservoir simulation.

In a USD 5 million partnership with Oil India Limited, Dr Thakur’s team helped capture carbon dioxide from petrochemical plants to boost oil recovery in several fields in Assam. The project is targeted to help reduce India’s carbon footprint and increase its ability to fulfil its energy needs.

“Dr Thakur’s leadership, passion and cutting-edge research have been instrumental in positioning the University as a strategic partner to the energy industry,” said Ramanan Krishnamoorti, UH vice president of energy and innovation.

“His extensive knowledge and expertise will be of great benefit to TAMEST and the state of Texas. I sincerely congratulate him on this well-deserved appointment,” he added.

“We fully support Dr Thakur’s involvement in this key leadership position which is critical to advancing innovation across our state. He has an incredible passion for teaching and collaboration which will be a great asset to the TAMEST,” said Joseph W. Tedesco, Elizabeth D. Rockwell Dean of the Cullen College of Engineering.

Dr Thakur joined UH in 2016 with a grant from the Texas Governor’s University Research Initiative (GURI). He joined as director of UH Energy Industry Partnerships after almost four decades working in the industry at Chevron, where he served in several leadership roles, including vice president of reservoir management.

He earned his doctorate in petroleum and natural gas engineering (PNGE) from Pennsylvania State University in 1973, after earning his master’s degrees in mathematics and PNGE there. He also has an MBA from Houston Baptist University and received his bachelor’s degree in petroleum engineering from IIT (ISM) Dhanbad in India.

TAMEST membership includes all Texas-based members of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine, the state’s nine Nobel laureates and 18 member institutions, including the University of Houston. It brings together the state’s “best and brightest” scientists and researchers to foster collaboration and advance research, innovation and business in Texas, according to the TAMEST website.
 

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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Boy, 4, Sexually Assaulted, Killed In Odisha; Engineering Student Arrested

Boy, 4, Sexually Assaulted, Killed In Odisha; Engineering Student Arrested


The accused fled the area after the incident and he was arrested later, cops said. (Representational)

Ganjam:

A 22-year-old engineering student was arrested on Wednesday over the death of a four-year-old boy in Odisha’s Ganjam district, police said.

The boy was found in blood on the terrace of his neighbour’s house on Tuesday.

As per preliminary investigation, the engineering student had sexually assaulted the boy and fearing arrest, smashed the boy’s head with an iron door of the under-construction house, a police officer said.

The accused fled the area after the incident and he was arrested near Aska, its SDPO Uma Shankar Singh said.

He said the exact cause of the death could be ascertained only after getting the post-mortem report.

The incident came to light after the victim’s parents did not find the boy in the house for long hours and later spotted the boy in the pool of blood on the terrace of the neighbour’s house. He was taken to a community health centre in Dharakote, where the doctor declared him dead.

Meanwhile, human rights activist Rabindra Mishra appealed to the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) to direct the state government to take stringent action against the accused and pay a compensation of Rs 20 lakh to the victim’s parents.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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Congress’s AK Antony’s Son Quits Party, Cites Post On BBC Series On PM Modi

Congress’s AK Antony’s Son Quits Party, Cites Post On BBC Series On PM Modi


Anil Antony announced his decision to quit on Twitter, sharing his resignation letter.

New Delhi:

Congress veteran AK Antony’s son Anil K Antony has quit the party alleging “intolerant calls to retract a tweet” in which he had denounced a BBC documentary on Prime Minister Narendra Modi and called it a “dangerous precedent”.

Anil Antony, who was part of the Congress’s social media cell in Kerala, shared his resignation letter on Twitter today and cited “abuses by ones supporting a trek to promote love” in a caustic reference to Rahul Gandhi’s Bharat Jodo Yatra.

“I have resigned from my roles in the Congress. Intolerant calls to retract a tweet, by those fighting for free speech. I refused. @facebook wall of hate/abuses by ones supporting a trek to promote love! Hypocrisy thy name is! Life goes on,” he wrote.

Anil Antony’s “redacted resignation letter” slammed the party leadership, saying: “By now, I have been made well aware that you, your colleagues, and the coterie around the leadership are only keen to work with a bunch of sycophants and chamchas, who would unquestionably be at your beck and call. This has become the lone criterion of merit.”

Yesterday, Anil Antony called the BBC a state-sponsored channel with a “long history of prejudices against India”, while slamming a two-part series focusing on PM Modi and the 2002 Gujarat riots.

His view was in complete contrast to the stand of the Congress in Kerala, which announced that the documentary would be screened in different parts of the state.

The documentary, which investigates allegations liked to the 2002 Gujarat riots, has been slammed by the Ministry of External Affairs as a “propaganda piece designed to push a discredited narrative”.  The documentary reflects a “colonial mindset”, the government said.

The opposition has accused the Centre of ordering the blocking of multiple YouTube videos and Twitter posts sharing links to the documentary.

Congress leader Rahul Gandhi, speaking to reporters in Jammu during his Bharat Jodo Yatra, questioned what he called censorship by the government. “Truth shines bright. It has a nasty habit of coming out. So no amount of banning, oppression and frightening people is going to stop the truth from coming out,” he said.

Speaking to NDTV, Mr Antony said he had “no problem” with anyone in the Congress party, including Rahul Gandhi, but “in the 75th year of our independence, we shouldn’t allow foreigners or their institutions to undermine our sovereignty or run down our institutions.”

Anil Antony’s father AK Antony is one of the Congress’s top leaders and was Union Defence Minister when the party was in power.





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