
‘Will launch pilot project to install solar houses in Haryana soon': Khattar on Vij's proposal
The Ministry of Power 'will soon launch a pilot project to install solar houses across Haryana', Union Energy Minister Manohar Lal Khattar said on Friday, adding that if successful, it will eventually be expanded to other states.
A solar house, also known as a solar home system (SHS), utilises solar panels to generate electricity from sunlight, which can then be used to power a home's electrical needs. The system can either be on-grid (connect to power grid) or off-grid (operate independently of grid).
The announcement came after Haryana Energy Minister Anil Vij — during the Regional Power Conference with northern states and union territories, in Chandigarh on Friday — suggested the construction of solar houses in Haryana villages, to 'meet farmers' rising power needs'.
Currently, many in Haryana villages have 10-kilowatt (kW) solar panels, Vij said. 'For higher capacity needs, dedicated solar houses will be more feasible. They require reliable electricity supply for agricultural activities, regardless of the source — solar, Bhakra or power central pool. Thus, a comprehensive solar project should be implemented to benefit all the stakeholders.'
'The state government has been working on promoting the use of solar energy across Haryana, so that it becomes self-reliant in the power sector. The Energy Department should run a pilot project to install solar houses across Haryana, and if successful, it could be expanded to other regions of the state,' Vij added.
Khattar said India's renewable energy share in the total installed power capacity has increased to 49 per cent in April 2025 from 32 per cent in 2014.
The minister said states should also work on having an adequate power generation mix, including the addition of nuclear generation capacity while meeting their resource adequacy plan.
He also pointed out that states should complete the installation of prepaid smart metres in government establishments and colonies by August 2025 and for all commercial, industrial and high-load consumers by November 2025.
States should work towards listing power sector utilities to generate additional resources and improve transparency and governance, the minister noted.
'We successfully met a peak demand of 250 GW in May 2024 and India has transformed from power-deficit to a power-sufficient nation and as of today, peak demand shortage is zero,' he said.
He outlined the importance of continuous cooperation and coordination between central and state governments in achieving the goal of Viksit Bharat by 2047.
India's peak electricity demand is projected to reach 446 GW by 2034-35 and meeting this sustainably requires proactive planning and continued coordination between the centre, states, and stakeholders, the minister said.
He also advised states to implement Renewable Purchase Obligation (RPO) Guidelines and urged them to form dedicated teams for this critical planning.
The minister highlighted the importance of cyber-security measures and islanding schemes as effective measures to prevent power outages due to cyber concerns and enable the resilience of the grid.
Earlier, Vij urged Khattar to approve the 'viability gap funding for a 600 megawatt-hour (MWh) Battery Energy Storage System (BESS) in Haryana', while requesting 'early approval' for Rs 3,179.47-crore proposals under the Revised Distribution Sector Scheme (RDSS) to strengthen supply systems in Sonepat and Jhajjar, and Rs 142 crore for the pending proposal of a 33 kV substation augmentation under the LRP plan.
The Haryana Energy Minister also proposed a policy to 'regulate the installation of poles, substations and transmission lines' on agricultural fields and residential areas, in a bid to prevent inconvenience to stakeholders, while suggesting 'underground cabling' in densely populated or sensitive areas.
The meeting was attended by Anil Vij ( Energy Minister, Haryana), Harbhajan Singh ( Power Minister, Punjab), Subodh Uniyal (Forest Minister, Uttarakhand), A K Sharma ( Energy Minister, Uttar Pradesh), Ashish Sood (Power Minister, Delhi), Javed Ahmad Rana (Jal Shakti, Environment & Forest & Tribal Affairs, Jammu & Kashmir) and Heeralal Nagar (Energy Minister of State, Rajasthan).
