logo
Tensbarg Group : Sourced from the Sacred Himalayas, Elevating Water to a New Standard of Purity Across South Asia

Tensbarg Group : Sourced from the Sacred Himalayas, Elevating Water to a New Standard of Purity Across South Asia

The Print22-05-2025

New Delhi [India], May 22: The bottled water industry in India is evolving rapidly, moving beyond commoditized offerings to meet the growing demand for health-conscious, premium hydration. At the forefront of this shift is Tensbarg–a brand redefining the water experience with its limited-edition Himalayan spring water, now setting new benchmarks not just in Delhi, but across South Asia. Born from the untouched glaciers of the Himalayas and enriched by the pristine natural ecosystems of Nepal, Bhutan, and northern India, Tensbarg isn't just water–it's a symbol of purity, sustainability, and mindful living.
The Essence of True Purity
Tensbarg water is harvested from high-altitude springs and glacial meltwaters deep in the Himalayas. Shielded by geography and time, these sources span across India, Nepal, and Bhutan–regions revered for their spiritual significance and ecological sanctity. Filtered naturally through ancient mineral-rich rock, this water offers a taste that is crisp, clean, and delicately balanced, unlike conventional bottled water extracted from municipal or industrial zones.
Precision in Every Drop
Each bottle of Tensbarg undergoes a rigorous multi-stage quality process–from microbiological and mineral testing to UV purification and European-grade bottling. The water is bottled at source, untouched by human hands, to preserve its natural character. Certified to meet and exceed global water quality standards, Tensbarg represents a new class of trust and transparency in the Indian and South Asian bottled water markets.
Technology Meets Ecology
Tensbarg's production facilities–located in some of the highest elevations on Earth–are powered by closed-loop, energy-efficient bottling systems. Utilizing UV sterilization, low-emission logistics, and biodegradable packaging, the brand is committed to preserving the very environments it draws from. By responsibly integrating resources from Bhutan's glacial reserves and Nepal's untouched spring networks, Tensbarg supports regional sustainability, economic development, and cross-border eco-partnerships. 'We aren't just bottling water,' says the Tensbarg Group. 'We're bottling the untouched purity of the Himalayas and bringing it to the world–responsibly, respectfully, and sustainably.'
A Lifestyle for the Conscious Generation
Today's youth in Delhi, Mumbai, Kathmandu, and Thimphu aren't just seeking hydration–they're choosing meaningful brands. For this health-driven generation, Tensbarg water is a conscious decision: pure, premium, and environmentally aligned. More than hydration, it's a lifestyle choice that speaks to wellness, environmental awareness, and cultural connection to the Himalayas.
Expanding into Wellness: The Tensbarg Experience
Leveraging its access to rare Himalayan resources, Tensbarg is now expanding into other wellness categories, including:
* Mineral-Infused Facial Mists – made with spring water from Nepal for natural skin hydration.
* Botanical Teas – blended with herbs sourced from the forests of Bhutan and steeped in Tensbarg water
* Ayurvedic Wellness Shots – combining Himalayan water with traditional Indian and Bhutanese herbs
* Luxury Spa Products – using Tensbarg water as the core base for creams, oils, and cleansing rituals
Each product echoes the brand's philosophy: purity, purpose, and premium craftsmanship.
Sustainability Meets Strategy
Tensbarg is more than a premium brand–it's a movement toward responsible water sourcing and eco-conscious business. By uniting the natural wealth of India, Nepal, and Bhutan under a shared mission, Tensbarg is pioneering a regional model of transboundary sustainability, local empowerment, and environmental leadership. In a region facing increasing pressure on freshwater systems, Tensbarg offers a path forward–where purity meets responsibility.
A Himalayan Revolution
From the sacred peaks of Bhutan and Nepal to the urban pulse of New Delhi, Tensbarg is shaping a new era of hydration. One rooted in nature, integrity, and innovation. Now available in a limited edition release, Tensbarg is for those who demand nothing but the purest–in water, in values, and in life.
(ADVERTORIAL DISCLAIMER: The above press release has been provided by Sky Line Digicorp. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of the same)
This story is auto-generated from a syndicated feed. ThePrint holds no responsibility for its content.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Piyush Goyal says addressing non-tariff barriers key to India-EU trade pact
Piyush Goyal says addressing non-tariff barriers key to India-EU trade pact

