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First jungle walk – seven km through the darkness

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by Ravi Samarasinha

During the last decade I have had the good fortune to enjoy numerous days at Yala, the premier wildlife park after the unfortunate closure of Wilpattu and Yala East. One of the many unforgettable trips, and many years later, an unusual experience with leopard and bear at Yala are worthy of recall.

First jungle walk

The dry season was at its peak at Yala in October 1993 as Lal Anthonis, tracker Premasiri and I made our way to Heenwewa. Clouds of dust billowed behind the car and the monotony of the bare brown thorn scrub was broken here and there by the bright green of palu, weera and malithan (mustard) trees.

Wildlife photographer Lal and I had come together a few years earlier, and I soon accompanied him on his frequent journeys to the jungles. These visits with Lal were a wonderful learning experience. At that time I was a medical student and my textbooks often accompanied me on these journeys. This October trip was special for two reasons. I had just completed my final medical examination after intense study, and was looking forward to relaxing in the jungles. The second reason was the recent sighting of a rare albino elephant calf in a herd known to frequent Heenwewa tank. We were hoping to see the albino and possibly photograph it.

Heenwewa

Heenwewa tank, which is a perennial source of water, attracts many herds of elephants in the dry months. Many of these herds forage outside the park in abandoned chena lands, but come to Heenwewa during the dry season, as it is often the only source of water in the area.

We reached Heenwewa bungalow shortly after noon, and Sumanadasa, its keeper, quickly prepared lunch for us as we unpacked. We set off on our first drive to see wildlife after an early tea. Lal’s station wagon handled the rough gravel roads with ease, its quiet petrol engine enabling us to view wildlife with minimal disturbance. Due to the parched conditions animals were scarce and, to make matters worse, repair work on the culverts and causeways along the main road was underway with muddy detours around them. The evening ended early as heavy clouds gathered overhead, an indication that the onset of the north-east monsoon was imminent. That night as we relaxed after dinner, frogs began a cacophony of croaking in anticipation of rain. As we turned in for the night, we fervently hoped it would not rain just yet.

Drought ends

Early next morning, as I was awakened by the persistent beeping of the alarm clock, I heard the patter of rain on the roof. Disappointed, I went back to sleep.

The morning remained overcast with a thin drizzle. Shortly after noon the sun suddenly broke through the clouds and shone brightly. After a hurriedly consumed lunch we set off around 2 pm. As we came near Gonagala tank, I noted with concern the rapid build-up of dark clouds to the north threatening to obscure the sun.

Gonagala tank, which was completely dry, had recently been restored by the Department of Wildlife Conservation and now needed the monsoon rains to fill up. This tank is fed by an ara (rivulet) originating in the vicinity of Situlpauwa, and is known to carry a huge volume of water during the monsoon. The old Heenwewa road on which we travelled passed through the now dry tank bed. Raindrops were beginning to fall, and by the time we reached the main road at Buttuwa it was literally pouring. Brown, foamy water gushing past swept leaves and twigs in its wake to form streams loaded with debris, which flowed along roads and eventually filled parched water-holes.

Floods

Our tracker informed us that the old Buttuwa bungalow was unoccupied that day, and so we made our way there, as it was pointless driving around in the rain. Dharmadasa, the bungalow keeper, served us hot tea while we chatted and waited patiently for the rain to cease. For three hours it rained incessantly, and finally it eased into a thin drizzle around 5.30 pm. Although it was relatively early in the evening it was already quite dark as we thanked Dharmadasa and set off on our return journey to Heenwewa. All the water-holes we passed by were overflowing. In many places the roads were inundated with water. The dry dusty roads had turned muddy and treacherous, forcing Lal to drive cautiously, fully aware that the smallest mistake could get us hopelessly stuck in the mud.

The thin drizzle continued as we drove past an overflowing Buttuwa tank. Our progress was painfully slow, the tracker getting off frequently to clear fallen branches and other debris. The station wagon’s rear wheels were often spinning while trying to grip in the muddy conditions. Just before Gonagala tank the gravel road ahead disappeared into a sheet of water. Unwilling to take a risk at that time we turned around and headed back to the main road hoping to take the longer route via the park office and the Situlpauwa road. We soon realized that this was not possible as the detours around the culverts under repair were muddy and even a jeep with four-wheel drive may have got stuck.

