Monday, November 8, 2021

Nostalgic Day with Lodha Amara Odia Group



 

Someday we wish if we could go back in life, not to change anything, but to feel a few things twice.

Back then in life, punishment with friends that made unforgettable moments, madness in the school break that made incredible highlights....each one of us have treasured memories

#Hindsights 2020..taught us to sing, dance and bake to bring everyone together and be real.. 

The question is can we go back in time.. when people and emotions were real..

Yes we can and...we did it...and the above image is a testimony to it... 

While we had a lot fun in the above frame, while clicking .. but now we all realize that it was a memory in making....

We won't sign-off, till we meet again..

We will create an opportunity to meet, cherish and celebrate again.. 


Jay Jagannath

Ame Odia .. Bhari Badhia

Friday, July 23, 2021

Niladri Bije…… & the sweet narrative of Kheer Mohan…aka Rasagola


 

Niladri Bije is the ceremony of Lord Jagannath’s return with his siblings from the Raths to the main temple in Goti Pahandi. ( the next Deity only moves from the chariot after the former Deity reached the destination)

This is really interesting as it is all about the continuation of the fight between Lord Jagannath and Goddess Laxmi. On the return from the vacation from their Mausi's home 
Lord Jagannath, Lord Balabhadra and Subhadra, when they try to enter the Temple, Goddess Lakshmi did not allow Lord Jagannath to enter.

A fight happens between Lord Jagannath and Laxmi in front of the Temple. Goddess Laxmi was angry on Lord Jagannath; as he did not take her along for the vacation to his Mausi's home.  The angry Goddess Laxmi didn’t want Lord Jagannath to enter the Puri Temple as he had disrespected her.

To please the upset wife, Lord Jagannath offered saree and Kheer Mohan (most of us know it as Rasagola) to Goddess Laxmi; She calmed down and accepted his apology and allowed him to enter the Puri Temple. Since then it has been a customary every year at the Puri Temple.

This auspicious day, Niladri Bije, today, is also celebrated as the famous Rasagola Dibasa in Odisha.

 

Jai Jagannath….!!!


Thursday, July 22, 2021

To love, or to hate? That is the question.

 

To love, or to hate? That is the question.


Is it the nobler to suffer through all the love and hate...?


"That question " is a question far from you. this seems closer to your heart,


A question so near, nearer than the answer dear, in love I fell, why bother the answer here


Thou thought so clear, thy question confused. Your love she hates, the love she refused


Thy willingness to confess made weak by the pangs of unrequited


Seek not the nod o pal, your beloved is not that girl


Let the cracks devour, of your heart asunder. Betrayal of love, in rain and thunder


Oh Beauty, please forgive all my sins in the prayer

Saturday, June 12, 2021

COVID 19 APOCALYPSE - OXYGEN CONUNDRUM - THE LESSONS LEARNT

 A lot has been manifested about the grim battle between that the Indian healthcare system and COVID in the year 2021. The second bout came with newer and unimaginable implications of the disease, which has left numerous ineradicable impressions. The most precarious conversation has definitely been about the medical oxygen and the sense of predicament around it.

Social media and news channels reported numerous instances of worried relatives of the COVID-19 patients in hospitals trying to enter the ICUs to check if their family member is being provided oxygen supply or not. Further, not only individuals but even hospitals were posting SOS messages on social platforms asking for help in replenishing the fast-depleting oxygen supply.

As compared to approximately 10 million getting infected in over 10 months during the first wave, the country witnessed more than 11 million being infected in just 10 weeks during the second wave. This sudden rapid rise in daily number of cases resulted in a massive demand for oxygen for treatment, and immediate lack of supply created an emergency situation in the country. What followed was a lot of disarray and turmoil, eventually being overcome by stupendous sacrifices and decisive innovations.

But it is important for the country to understand what led to the conundrum, how we overcame it and what we need to do to be better prepared for a third bout with COVID.

