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How Swami Vivekananda Paved the Way for India’s Premier Science Institution

On the occasion of Swami Vivekananda’s birth anniversary, EdPublica highlights his pivotal role, alongside Sister Nivedita, in inspiring the creation of the Indian Institute of Science, India’s top-ranked higher education institution

Dipin Damodharan

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The Indian Institute of Science (IISc), today a global leader in scientific research, and India’s top-ranked higher education institution, owes its origin to a confluence of visionary ideas and unwavering dedication to national progress. While the name of eminent industrialist Jamsetji Tata often stands at the forefront of the institute’s establishment, two lesser-known figures played pivotal roles in shaping its foundations: Swami Vivekananda, a revolutionary Indian spiritual leader the world has ever seen, and his most loyal disciple Sister Nivedita. Their influence not only propelled the institution’s creation but also laid the groundwork for India’s self-reliance in science and technology.

The Visionary Dialogue: Swami Vivekananda and Jamsetji Tata

In the summer of 1893, two individuals—both from vastly different walks of life—found themselves sharing a ship journey from Japan to Canada. One was Swami Vivekananda, a 30-year-old monk, unknown to the world but filled with boundless energy and deep wisdom; the other was Jamsetji Tata, a prominent industrialist with a forward-thinking vision for India’s economic future. Their discussions during this journey would have a profound impact on the future of Indian science.

Swami Vivekananda, a leader whose brilliance and eloquence were so exceptional that even a Western leader could not come close to him at that time, passionately spoke of India’s potential to transition from merely trading raw materials to manufacturing its own goods. He emphasized the need for scientific and technological education to fulfill the country’s needs and help it become self-sufficient. He envisioned India not just as a land of spirituality, but as a land of innovation, equipped to face the challenges of a rapidly modernizing world.

Tata, already an influential figure in India’s industrial landscape, was deeply moved by Vivekananda’s ideas. Although the monk’s vision was far-reaching and idealistic, Tata recognized its importance and resolved to act upon it. This was the beginning of Tata’s long-standing commitment to the advancement of science in India.

Tata sought Vivekananda’s guidance to create a place where India’s spiritual ascetics could devote themselves to the advancement of science and technology.

The Seed of an Institution: Tata’s Pledge and Vivekananda’s Guidance

In 1898, five years after their first meeting, Tata wrote to Swami Vivekananda, after the latter’s much-celebrated and adored foreign trips that rocked the West, recalling their conversation on the ship. In his letter, Tata spoke of his vision for a research institute that would combine scientific research with the development of India’s humanistic traditions. Tata committed a substantial sum—200,000 pounds sterling (about INR 30 lakh at the time)—to establish a research institute that would focus on solving problems related to tropical diseases, Indian history, and the nation’s neglected scientific fields. Tata sought Vivekananda’s guidance to create a place where India’s spiritual ascetics could devote themselves to the advancement of science and technology.

“I trust you remember me as a fellow-traveller on your voyage from Japan to Chicago. I very much recall at this moment your views on the growth of the ascetic spirit in India, and the duty, not of destroying, but of diverting it into useful channels.

I recall these ideas in connection with my scheme of a Research Institute of Science for India, of which you have doubtless heard or read. It seems to me that no better use can be made of the ascetic spirit than the establishment of monasteries or residential halls for men dominated by this spirit, where they should live with ordinary decency, and devote their lives to the cultivation of sciences – natural and humanistic. I am of opinion that if such a crusade in favour of an asceticism of this kind were undertaken by a competent leader, it would greatly help asceticism, science, and the good name of our common country; and I know not who would make a more fitting general of such a campaign than Vivekananda,” Tata wrote in the letter.

In his reply letter, Vivekananda said (which was published in the April 1899 issue of Prabuddha Bharata, a monthly magazine started by Vivekananda), “We are not aware if any project at once so opportune and so far-reaching in its beneficent effects was ever mooted in India, as that of the post-graduate research university of Mr. Tata. The scheme grasps the vital point of weakness in our national well-being with a clearness of vision and tightness of grip, the masterliness of which is only equalled by the munificence of the gift with which it is ushered to the public.

It is needless to go into the details of Mr. Tata’s scheme here. Every one of our readers must have read Mr. Padsha’s lucid exposition of them. We shall try to simply state here the underlying principle of it. If India is to live and prosper and if there is to be an Indian nation which will have its place in the ranks of the great nations of the world, the food question must be solved first of all. And in these days of keen competition, it can only be solved by letting the light of modern science penetrate every pore of the two giant feeders of mankind: agriculture and commerce.”