Time of India

time25 minutes ago

  • Time of India

Piyush Goyal says addressing non-tariff barriers key to India-EU trade pact

Finding solutions to address non-tariff barriers would be important for the proposed free trade agreement (FTA) between India and the European Union (EU) and both sides are actively working on resolving these issues, Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal said on Thursday. He said the two sides are "pretty" close to finalising the talks for the proposed free trade pact. "Significant progress has been made. More than half the chapters are ready. In terms of content, I would say we are almost 90 per cent ready for market access. The important issues to be addressed are non-tariff barriers and how we will make it smoother, easier, and better to do business between the EU and India," Goyal told reporters here. Play Video Pause Skip Backward Skip Forward Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration 0:00 Loaded : 0% 0:00 Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 1x Playback Rate Chapters Chapters Descriptions descriptions off , selected Captions captions settings , opens captions settings dialog captions off , selected Audio Track default , selected Picture-in-Picture Fullscreen This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Opacity Opaque Semi-Transparent Text Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Opacity Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Caption Area Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Opacity Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Drop shadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Undo He added that both India and the EU are in active discussions to find solutions to make business smooth for companies of both sides. Also Read: US trade pact set for early finish: Piyush Goyal Live Events "Unless countries recognise that over regulation and barriers to trade will be met with reciprocal action, everybody suffers. We are committed to deregulation, to finding solutions to the high cost of regulation, the non-tariff barriers that these regulations cause and the impediments to free trade. I am quite hopeful that we will find very robust solutions to this problem," the minister said. He is here on an official visit to meet his Swedish counterpart and companies for promoting trade and investments between the two countries. Sweden is a member of the 27-nation EU bloc. Key Indian exports that routinely face high barriers in the EU include -- chillies, tea, Basmati rice, milk, poultry, bovine meat, fish, chemicals products. Most non-tariff measures (NTMs) are domestic rules created by countries with an aim to protect human, animal or plant health and environment. NTM may be technical measures such as regulations, standards, testing, certification, pre-shipment inspection or non-technical measures like quotas, import licensing, subsidies, government procurement restrictions. Also Read: Challenging times for global trade; India will certainly cross USD 825 bn exports this fiscal: Piyush Goyal When NTMs become arbitrary, beyond scientific justification, they create hurdles for trade and are called NTBs (non-tariff barriers). India's exports are far below potential as they face NTBs in regions, including the EU, the US, China, Japan, and Korea. According to think tank GTRI, the EU has set MRL (minimum residual limit) for tricyclazole, a fungicide in rice, to 0.01 mg per kg as against the ten times higher limit earlier. Similarly, the EU has set MRL for aflatoxins B1 level in chilies and other spices at 5 to 10 ppb (parts per billion). The minister said negotiations on services and rules or origin have started. To give an impetus to the ongoing talks for the FTA, EU Commissioner for Trade and Economic Security Maros Sefcovic is expected to visit New Delhi on June 28-29. On the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM), Goyal said this measure is "not good" as it is also a kind of a non-tariff barrier. This carbon tax, if imposed, will do injustice to Indian industry, he said, adding that if the EU will take any such step, India will have to respond to that. FTA talks are happening in a good environment and it will not be good to impose carbon tax on Indian goods, he added. "Our talks are going on the issue to find ways to deal with this," the minister said, adding that some good solutions will come out on this. On February 28, Prime Minister Narendra Modi and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen agreed to seal a much-awaited free trade deal by this year amid rising concerns over US President Donald Trump 's policy on tariffs. In June 2022, India and the 27-nation EU bloc resumed the negotiations after a gap of over eight years. It stalled in 2013 due to differences over the level of opening up of the markets. India's bilateral trade in goods with the EU was USD 136.4 billion in 2024-25 (exports USD 75.75 billion, imports USD 60.65 billion), making it the largest trading partner of India for goods. The EU market accounts for about 17 per cent of India's total exports, while the EU's exports to India make up 9 per cent of its total exports. EU's investments in India are valued at over USD 117 billion with around 6,000 European companies present in India. India's investments in the EU are valued at around USD 40 billion.