It was now close to 6.30 pm and getting dark as we turned round, and headed back to Gonagala, the headlamps brightly lighting the way. Lal kept the car headlights on as Premasiri and I waded into the water flowing across the road near Gonagala, checking the depth and feeling for hidden obstacles. The water lapped around our knees, then briefly became shallower, as the road curved to the left and out of the water. After returning to the car to brief Lal, Premasiri and I walked ahead to guide Lal through the water. As I walked I listened anxiously for sounds, which would indicate whether the car was getting bogged down. At that time luck favoured us, for the gravel road under the water had little mud, and Lal made his way across the inundated stretch without much difficulty. Much relieved, we continued our journey confident of getting to Heenwewa soon.

Stuck in the mud

Ahead of us the road dipped gradually as it passed through the Gonagala tank bed. We descended into the tank bed and drove on it till we came to a little stream of water running across the road. This stream was only about ten feet wide and the road sloped gently into the water before rising on the other side. We drove into this stream confidently, but just as we thought we were safely across, the rear wheels began to spin, the engine roared ineffectively, and the car came to a halt. Lal then attempted to reverse and when that failed we realized we were in trouble. It was dark outside with only an occasional glimmer of light provided by the fireflies. Lal kept the engine running and the headlamps on as we got off to assess our predicament.

The stream was only a few inches deep. A hidden bank of soft sand in which the front wheels lay embedded had brought about our downfall. We dug around the tyres using our bare hands and placed branches and stones around the wheels hoping the tyres would grip. Premasiri and I pushed while Lal tried again but our efforts were fruitless and after a half hour of effort we gave up. After a quick discussion we decided that the best option was to walk to Heenwewa bungalow, seven km away!

Walk at night

Using the hydraulic jack we raised the rear of the car until the exhaust was clear of the water and switched off the engine. This manoeuvre prevented water being sucked into the sump in case the engine stopped with the exhaust opening submerged. Lal opened a large wooden box, which contained many useful items and produced to our relief three small torches. Without these walking in Yala at night would have been difficult and probably dangerous.

We set off around 8 pm, the light from the torches illuminating the muddy road ahead. The initial excitement and novelty of the night walk soon wore off. We were now quite wet and my shirt clung to my body as we trudged along. I was forced to walk barefooted as my slippers kept getting stuck and coming off in the mud. Stones and thorns now made walking painful.

Premasiri then reminded us to keep a look out for the huge buffalo we had passed by on our way out. As I glanced around nervously I realized that in the night everything looked very different, and the once familiar roadside was now totally alien to me. By now I was wishing for the end of this nightmarish journey. Suddenly, there came a rustling of leaves and a loud blowing sound from the dark jungle to our right. Instantaneously, the three of us ran, thoughts of the big buffalo uppermost in our minds. Finally, exhausted, we stopped running and stood together panting and listening nervously for any more sounds. However, all was quiet except for the sound of the rain, crickets and frogs.

Feeling a little foolish, but greatly relieved, we continued walking. Due to the overcast conditions, it was pitch black all around us, and as our torches were now fading, we were forced to use them intermittently. Finally, as we came around a bend we saw a faint glimmer of light in the distance, and relief flowed through my weary body as the bungalow came into view, with an anxious Sumanadasa waiting for us.

Sumanadasa suggested going back immediately to retrieve the vehicle, but having just completed a difficult seven km walk, we were both mentally and physically too tired to do so. Furthermore, tracker Premasiri assured us that the vehicle was quite safe, and that it would be best to go the following day. We were forced to have our dinner in darkness, as the lights attracted many smelly bean-shaped bugs, which were numerous after the rain. Around us the frogs celebrated the onset of the rains with a symphony of croaking.

Retrieving the vehicle

The next morning dawned bright and clear, and after the rains everything looked fresh and clean. We set off early with Sumanadasa and a few others from the Heenwewa beat accompanying us. This time the walk was extremely enjoyable and there was much to see and hear around us. Shrikes chattered and doves cooed around us as we neared Gonagala. Game-guard Abeysinghe, known for his humour, strode ahead leading the way. When he turned around at Gonagala and shouted, “the car is floating,” we just laughed! When we came up to him, we stood still in stunned silence.