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Image credit: Dipin/EdPublica

While Swami Vivekananda could not directly lead the initiative due to his responsibilities with his monastic order, he wholeheartedly supported Tata’s vision. He encouraged his disciples to take the project forward, though he could not dedicate his time to its realization.

Sister Nivedita: A Tireless Advocate for Science and Self-Reliance

Swami Vivekananda’s disciple, Sister Nivedita, emerged as a crucial figure in the realization of Tata’s vision. Nivedita, who was deeply committed to India’s intellectual and cultural revival, took it upon herself to champion the cause of the research institute. Her writings in various English-language newspapers were instrumental in rallying public support for the project. In 1899, Nivedita wrote:

“We are not aware if any project is at once so opportune and so far-reaching in its beneficent effects as that of the Post-Graduate Research University of Mr. Tata. The scheme grasps the vital point of weakness in our national well-being with a clearness of vision and tightness of grip.”

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Her powerful advocacy helped keep the vision alive despite challenges from the British colonial administration. Nivedita’s activism, coupled with her close relationship with prominent international thinkers, played a significant role in generating support for Tata’s ambitious plan.

Resistance and Struggle: The British Roadblocks

Despite Tata’s substantial pledge and Nivedita’s advocacy, the British establishment was initially unsupportive of the idea. When Tata presented the idea to Lord Curzon, the Viceroy of India, Curzon dismissed it as unfeasible. He doubted that Indians had the capacity for scientific research and questioned whether an institute focused on both science and humanities could succeed. Even after Tata met the Viceroy’s skepticism with steadfast commitment, the project was stalled.

The British colonial officials’ resistance continued when Sir William Ramsay, a well-known scientist, was appointed to inquire into Tata’s proposal. Ramsay, though a Nobel laureate in Chemistry, failed to transcend colonial biases. He rejected the idea, citing the improbability of blending scientific research with humanities. Despite the setbacks, Sister Nivedita refused to let the vision fade. While in London, she lobbied influential figures such as William James, the renowned American philosopher, and Patrick Geddes, a Scottish intellectual. Their advocacy bolstered the project’s credibility, with James even emphasizing that the institution should be managed entirely on national lines, free from government control.

The Final Approval: The Indian Institute of Science

Tragedy struck when Jamsetji Tata passed away in 1904, two years after Swami Vivekananda’s death. However, Tata’s dream was eventually realized after his death, when Lord Minto, the Viceroy who succeeded Lord Curzon, finally approved the proposal in 1909. The institute was originally intended to be located in Bombay, but it was ultimately established in Bangalore, thanks to the generous gift of 370 acres from the Maharaja of Mysore, Krishnaraj Wadiyar, who had been a devoted disciple of Vivekananda. His father H.H. Chamaraja Wadiyar, had been a staunch follower of Vivekananda and was greatly involved in sending him to the West.

The institute went on to become the intellectual backbone for a host of specialized institutions in India, including the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research and the Indian Institutes of Technology.

Unrecognized Contributions: The Role of Swami Vivekananda and Sister Nivedita

While Jamsetji Tata’s name is forever associated with the IISc, the contributions of Swami Vivekananda and Sister Nivedita are often overlooked. Vivekananda’s ideas on channeling India’s spiritual energy towards practical, scientific advancement laid the ideological foundation for the institute. Sister Nivedita’s tireless advocacy ensured that Tata’s vision remained alive, even in the face of intense opposition.

Today, the IISc stands as a testament to the dreams of these extraordinary individuals—visionaries who understood the critical link between scientific progress and national self-reliance. While the world remembers Tata for his industrial foresight, it is important to recognize the role played by Vivekananda and Nivedita in laying the intellectual and spiritual groundwork for what would become India’s premier scientific institution. Their legacy continues to inspire generations of scientists, educators, and thinkers in India and beyond.

The ideas of Swami Vivekananda were clear and unwavering. Freedom and reason were their essence. That was reflected in the case of the IISc. He consistently taught the eternal principles of Dharma, and that was their core. In the verse “Yukthiyuktham vachograhhyam balaadapi shukaadapi, Ayukthamaapi na graahhyam saakshaadapi Brihaspathe”, lies the foundation of Indian epistemology. Rational matters can be accepted from anyone, even from a child or a parrot. However, irrational ideas, no matter how great the person who presents them, must not be accepted. This stands in opposition to all forms of blind belief. Therefore, a philosophy based on authoritarianism cannot claim to be the legacy of Swami Vivekananda. Neither can a dogmatic “Ism” rooted in a singular intellect be aligned with his vision. Swami believed that freedom is the soul of India and indeed, of humans. Its dependence is solely on itself.