Addressing non-tariff barriers key for India, EU trade pact, says Piyush Goyal
Addressing non-tariff barriers key for India, EU trade pact, says Piyush Goyal

The Hindu

time25 minutes ago

  • The Hindu

Addressing non-tariff barriers key for India, EU trade pact, says Piyush Goyal

Finding solutions to address non-tariff barriers would be important for the proposed free trade agreement (FTA) between India and the European Union (EU) and both sides are actively working on resolving these issues, Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal said on Thursday (June 12, 2025). He said the two sides are "pretty" close to finalising the talks for the proposed free trade pact. "Significant progress has been made. More than half the chapters are ready. In terms of content, I would say we are almost 90 per cent ready for market access. The important issues to be addressed are non-tariff barriers and how we will make it smoother, easier, and better to do business between the EU and India," Mr. Goyal told reporters in Stockholm. He added that both India and the EU are in active discussions to find solutions to make business smooth for companies of both sides. "Unless countries recognise that over regulation and barriers to trade will be met with reciprocal action, everybody suffers. We are committed to deregulation, to finding solutions to the high cost of regulation, the non-tariff barriers that these regulations cause and the impediments to free trade. I am quite hopeful that we will find very robust solutions to this problem," the Minister said. He is here on an official visit to meet his Swedish counterpart and companies for promoting trade and investments between the two countries. Sweden is a member of the 27-nation EU bloc. Key Indian exports that routinely face high barriers in the EU include — chillies, tea, Basmati rice, milk, poultry, bovine meat, fish, chemicals products. Most non-tariff measures (NTMs) are domestic rules created by countries with an aim to protect human, animal or plant health and environment. NTM may be technical measures such as regulations, standards, testing, certification, pre-shipment inspection or non-technical measures like quotas, import licensing, subsidies, government procurement restrictions. When NTMs become arbitrary, beyond scientific justification, they create hurdles for trade and are called NTBs (non-tariff barriers). India's exports are far below potential as they face NTBs in regions, including the EU, the US, China, Japan, and Korea. According to think tank GTRI, the EU has set MRL (minimum residual limit) for tricyclazole, a fungicide in rice, to 0.01 mg per kg as against the ten times higher limit earlier. Similarly, the EU has set MRL for aflatoxins B1 level in chilies and other spices at 5 to 10 ppb (parts per billion). The minister said negotiations on services and rules or origin have started. To give an impetus to the ongoing talks for the FTA, EU Commissioner for Trade and Economic Security Maros Sefcovic is expected to visit New Delhi on June 28-29. On the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM), Goyal said this measure is "not good" as it is also a kind of a non-tariff barrier. This carbon tax, if imposed, will do injustice to Indian industry, he said, adding that if the EU will take any such step, India will have to respond to that. FTA talks are happening in a good environment and it will not be good to impose carbon tax on Indian goods, he added. "Our talks are going on the issue to find ways to deal with this," the minister said, adding that some good solutions will come out on this. On February 28, Prime Minister Narendra Modi and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen agreed to seal a much-awaited free trade deal by this year amid rising concerns over US President Donald Trump's policy on tariffs. In June 2022, India and the 27-nation EU bloc resumed the negotiations after a gap of over eight years. It stalled in 2013 due to differences over the level of opening up of the markets. India's bilateral trade in goods with the EU was $136.4 billion in 2024-25 (exports $75.75 billion, imports $60.65 billion), making it the largest trading partner of India for goods. The EU market accounts for about 17 per cent of India's total exports, while the EU's exports to India make up 9% of its total exports. EU's investments in India are valued at over $117 billion with around 6,000 European companies present in India. India's investments in the EU are valued at around $40 billion.