Ahead of us lay the newly filled Gonagala tank, with part of its waters covering the old Heenwewa road where we had abandoned the car. Imagine our horror on seeing that only the olive-green roof of the car was visible! The sunlight glistened in the oil pool which floated around the roof. We waded up to the car and peered in. Plastic water bottles, a can of brake oil. and in the far corner, Lal’s 1000 mm lens in its wooden box bobbed around in the water inside!

It did not take us long to get the car back on to dry land. Water gushed out from beneath the doors. Inside, the car was an absolute mess, with mud. soaked boxes. and an overpowering stale smell. After sending a radio message, we had to wait for the tractor to arrive. Once it came the car was towed along to the office, and later to a garage in Tissamaharama. There the rest of the day was spent washing the car, changing all the oils. and drying the electrical system. That evening we all held our breath as Lal turned on the engine. To our surprise and delight it started, and we made our way back slowly to Colombo escorted by my father’s jeep, which had been sent as a back-up vehicle.

(To be continued next week)



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The Ramadan War

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Benjamin Netanyahu, Donald Trump and Mojtaba Khamenei

A Strategic Assessment of a Conflict Still Unresolved

The Unites States of America and its ally, Israel attacked Iran on 28 February, or the 10th day of the month of Ramadan. More than a month of intense fighting has passed since, and the Ramadan War has settled into a grinding, attritional struggle that defies early declarations of victory. Despite sustained U.S. and Israeli air and naval bombardment, Iran remains standing, and continues to strike back with a level of resilience that has surprised many observers. The conflict has evolved into a contest of endurance, adaptation, and strategic innovation, with each side attempting to impose costs the other cannot bear.

Iran’s response to the overwhelming airpower of its adversaries has been both simple and devastatingly effective: saturate enemy defences with swarms of inexpensive drones and older ballistic missiles, forcing them to expend costly interceptors and reveal radar positions, and then follow up with salvos of its most advanced precisionguided missiles. This layered approach has inflicted severe physical damage on Israel and has shaken its national morale. The country has endured repeated missile barrages from Iran and rocket fire from Hezbollah, straining its airdefence network and pushing its civilian population to the limits of endurance.

The United States, meanwhile, has been forced to evacuate or reduce operations at several bases in the Gulf region due to persistent Iranian drone and missile attacks. For both the U.S. and Israel, the war has become a test of strategic credibility. For Iran, by contrast, victory is defined not by territorial gains or decisive battlefield outcomes, but by survival, and by continuing to impose costs on its adversaries.

The central strategic objective for the U.S. has now crystallised: reopening the Strait of Hormuz to secure global energy flows. Ironically, the Strait was open before the war began; it is the conflict itself that has rendered it effectively closed. Air and naval power alone cannot achieve this objective. The geography of the Strait, combined with Iran’s layered defences, means that any lasting solution will require ground forces, a reality that carries enormous risks.

U.S. Strategic Options

The United States faces five broad operational options, each with significant drawbacks.

1. Seizing Kharg Island

Kharg Island handles roughly 90% of Iran’s oil exports, making it an attractive target. However, it lies only a short distance from the Iranian mainland, where entrenched Iranian forces maintain dense networks of missile batteries, drones, artillery, and coastal defences. Any attempt to seize Kharg would require first neutralising or capturing the adjacent coastline, a costly amphibious and ground operation.

Even if successful, this would not reopen the Strait of Hormuz. It would merely deprive Iran of export capacity, which is not the primary U.S. objective. At least ostensibly not; there are those who argue that the U.S. simply wants to take over Iran’s petroleum (see below).

2. Forcing the Strait of Hormuz by Naval Power

Sending U.S. naval forces directly through the Strait is theoretically possible but operationally hazardous. Iran has mined all but a narrow channel hugging its own shoreline. That channel is covered by overlapping fields of antiship missiles, drones, artillery, and coastal radar. Clearing the mines would require prolonged operations under fire. Attempting to push through without clearing them would risk catastrophic losses.

3. Capturing Qeshm, Hengam, Larak, and Hormuz Islands

These islands dominate the Iranian side of the Strait and host radar, missile, and drone installations. Capturing them would degrade Iran’s ability to close the Strait, but the islands are heavily fortified, and the surrounding waters are mined. Amphibious assaults against defended islands are among the most difficult military operations. Even success would not guarantee the Strait’s longterm security unless the mainland launch sites were also neutralised.