Dipin is the Co-founder and Editor-in-Chief of EdPublica. A journalist and editor with over 15 years of experience leading and co-founding both print and digital media outlets, he has written extensively on education, politics, and culture. His work has appeared in global publications such as The Huffington Post, The Himalayan Times, DailyO, Education Insider, and others.

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Sustainable Energy

The $76/MWh Breakthrough: Battery-Backed Solar Becomes the Cheapest Firm Power

The battery price collapse that just made solar a 24/7 power source. Utility-scale battery storage is now cheap enough to make dispatchable solar power economically viable in markets outside China and the US.

Dipin Damodharan

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Batteries now cheap enough to deliver solar when it is needed
Bird's Eye View of Solar Panel Roof at Sukaresmi, Jawa Barat, Indonesia/Image credit: Tom Fisk/Pexels

For years, clean-energy advocates spoke about a coming inflection point — a moment when renewable energy would stop being intermittent and start behaving like the dependable backbone of a modern grid. Has that moment quietly arrived? And it didn’t come from a single breakthrough technology, but from something more subtle and powerful: a sudden, cascading collapse in the cost of utility-scale battery storage.

In just two years, the economics of clean electricity have undergone one of the most dramatic shifts since the birth of the solar industry itself. Battery storage systems — long considered the missing link in renewable-dominant grids — have become so inexpensive that they now make solar energy dispatchable, not just abundant.

Utility-scale battery storage has crossed a decisive economic threshold in 2025. Fresh data from energy think tank Ember shows that the cost of turning abundant daytime solar power into on-demand, anytime electricity has fallen to $65/MWh, making stored solar competitive with fossil-fuel-based power in many markets.

Chart 4 It costs just 33 MWh to transform daytime solar into dispatchable solar@2x
Credit: Ember

The shift is not hypothetical. It is real, measurable, and unfolding at extraordinary speed. Across India, Italy, Saudi Arabia, and beyond, a pattern is emerging: utility-scale battery projects clearing auctions at around US$120–125/kWh, with core equipment priced near US$75/kWh, and installation, grid integration, and civil-works accounting for the remainder.

Kostantsa Rangelova, Global Electricity Analyst at Ember, points out the scale of the transformation with unusual bluntness: “After a 40% fall in 2024 in battery equipment costs, it’s clear we’re on track for another major fall in 2025. The economics for batteries are unrecognisable, and the industry is only just getting to grips with this new paradigm.”

The Silent Revolution Inside a Battery

The collapse in cost is only part of the story — the other half is technological maturity. Modern utility-scale batteries now offer:

  • 20-year lifetimes
  • 10,000–12,000 cycles
  • Round-trip efficiency above 90%

This is not incremental improvement. It is structural change.

For decades, the energy world assumed batteries were too fragile, too short-lived, too expensive for grid infrastructure. In 2025, they are emerging as among the most reliable long-duration assets in the power sector — often outliving the fossil-fuel plants they are replacing.

And just beneath the lithium boom lies something even more consequential: the arrival of sodium-ion batteries, which skip the need for lithium, nickel, or cobalt — promising prices once considered impossible.

When Cheap Batteries Meet Cheap Solar

The most important number in all the new data is not the capex, or cycle life, or equipment pricing. It is this:

US$76 per megawatt-hour.

That is the cost of delivering solar electricity whenever it is needed, day or night — if half of solar output is stored in batteries at US$65/MWh and the rest supplied directly during the day. In other words: solar + storage has become a dispatchable baseload resource.

For countries with rising electricity demand, this is seismic.

Rangelova puts it simply: “Solar is no longer just cheap daytime electricity, now it’s anytime dispatchable electricity. This is a game-changer for countries with fast-growing demand and strong solar resources.”

Gas markets — especially those reliant on imported LNG — cannot compete with $76/MWh firm clean power without subsidies or regulatory advantage. Coal plants — once symbols of energy security — now struggle to match either the cost or flexibility of storage-backed solar.

Chart 2 Battery cost fell by an average of 20 @2x
Credit: Ember

A Lesson from Kerala: Cheap Solar Isn’t Enough Without Storage

Even in regions with abundant solar potential and strong rooftop adoption, intermittency remains a barrier. Take the example of Kerala’s celebrated Perinjanam Energy Project, which electrified hundreds of households through community-driven rooftop solar and inspired nationwide interest.