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India Gazette
13 hours ago
- India Gazette
CCPA issues advisory to E-Commerce platforms for self-audit within 3 months to detect dark patterns
New Delhi [India], June 7 (ANI): The Central Consumer Protection Authority (CCPA) has issued advisory to all e-commerce platforms to take necessary steps to ensure that their platforms do not engage in deceptive and unfair trade practice which are in the nature of Dark Patterns. In a release on Saturday, the Ministry of Consumer Affairs, Food & Public Distribution said that all e-commerce platforms have been advised to conduct self-audits to identify dark patterns within 3 months of the issue of the advisory and take necessary steps to ensure that their platforms are free from such dark patterns. The e-commerce platforms, based on the self-audit reports, have also encouraged to give self-declarations that their platform is not indulging in any dark patterns. The self-declarations by the platforms will enable fair digital ecosystem along with building trust between consumers and e-commerce platforms, the release added. CCPA has also issued notices to e-commerce platforms in some cases that have been found violating the Guidelines for Prevention and Regulation of Dark Patterns. All e-commerce platforms are therefore, advised to refrain from deploying deceptive design interfaces that mislead consumers or manipulate their decision-making. The Authority has been keeping a close watch on the violation of the Guidelines issued for Prevention and Regulation of Dark Patterns. Instances of Dark Patterns have been noticed on E-Commerce platforms. The Department of Consumers Affairs, Government of India constituted a Joint Working Group (JWG) comprises of representatives from concerned Ministries, regulators, Voluntary Consumer Organisations and NLUs. The mandate of this JWG is examine and undertake measures to identify violations of Dark Patterns on e-commerce platforms and share the information with the Department of Consumer Affairs on regular intervals. The JWG shall also suggest appropriate awareness programmes for creating awareness amongst the consumers. As part of the Government's broader strategy and ongoing efforts to strengthen consumer protection in the digital era and curb unfair practices in e-commerce and online services, Department of Consumer Affairs, Government of India had notified the Guidelines for Prevention and Regulation of Dark Patterns in 2023 and specified 13 dark patterns, namely: False urgency, Basket Sneaking, Confirm shaming, forced action, Subscription trap, Interface Interference, Bait and switch, Drip Pricing, Disguised Advertisements and Nagging, Trick Wording, Saas Billing and Rogue Malwares. (ANI)


Time of India
16 hours ago
- Time of India
Big relief for consumers suffering loss due to dark patterns; Govt asks all e-commerce sites to take steps to eliminate dark patterns
The government has declared war on the practice of 'Dark Pattern' being run by some e-commerce companies, as noticed by the government. In a press release dated June 7, 2025, the Central Consumer Protection Authority (CCPA) has issued an advisory to all e-commerce platforms to take necessary steps to ensure that their platforms do not engage in deceptive and unfair trade practices which are in the nature of dark patterns . For those uninitiated, dark patterns are manipulative tricks employed by a company to convince you to buy a higher priced product or service than you otherwise would have. As a direct result of dark patterns, consumers suffer financial loss and result in them taking an action they may not want to take, such as signing up for a service in order to access content. Read below to know more about what the 13 types of dark patterns are and what the government told e-commerce companies to do. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like You Won't Believe What These Celebrities Studied in College Learn More Undo What did the government say to e-commerce companies? According to the press release, the government has issued notices to e-commerce platforms in some cases that have been found violating the Guidelines for Prevention and Regulation of Dark Patterns. 'All e-commerce platforms are therefore advised to refrain from deploying deceptive design interfaces that mislead consumers or manipulate their decision-making,' said the Central Consumer Protection Authority (CCPA) in the press release. Live Events The press release mentioned: 'All e-commerce platforms have been advised to conduct self-audits to identify dark patterns, within 3 months of the issue of the advisory, and take necessary steps to ensure that their platforms are free from such dark patterns. The e-commerce platforms, based on the self-audit reports, have also encouraged to give self-declarations that their platform is not indulging in any dark patterns.' The government said in the press release: 'CCPA has also issued notices to e-commerce platforms in some cases that have been found violating the Guidelines for Prevention and Regulation of Dark Patterns. The Authority has been keeping a close watch on the violation of the Guidelines issued for Prevention and Regulation of Dark Patterns. Instances of Dark Patterns have been noticed on E-Commerce platforms.' What are various types of identified dark patterns? According to the press release the Department of Consumer Affairs had notified the Guidelines for Prevention and Regulation