4. Invading Southern Iraq and Crossing into Khuzestan

This option would involve U.S. forces advancing through southern Iraq, crossing the Shatt alArab waterway, and pushing into Iran’s Khuzestan province — home to most of Iran’s oilfields. The terrain is difficult: marshes, waterways, and narrow approaches. Iranian forces occupy the high ground overlooking the plains.

While this route would allow Saudi armoured forces to participate, it would also expose U.S. and allied logistics to attacks by Iraqi Shia militias, who have already demonstrated their willingness to target U.S. assets. The political and operational risks are immense.

5. Capturing Chabahar and Advancing Along the Coast

The most strategically promising — though still costly — option is seizing the port of Chabahar in southeastern Iran and advancing roughly 660 kilometres along the coast toward Bandar Abbas. This approach offers several advantages:

· Distance from Iran’s core population centres complicates Iranian logistics.

· Chabahar’s deepwater port (16m draught)

would provide a valuable logistics hub.

· U.S. carriers could remain at safer standoff distances

, supporting operations without entering the Strait.

· The coastal route allows naval gunfire and missile support

to assist advancing ground forces.

· Local Baluchi insurgents

could provide intelligence and limited support.

· Capturing Bandar Abbas would

outflank Iran’s island defences and effectively reopen the Strait.

This option is likely to form the backbone of any U.S. ground campaign, potentially supplemented by diversionary attacks by regional partners to stretch Iranian defences.

The Limits of U.S. Superiority

The United States retains overwhelming superiority in naval power and manned airpower. But whether this advantage translates into dominance in unmanned systems or ground combat is far from certain.

The 2003 invasion of Iraq is often cited as a model of U.S. military prowess, but the comparison is misleading. Iraq in 2003 had been crippled by a decade of sanctions. Its forces lacked modern mines, antitank missiles, and effective air defences. Tank crews had little training; some could not hit targets at pointblank range. RPG teams were similarly unprepared. The U.S. enjoyed numerical superiority in the theatre and total control of the air, allowing it to isolate Iraqi units and prevent reinforcement.

Even under those favourable conditions, Iraqi forces managed to delay the U.S. advance. At one point, forward U.S. units nearly ran out of ammunition and supplies, forcing the diversion of forces intended for the assault on Baghdad to secure the lines of communication.

Iran is not Iraq in 2003. Its armed forces and industrial base have adapted to nearly half a century of sanctions. It produces its own drones, missiles, artillery, and armoured vehicles. It has built extensive underground facilities, hardened command posts, and redundant communication networks.

Moreover, the battlefield itself has changed. The RussoUkrainian war demonstrated that deep armoured penetrations – once the hallmark of U.S. doctrine – are now extremely vulnerable to drones, loitering munitions, and precision artillery. The result has been a return to attritional warfare reminiscent of the First World War, with front lines stabilising into trench networks.

Yet, as in the First World War, stalemate has been broken not by massed assaults but by small, highly trained teams infiltrating thinly held lines, identifying targets, and guiding drones and artillery onto enemy positions deep in the rear. Iran has studied these lessons closely.

Mosaic Defence and Transformational Warfare

Iran’s military doctrine has evolved significantly over the past two decades. Its “mosaic defence” decentralises command and control, ensuring that even if senior leadership is targeted, local units can continue operating autonomously. This structure proved resilient during the initial waves of U.S. and Israeli strikes.

Iran has also absorbed lessons from U.S. “shock and awe” operations. The botched U.S. invasion of Grenada in 1983 exposed weaknesses in joint operations, prompting the development of “effectsbased operations,” “rapid dominance” and the broader concept of “transformational warfare.” These doctrines (better known colloquially as “Shock and Awe”), influenced by Liddell Hart and Sun Tzu, emphasised simultaneous strikes on strategic targets to paralyse the enemy’s decisionmaking.

While the U.S. struggled to apply these concepts effectively in Iraq and Iran, Tehran has adapted them for asymmetric use. Its drone and missile campaigns have targeted not only military assets but also economic infrastructure and psychological resilience. Israel’s economy and morale have been severely tested, and the United States finds itself entangled in a conflict that offers no easy exit.

Iran has also pursued a broader strategic objective: undermining the petrodollar system that underpins U.S. financial dominance. By disrupting energy flows and encouraging alternative trading mechanisms, Iran seeks to weaken the economic foundations of U.S. power.