Despite the early promise, the project — like many others across the state — struggled to scale. Limited land, regulatory uncertainty, low uptake of storage solutions, and weak incentive frameworks meant that daytime solar generation rarely translated into reliable electricity at night. The result: solar remained supplemental, not transformative.

This Kerala story captures a broader truth: solar panels alone don’t solve energy access and reliability problems. Without cost-effective storage, solar output — no matter how abundant — remains tied to the sun. The battery price collapse of 2025 changes that equation entirely, paving the way for renewable energy systems that are not just clean, but dependable.

What Happens Next

The global power system is entering an era in which:

  • Solar is the world’s cheapest electricity.
  • Batteries are the world’s cheapest way to deliver that electricity when it’s needed.
  • And the combination is now cheaper than building most new fossil-fuel plants.

The implications are enormous. Fossil-fuel peakers — long viewed as indispensable for evening demand peaks — are likely to be replaced by four-hour battery systems. Energy planners are questioning whether large gas or coal plants still make sense. Countries with surging power demand are increasingly designing energy systems around solar + storage from the outset.

Cheap batteries, in short, have not just made solar better. They have made solar inevitable.

And as Ember’s analysts conclude in their report: “Cheap batteries do not just complement solar — they unlock its full potential.”

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COP30

From 6% to 16%: The Philippines Shows the World How Fast Climate Budgets Can Shift

In just four years, the Philippines has expanded its climate spending from PHP 282 billion to over PHP 1 trillion — one of the fastest fiscal shifts anywhere in the world.

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Flooded Street with Jeepney in Malabon, Philippines. Image credit: Tear Cordez/Pexels

Governments across the world are beginning to rethink the way national budgets are designed, moving away from traditional fiscal planning and toward systems that integrate climate considerations directly into spending decisions. A new comparative review of global green-budgeting practices reveals a trend that is gathering momentum: more countries are using their budgets as climate-governance tools. But the pace of progress varies sharply between advanced economies and emerging markets.

The Rise of Climate-Conscious Budgets

Countries such as France, Ireland, Mexico and the Philippines provide some of the clearest examples of how climate priorities are reshaping national expenditure. France has increased its identified climate-positive budget from €38.1 billion in 2021 to €42.6 billion in 2025, while Ireland expanded its environmental allocations from €2 billion (2020) to €7 billion (2025). Mexico’s transformation has been even more rapid: climate-related expenditures rose from MXN 70 billion (2021) to MXN 466 billion (2025) — a six-fold increase.

A Sudden Surge in the Philippines

Nowhere is the shift more dramatic than the Philippines. After embedding climate budget tagging across its ministries, the country’s climate budget expanded from PHP 282 billion in 2021 to more than PHP 1 trillion in 2025, raising its share of the national budget from 6% to 16%. The reform forced ministries to assess thousands of programmes through a climate lens, resulting in a shift toward resilient infrastructure, sustainable energy, water security, and climate-smart industries.

Advanced Economies Move Beyond Tagging

While emerging economies are scaling up climate allocations, advanced economies are integrating climate metrics deeper into fiscal systems. Canada’s “climate lens” requires greenhouse-gas and resilience assessments for major infrastructure projects before funding is approved. Norway links its annual budget to its Climate Change Act and long-term low-emission strategies. Germany uses sustainability indicators to guide fiscal decisions, embedding climate considerations into macroeconomic planning.

These tools go beyond transparency. They force ministries to justify public spending not only in economic terms, but in climate terms — shifting budgets from accounting documents to steering instruments.

Despite this momentum, the analysis notes a persistent gap: many countries stop at tagging climate-related expenditures without linking them to outcomes or performance indicators. Tagging improves transparency, but on its own does not change investment decisions. Without climate-based appraisal and monitoring, high-emission infrastructure can still slip through national budgets unchallenged.

The Financing Challenge

For lower-income countries, the largest barriers are financial. High capital costs, limited fiscal room, and weaker public financial management systems restrict the scale of green budgeting reforms. Even when climate spending rises, sustaining these increases requires integrating climate metrics into medium-term fiscal frameworks — something only a handful of emerging economies have attempted.

Innovations Show What’s Possible

Some models offer a blueprint. Indonesia’s climate-tagging system feeds directly into its sovereign green sukuk framework, giving investors clear visibility over the use of proceeds. This loop — tagging, reporting, financing — demonstrates how governments can leverage green budgeting to unlock larger pools of private capital.

Still in Progress

The report concludes that the next frontier for green budgeting is integration: linking budget tagging, climate-lens project appraisal, performance-based reporting, and climate-aligned fiscal strategies. Done together, these tools allow budgets to become climate-governance instruments capable of guiding national transitions.