Factors exacerbating the Crisis situation

The country has been fighting continuously and relentlessly against the virus since its outbreak in early 2020. Interventions like extended lockdowns, stringent health safety measures, fast-tracking the vaccination rollouts, etc., had put India in a relatively better position as compared to many other countries across the world. However, the mammoth crisis of the second wave sweeping across the nation, blew all our learnings into the wind.

Some of the major factors that created a sense of panic during the second wave included:

Oxygen demand-supply mismatch: The impact of the second wave was much more widespread, hitting different regions almost simultaneously. This raised an abrupt and urgent demand for oxygen across different geographies almost at the same time. Further, the oxygen production is disproportionately spread across India with about 70% of the supply concentrated in the eastern and western part, 20% in southern, and 10% in the northern region. And the most number of infected cases were being reported from the north. With news of oxygen shortage amidst rising number of critical cases spreading like wildfire, people began panic buying of oxygen cylinders and machines like oxygen concentrators even when not required, which added pressure to the already depleting stock.

Inadequate cryogenic infrastructure: The existing liquid oxygen supply chain network faces many challenges, including inadequate number of oxygen tankers for moving oxygen from distant production facilities to meet the demand across different regions. Also, where a hospital would usually require a weekly refill from a 1000-liter tank, the demand spiked to a refill on a daily basis, putting immense pressure on the supply chain.

Less-equipped healthcare infrastructure: The healthcare infrastructure was not prepared to meet the sudden surge in critical cases that required oxygenated beds, especially in case of a prolonged stay. Hospitals in both public and private sector were found lacking the resources to cater to unexpected increase in oxygen consumption.

Nation Unified by a Single Objective: Dealing with the Oxygen Crisis

While the second wave brought to the surface the stark inadequacies in our resources and strategies to deal with the challenges of the pandemic, the stakeholders – the Government, the states, corporates, individuals, and our allies from across the world came together to offer resilient support and assistance.

Role of the government: The 6 empowered groups established in early 2020 to deal with the various challenges of the pandemic reconstituted into ten groups to tackle the issues arising in the second wave. Additionally, the Commerce Ministry adopted game changing strategies, including utilizing industrial oxygen as medical oxygen, converting the nitrogen and argon tankers into oxygen tankers thus increasing the number of cryogenic tankers by 50%, utilizing all available resources to hasten the supply of oxygen, etc. The state-owned steel plants reduced their safety stock from 3.5 days’ worth of oxygen to 0.5 day to help reduce the oxygen shortage.

Commendable feat by the Indian Railways that launched “Oxygen Express” to transport oxygen tankers from farthest parts of the country to places in need.

The Indian Air Force (IAF), Indian Railways, Indian Army, Navy, and the State Police, all pooled their resources and collaborated their efforts to ensure ease of movement of oxygen, setting up of medical facilities, storage facilities, green corridor, etc. The Supreme Court set up a National Task Force to ensure effective and transparent allocation of liquid medical oxygen across the country.

Private sector: The steel Industry pitched in by increasing the country’s output by 30% in just one month. Also, within the healthcare sector, not only the frontliners but “back in the line” workers like ambulance drivers, oxygen tank drivers, etc. worked 24/7 to help in oxygen reaching the patients.

Rest of the World: Countries including the UK, the US, Russia, and China assisted with medical supplies such as raw materials needed for vaccines, critical COVID-related medical supplies, oxygen generation equipment, and an enhanced capability for smoother transportation and storage of oxygen.

Prepare Proactively

The past few months have taught us some highly vital lessons to meet any furtue waves in a more streamlined and effective manner. The need of the hour is to strengthen the country’s last mile cryogenic infrastructure. As ASUs take years to set up, reinforcing storage facilities is essential to meet the oxygen requirements at the farthest parts of the country. Moreover, we need to lay down viable strategies to increase the storage capacity at district level, such as the Hub and Spoke model. Also, it has become important to enhance state-wise fleet of cryogenic tankers to meet the sudden demand to transport oxygen across geographies. Lastly, the healthcare system needs to be encouraged be judicious in its use of oxygen through  regular audits.