Will the USA Achieve Its War Aims?

The United States’ core objective appears to be securing control over global energy flows by reopening the Strait of Hormuz and limiting China’s access to Middle Eastern oil before it can transition to alternative energy sources. Whether this objective is achievable remains uncertain.

A ground campaign would be long, costly, and politically fraught. Iran’s defences are deep, layered, and adaptive. Its drone and missile capabilities have already demonstrated their ability to impose significant costs on technologically superior adversaries. Regional allies are cautious, and global support for a prolonged conflict is limited.

The United States retains overwhelming military power, but power alone does not guarantee strategic success. Iran’s strategy is simple: survive, adapt, and continue imposing costs. In asymmetric conflicts, survival itself can constitute victory.

In Frank Herbert’s Dune, the protagonist, Paul Muad’dib says “he who can destroy a thing, controls a thing.” This is the essence of Iranian strategy – they have a stranglehold on petroleum supply, and can destroy the world economy. Trump has had to loosen sanctions on both Iran’s and Russia’s oil, simply to prevent economic collapse.

The Ramadan War has already reshaped regional dynamics. Whether it reshapes global power structures will depend on how the next phase unfolds, and whether the United States is willing to pay the price required to achieve its aims.

by Vinod Moonesinghe

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Nayanandaya:A literary autopsy of Sri Lanka’s Middle Class

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“Nayanandaya,” meaning the enchantment of indebtedness, is Surath de Mel’s latest novel. True to his reputation as a maximalist writer, de Mel traverses the labyrinth of middle-class struggles; poverty, unemployment, the quest for education, through a father’s fragile dreams. The novel unfolds around Mahela, his son, his friendships, and the fragile relationships that keep him tethered to life.

“Happiness is not a destination; it is a journey. There are no shortcuts to it. At some point, the path you thought was right will be wrong. You have to make sacrifices for it.”

These words, uttered by the protagonist Mahela to his ten-year-old son, is the silent mantra of every middle-class parent. A common urban middle-class father’s yearning for his child to climb the ladder he himself could not ascend.

A Socio-Political Mirror

Sri Lanka’s middle class remains trapped in paradox. They are educated but underemployed, salaried but indebted, socially respected yet politically invisible. Structural inequalities, economic volatility and populist politics inclusively contribute to keep them “forever middle”.

Through protagonist Mahela, who is sometimes a graphic designer, sometimes a vendor and always a failure Surath de Mel sketches the deficiencies of an education system that does not nurture skills of the students. Sri Lanka boasts about high literacy rates, yet the economy cannot absorb the thousands of graduates produced into meaningful work. Underemployment becomes the inheritance of the middle class. With political connections often the stories can be transformed. De Mel pens it in dark humour to expose these truths:

“Some notorious writer once sneered in a newspaper, ‘Give your ass to the minister, and you’ll earn the right to keep it on a bigger chair.’ Countless people waiting in ministers’ offices, pressing

their backsides to seats, carrying the weight of their own lives.”

Childhood Trauma and Its Echoes

Surath de Mel frequently weaves psychoanalysis into his fiction. In Nayanandaya, he captures the lingering shadows of childhood trauma. Mahela, scarred by a loveless and fractured youth, suffers phobic anxiety and depression, apparently with a personality disorder as an adult. His confession at the psychologist reveals it out:

“Childhood? I didn’t have one. I was fifteen when I was born.”

Here, Mahela marks his true birth not at infancy, but at the death of his parents. This statement itself reveals the childhood trauma the protagonist had gone through and the reader can attribute his subsequent psychological struggles as the cause of it.

Surath de Mel

From a Lacanian perspective, trauma is not just something that happens to a child; it is a deep break in how the child understands the world, themselves, and others. Some experiences are too painful to be put into words. Lacan calls this the Real — what cannot be fully spoken or explained. This pain does not disappear but returns later in life as anxiety, fear, or obsessive compulsive disorder.

This trauma disturbs the child’s sense of self and their place in society. When language fails to make sense of loss, the mind creates fantasies to survive. These fantasies quietly shape adult desires, relationships, and choices.

In Nayanandaya, childhood trauma of the protagonist does not stay buried — it lives on, shaping the adulthood in unseen ways. In the narrative, Mahela’s struggles are not just personal failures but the result of a past that was never given words.