But the pace remains uneven. Some countries are racing ahead, while others are taking incremental steps. What is clear, however, is that climate-aligned public finance is no longer optional. As climate impacts intensify, the alignment of the world’s budgets will determine who adapts — and who is left behind.

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COP30

Corporate Capture: Fossil Fuel Lobbyists at COP30 Hit Record High, Outnumbering Delegates from Climate-Vulnerable Nations

COP30 sees over 1,600 fossil fuel lobbyists inside climate talks, surpassing delegations of climate-vulnerable nations. Experts warn of corporate capture.

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COP30 was billed as the “Implementation COP,” a summit where governments would finally convert years of climate promises into concrete action. Instead, the year’s most striking headline comes from the corridors, not the negotiation rooms: more than 1,600 fossil fuel lobbyists have entered the talks — the highest in the history of the UN climate process.

A new analysis by the Kick Big Polluters Out (KBPO) coalition reveals that one in every 25 participants in Belém is linked to the oil, gas, or coal industry. The number surpasses the total delegations of many climate-vulnerable nations and even outnumbers the combined negotiating teams of the 10 most climate-impacted countries.

For many observers, the surge represents not just a statistic but a symptom of a deeper structural crisis.

“It’s common sense that you cannot solve a problem by giving power to those who caused it,” said Jax Bonbon of IBON International in a statement. “Yet three decades and 30 COPs later, more than 1,500 fossil fuel lobbyists are roaming the climate talks as if they belong here.”

A Climate Summit Outnumbered by Industry

The analysis shows 599 industry-linked representatives entered COP30 through Party overflow badges — a route typically reserved for government delegates. This method bypasses new transparency rules that require non-government participants to disclose their affiliations.

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Illustration: S James/EdPublica

Several countries also included fossil fuel representatives directly within their official delegations. According to the report, France, Japan, and Norway brought senior industry figures, including those from TotalEnergies, Japan Petroleum Exploration, and Equinor.

“Until we Kick Big Polluters Out, we can expect the outcomes of COP30 — and every COP after — to be written by the world’s largest polluters,” said Pascoe Sabido of Corporate Europe Observatory. “It’s profit over people and the planet.”

The contrast between industry presence and the representation of climate-impacted nations is stark. The Philippines’ delegation is outnumbered by nearly 50 to 1. Jamaica sent fewer than 40 delegates — as it deals with the aftermath of Hurricane Melissa — while hundreds of industry lobbyists move freely inside the venue.

‘A Flood of Influence’

Civil society groups warn that the negotiations risk being shaped by the very actors accelerating the climate crisis.

“The COP is massively flooded with around 1,500 representatives of the fossil fuel industry — like a river bursting its banks and sweeping everything away,” said Susann Scherbarth of Friends of the Earth Germany.

The criticism echoes growing frustration among scientists and youth groups over the widening gap between climate science and political outcomes. Despite repeated warnings from the IPCC about the need for rapid fossil fuel phase-down, nearly $250 billion worth of new oil and gas projects have been approved since COP29.

Youth delegations expressed alarm that the negotiation space is becoming increasingly inaccessible to those most affected by the climate crisis.

“The UNFCCC is in need of rehabilitation,” said Pim Sullivan-Tailyour from the UK Youth Climate Coalition. “My generation deserves Just Transition policies shaped by what people and the planet need — not what polluters’ profits demand.”

Demands for Integrity and Accountability

Transparency and governance experts argue that the situation has reached a defining moment. “If COP30 is indeed the COP of truth, the Presidency and the UNFCCC Secretariat must strengthen participant disclosure rules,” said Brice Böhmer of Transparency International. “It is time to ensure integrity and restore trust.”

Civil society groups are urging governments to adopt formal conflict-of-interest rules, a step the UNFCCC has so far resisted. They argue that genuine climate progress requires insulating negotiations from actors whose core business models rely on continued fossil fuel extraction.

A Crossroads Moment for the UN Climate Process

COP30 was expected to accelerate global action toward limiting warming to 1.5°C. Instead, it has reopened a fundamental question: Can a climate summit deliver meaningful outcomes when the world’s largest polluters enjoy unprecedented access inside the process?

The KBPO coalition says the answer depends on whether the UNFCCC is willing to adopt structural reforms that prioritise vulnerable communities over powerful corporations.

As the talks continue in Belém, the tension between ambition and influence remains at the heart of COP30 — raising critical questions about transparency, accountability, and the future of global climate governance.

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