While the second wave tested the nation’s prowess and we proved the mettle in the end, the brutality of it highlighted some major bottlenecks and shortcomings in our existing action plan to fight the pandemic. However, having learnt our lesson, the hard way, we are geared up to face the next wave. The key to combating this virus is to accelerate mass vaccination efforts as we believe 

More Vaccination = Less Need of Oxygen.


Sunday, May 23, 2021

When going gets tough .. the tough gets going ……!!!!

How India managed the ten-fold Medical Oxygen demand for in one month…!!!

 

The COVID-19 pandemic has been a defining global health crisis of our time and probably the greatest challenge the entire mankind would have ever faced.

The COVID-19 pandemic began its onslaught in India in the month of March 2020. The 1st wave peaked in the month of September 2020 with 1 million active cases. In the month of February 2021, the active case count came down to 136K.

 


Beginning March 2021, the country witnessed the 2nd wave with an unprecedented and steep growth trajectory in number of daily cases. In a span of one month daily new cases went up from 12K to 400K, a jump of 33 times in a short span of 30 days.



As you all are aware, Medical Oxygen has been an extremely critical element in the treatment and recovery of patients infected with COVID-19.

As on today third week May 2021, in India, more than 900K people are on Medical Oxygen support, and it is further increasing.


COVID and Medical Oxygen Industry in India


India has a total Liquid Medical Oxygen (LMO) production capacity of 7200 (Tons Per Day) TPD being produced from 70 manufacturing locations, also called Air Separation Units (ASUs) spread across the country. The eastern region of the country has a fairly greater presence of these ASUs.

The current oxygen situation is characterized by a geographical mismatch in demand and supplies of LMO. While the Northern parts of India produce barely 13% of the country’s oxygen, it has been consuming 26% of the country’s total available oxygen. This is been substantiated by the 35% production capabilities of Eastern India, which requires only 10% of the total oxygen available in the country to treat its COVID patients.


In order to balance this mismatch, initiatives like Roll-On Roll-Off Oxygen Express Train and Air Lifting of empty cryogenic tankers to reduce one-way travel time by 2 days which would have taken 10 to 11 days otherwise travelling from East/West to North.


One way empty tankers and return by Oxygen Express..!!




 

Over the past one month beginning April 2021, the LMO production has been increased from 7200 TPD to 9300 TPD, 30 % increase in production in one month, which has broken the Global benchmark...

 

As a nation, India had 1171 LMO Tankers available for distribution. In only one months’ time, India has added 509 more Tanker to the total fleet to ease the stress on the distribution infrastructure to cater to the unusual increase in medical oxygen demand.


The addition of these 509 tankers has been made possible by the import of 101 tankers and conversion of 408 Cryogenic Nitrogen and Argon tankers to Oxygen tankers.




Bottlenecks of Hospital Infrastructure

It’s important to take a note that, with the increased number of COVID-19 cases, every Hospital has increased the number of Beds, ventilators and its associated infrastructure.

But the Medical storage capacities and associated equipment configuration were done based on pre-COVID consumption.

With less storage and increased consumption, these tanks which used to get filled once in 4 day now needed 3 fills in a day. Safety stock of medical oxygen went down to less than 8 hrs there by increasing the number of SOS calls.

 

No one questioned why the hospital didn’t the Hospitals augmented their medical oxygen storage in past so many years….!!!!

 

What we went through…!!!

We went through an unimaginable stressful time, we didn’t had time to react and look back. We were given a task of which we didn’t have time to plan and understand, we just did it.

 

We moved 2,50,000 MT of medical oxygen pan India just in one month..!!!


It's an unfathomable journey of hard work done to supply medical oxygen to the entire Nation, from 900 MT per day to 9000 MT per day, 10 times more done everyday in the entire 2nd wave.


It’s a miracle..!!!


We feel very sad about the loss of lives…but that’s the nature of the disease in this pandemic.


We are preparing for the next wave now...!!