Tears of Fathers – Forgotten in Sri Lankan Literature

Sri Lankan literature has long been attentive to suffering — especially rural poverty, social injustice, and the silent endurance of women and single mothers. Countless novels, poems, and songs have given voice to maternal sacrifice, female resilience, and women’s oppression.

Yet, within this rich narratives, the quiet grief of the urban middle-class father remains mostly unseen. Rarely does fiction pause to examine the emotional lives of men who shoulder responsibility without language for their pain. These masculine tears are private, swallowed by routinely and masked by humour or silence. Definitely never granted literary space.

In Nayanandaya, Surath de Mel breaks this silence. Through Mahela, he lends voice to these overlooked men — fathers whose love is expressed through sacrifice rather than speech. However, de Mel does not romanticise the tears. Rather he humanises them. He allows their vulnerabilities, anxieties, and quiet despair to surface with honesty and compassion. In doing so, Nayanandaya fills a striking gap in Sri Lankan literature, reminding us that fathers, too, carry invisible wounds.

Literary value

With Nayanandaya, Surath de Mel reaches a new pinnacle in his literary craft. His language is dense yet lyrical, enriched with similes, metaphors, irony, and a full range of literary tools deployed with confidence and control.

One of the novel’s most touching narrative choices is the personification of Mahela’s son’s soft toy, Wonie. Through personified Wonie, de Mel captures the two most touching incidents in the entire novel . This simply reveals the author’s artistic maturity, transforming a simple object into a powerful emotional conduit that anchors the novel’s tenderness amidst its despair.

At a deeper symbolic level, Mahela himself can be read as more than an individual character, but a metaphor for Sri Lanka — a nation struggling under economic hardship, clinging to impractical dreams, witnessing the migration of its people, and drifting towards a slow, painful exhaustion. His personal failures could mirror the broader decay of social and economic structures. This symbolic reading lends Nayanandaya a haunting national resonance.

Today, many write and many publish, but only a few transform language into literature that lingers in the reader’s mind long after the final page. Surath de Mel belongs to that rare few. In a literary landscape crowded with voices, he remains devoted to art rather than popularity or trend. As a scholar of Sinhala language and literature, de Mel writes with intellectual depth, dark humour, and deep human empathy.

In conclusion, Nayanandaya is not merely a story; it is social commentary, psychoanalytic reflection, and tragic poetry woven into richly textured prose. With this novel — a masterful interlacing of love, debt, and fragile dreams — Surath de Mel engraves a distinctly Dostoevskian signature into Sinhala literature.

Reviewed by Dr. Charuni Kohombange

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Domestic Energy Saving

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Around 40 percent of the annual energy we use is consumed in domestic activities. Energy is costly, and supply is not unlimited. Unfortunately, we realize the importance of energy – saving only during the time of a crisis.

If you adopt readily affordable energy-saving strategies, you will cut down your living expenditure substantially, relieving the energy burden of the nation. Here are some tips.

Cooking:

Cooking consumes a good portion of domestic energy demand and common practices, and negligence leads to 30 – 40 percent wastage. A simple experiment revealed that the energy expenditure in boiling an egg with the usual unnecessary excess water in an open pan is nearly 50 percent higher than boiling in a closed lid pan with the minimal amount of water. In an open pan, a large quantity of heat is lost via convection currents and expulsion of water vapor, carrying excessive amounts of heat energy (latent heat of vaporisation). Still, most of us boil potatoes for prolonged intervals of time in open receptacles, failing to realise that it is faster and more efficient to boil potatoes or any other food material in a closed pan. About 30 – 40 percent of domestic cooking energy requirements can be cut down by cooking in closed-lid pans. Furthermore, food cooked in closed pans is healthier because of less mixing with air that causes food oxidation. Fat oxidation generates toxic substances. In a closed- lid utensil (not tightly closed), food is covered with a blanket of water vapor at a positive pressure, preventing entry of air and therefore food oxidation.

Overcooking is another bad habit that not only wastes energy but also degrades the nutritional value of food.

Electric kettle:

For making morning or evening tea or preparing tea to serve a visitor. Do not pour an unnecessarily large quantity of water into the electric kettle. Note that the energy needed to make 10 cups of tea is ten times that of one cup.