Nvidia chief calls AI ‘the greatest equaliser' but warns Europe risks falling behind
Nvidia chief calls AI ‘the greatest equaliser' but warns Europe risks falling behind

The Hindu

time25 minutes ago

  • The Hindu

Nvidia chief calls AI ‘the greatest equaliser' but warns Europe risks falling behind

Will artificial intelligence save humanity — or destroy it? Lift up the world's poorest — or tighten the grip of a tech elite? Jensen Huang, the global chip tycoon, offered his opinion on Wednesday: neither dystopia nor domination. AI, he said, is a tool for liberation. Wearing his signature biker jacket and mobbed by fans for selfies, the Nvidia CEO cut the figure of a tech rockstar as he took the stage at VivaTech in Paris. 'AI is the greatest equaliser of people the world has ever created,' Huang said, kicking off one of Europe's biggest technology industry fairs. But beyond the sheeny optics, Nvidia used the Paris summit to unveil a wave of infrastructure announcements across Europe, signaling a dramatic expansion of the AI chipmaker's physical and strategic footprint on the continent. In France, the company is deploying 18,000 of its new Blackwell chips with startup Mistral AI. In Germany, it's building an industrial AI cloud to support manufacturers. Similar rollouts are underway in Italy, Spain, Finland and the U.K., including a new AI lab in Britain. Other announcements include a partnership with AI startup Perplexity to bring sovereign AI models to European publishers and telecoms, a new cloud platform with Mistral AI, and work with BMW and Mercedes-Benz to train AI-powered robots for use in auto plants. The announcements reflect how central AI infrastructure has become to global strategy, and how Nvidia — the world's most valuable chipmaker — is positioning itself as the engine behind it. At the center of the debate is Huang's concept of the AI factory: not a plant that makes goods, but a vast data center that creates intelligence. These facilities train language models, simulate new drugs, detect cancer in scans, and more. Asked if such systems risk creating a 'technological priesthood' — hoarding computing power and stymying the bottom-up innovation that fueled the tech industry for the past 50 years — Huang pushed back. 'Through the velocity of our innovation, we democratise,' he told The Associated Press. 'We lower the cost of access to technology.' As Huang put it, these factories 'reason,' 'plan,' and 'spend a lot of time talking to' themselves, powering everything from ChatGPT to autonomous vehicles and diagnostics. But some critics warn that without guardrails, such all-seeing, self-reinforcing systems could go the way of Skynet in ' The Terminator ' movie — vast intelligence engines that outpace human control. 'Just as electricity powered the last industrial revolution, AI will power the next one,' he said. 'Every country now needs a national intelligence infrastructure.' He added: 'AI factories are now part of a country's infrastructure. That's why you see me running around the world talking to heads of state — they all want AI to be part of their infrastructure. They want AI to be a growth manufacturing industry for them.' Europe, long praised for its leadership on digital rights, now finds itself at a crossroads. As Brussels pushes forward with world-first AI regulations, some warn that over-caution could cost the bloc its place in the global race. With the U.S. and China surging ahead and most major AI firms based elsewhere, the risk isn't just falling behind — it's becoming irrelevant. Huang has a different vision: sovereign AI. Not isolation, but autonomy — building national AI systems aligned with local values, independent of foreign tech giants. 'The data belongs to you,' Huang said. 'It belongs to your people, your country... your culture, your history, your common sense.' But fears over AI misuse remain potent — from surveillance and deepfake propaganda to job losses and algorithmic discrimination. Huang doesn't deny the risks. But he insists the technology can be kept in check — by itself. 'In the future, the AI that is doing the task is going to be surrounded by 70 or 80 other AIs that are supervising it, observing it, guarding it, ensuring that it doesn't go off the rails.' The VivaTech event was part of Huang's broader European tour. He had already appeared at London Tech Week and is scheduled to visit Germany. In Paris, he joined French President Emmanuel Macron and Mistral AI CEO Arthur Mensch to reinforce his message that AI is now a national priority.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store