Electric Ovens:

Avoid the use of electric ovens as far as possible. Remember that foods cooked at higher temperatures are generally unhealthy, and even carcinogens are formed when food is fried at higher temperatures in an oven. If ever you need to bake something in an oven, limit the number of times you open the door. Use smaller ovens adequate for the purpose and not larger ones just for fashion.

Refrigerators:

Refrigerators consume lots of energy. Do not use over-capacity refrigerators just for fashion. Every time you open the fridge, more electricity is used to reset the cooling temperature. Plan your access to the appliance accordingly. Check whether the doors are properly secured and there are no leakages. Keep the fridge in a cooler location, not hit by direct sunlight and away from warmer places in the kitchen. Remember that turning off the fridge frequently will not save energy, instead it draws more energy.

Use of gas burners:

Do not use oversized utensils. Keep the lid closed as far as possible to prevent the escape of heat. Remember that excessive amounts of heat energy are carried away by a large surface-area conducting utensil. Do not open the gas vent to allow the flame to flash outside the vessel. A flame not impinging on the pan would not heat it, and gas is wasted. Ensure that the flame is blue. Frequently check whether gas vents are clogged with rust and carbon. Frequently, cooking material in the pan drops into the gas vents, and salt there corrodes the gas vents. Cleaning and washing would be necessary. Do not prolong cooking, taking time to prepare ingredients and adding them to the pan intermittently. Add ingredients at once and before switching the burner. If the preparation of a dish is prolonged to slow the cooking, use earthenware pots rather than metallic ones. An earthenware pot, being thermally less conducting retain heat.

Firewood for cooking:

Do not attempt to eliminate the use of firewood in cooking. If you are living in a village area, the exclusive use of LPG gas is an unnecessary expenditure. Large smoke-free, efficient oven designs are now available. If you are compelled to use gas, keep the option of firewood ovens, especially for prolonged cooking. Admittedly, there are locations, especially in cities, where the use of firewood is unsuited.

Hot water showers:

Before installing hot water showers, reconsider whether they are really necessary in a hot tropical climate. Go for solar water heaters, although the installation cost is high. Instant water heaters consume much less electricity compared to geysers with water tanks. Now, cheap and safe instant water heaters are available.

Lighting:

Arrange and design your residence to optimise daytime illumination until late evening. If you are constructing a new house, take this issue into account. Use LED lamps, which provide the same illumination for 85 percent less energy. In study rooms and areas that require prolonged illumination, paint the walls white. Angle – poised LED lamps with very low voltage are available. Use them for reading and studies. Routinely clean the surfaces of all lamps. Dust deposition cuts off light.

Air conditioning and ventilation:

Air conditioning consumes prohibitively large quantities of electrical energy. You can avoid air conditioning by optimising ventilation. The principle is to have air entry points (windows) in the house near the ground level and exit points (vents or windows) near the roof. Ground level is cooler, and the region near the roof is warmer. Thus, a cool air current enters the house near the ground level and hot air is drawn by the vents near the roof. The region near the ground can be rendered cooler by planting trees. Architectural designs are available to optimise this effect. You can sense the direction of air motion by holding a thin strip of paper near the windows at the ground and near the roof level. In addition to ceiling fan, install exhaust fans in the upper points of the house to remove hot air and draw cooler air through windows near the ground. Reduce the amount of sunlight hitting the roof by shading with trees. There are techniques for increasing the reflectance of the roof with paints and other designs.

Transportation:

A good portion of your budget is drained by transportation. Irrespective of who you are, use public transport if convenient and available. As much as possible, use the telephone and email to get your things done. If the officers do not comply for no valid reason, complain. Plan your trips to the town to do several things at the same time. Whenever possible, plan to share transport. Buy energy – efficient small vehicles. Routinely examine your vehicle for energy efficiency, i.e. correct tire pressure etc.

Charge electric vehicles off peak hours. Slow charging reduces heat generation in the circuit, reducing energy loss.

Energy is costly and limited in supply. Everything you do consumes energy. Be energy conscious in all your deeds. That attitude will reduce your expenditure, lessen the environmental degradation and financial burden of the nation in importing fuel.

Educating the general public is the most effective way of implementing energy-saving strategies.

By Prof. Kirthi Tennakone
(kenna@yahoo.co.uk)

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