of Dark Patterns in 2023 and specified 13 dark patterns, namely: False urgency, Basket Sneaking , confirm shaming, forced action , Subscription trap, Interface Interference , Bait and switch, Drip Pricing, Disguised Advertisements and Nagging, Trick Wording, Saas Billing and Rogue Malwares. According to another PIB press release dated June 30, 2023, some examples of dark patterns are: False Urgency: This tactic creates a sense of urgency or scarcity to pressure consumers into making a purchase or taking an action. Basket Sneaking: Websites or apps use dark patterns to add additional products or services to the shopping cart without user consent. Subscription Traps : This tactic makes it easy for consumers to sign up for a service but difficult for them to cancel it, often by hiding the cancellation option or requiring multiple steps. Confirm Shaming: It involves guilt as a way to make consumers adhere. It criticizes or attacks consumers for not conforming to a particular belief or viewpoint. Forced Action: This involves forcing consumers into taking an action they may not want to take, such as signing up for a service in order to access content. Nagging: It refers to persistent, repetitive and annoyingly constant criticism, complaints, requests for action. Interface Interference: This tactic involves making it difficult for consumers to take certain actions, such as canceling a subscription or deleting an account. Bait and Switch: This involves advertising one product or service but delivering another, often of lower quality. Hidden Costs: This tactic involves hiding additional costs from consumers until they are already committed to making a purchase. Disguised Ads: Disguised ads are advertisements that are designed to look like other types of content, such as news articles or user-generated content. Details of some of the specified dark patterns and how they manipulate consumers According to the Guidelines for Prevention and Regulation of Dark Patterns, 2023, here are the details: 1. False Urgency False urgency means falsely stating or implying the sense of urgency or scarcity so as to mislead a user into making an immediate purchase or take an immediate action, which may lead to a purchase; including: i. Showing false popularity of a product or service to manipulate user decision; ii. Stating that quantities of a particular product or service are more limited than they actually are. For example: a. Presenting false data on high demand without appropriate context. For instance, 'Only 2 rooms left! 30 others are looking at this right now.' b. Falsely creating time-bound pressure to make a purchase, such as describing a sale as an 'exclusive' sale for a limited time only for a select group of users. 2. Basket sneaking 'Basket sneaking' means inclusion of additional items such as products, services, payments to charity/donation at the time of checkout from a platform, without the consent of the user, such that the total amount payable by the user is more than the amount payable for the product(s) and/or service(s) chosen by the user. Provided that the addition of free samples or providing complimentary services or addition of necessary fees disclosed at the time of purchase, shall not be considered basket sneaking. Illustrations: a. Automatic addition of paid ancillary services with a pre-ticked box or otherwise to the cart when a consumer is purchasing a product(s) and/or service(s). b. A user purchases a single salon service, but while checking out a subscription to the salon service is automatically added. c. Automatically adding travel insurance while a user purchases a flight ticket. 3. Confirm shaming: 'Confirm shaming' means using a phrase, video, audio or any other means to create a sense of fear or shame or ridicule or guilt in the mind of the user, so as to nudge the user to act in a certain way that results in the user purchasing a product or service from the platform or continuing a subscription of a service. Illustrations: a. A platform for booking flight tickets using the phrase 'I will stay unsecured', when a user does not include insurance in their cart. b. A platform that adds a charity in the basket using a phrase 'charity is for rich, I don't care'. 4. Forced action Forced action means forcing a user into taking an action that would require the user to buy any additional good(s) or subscribe or sign up for an unrelated service, in order to buy or subscribe to the product/service originally intended by the user. Illustrations: a. prohibiting a user from continuing with the use of product or service for the consideration originally paid and contracted for, unless they upgrade for a higher rate or fees. b. forcing a user to subscribe to a newsletter in order to purchase a product. c. forcing a user to download an unintended/unrelated separate app to access a service originally advertised on another app e.g. A user downloads app, X, meant for listing houses for renting. Once the user downloads X, they are forced to download another app, Y, for hiring a painter. Without downloading Y, the user is unable to access any services on X. 5. Subscription trap Subscription trap means the process of making cancellation of a paid subscription impossible or a complex and lengthy process; or ii. hiding the cancellation option for a subscription; or iii. forcing a user to provide payment details and/or authorization for auto debits for availing a free subscription; iv. making the instructions related to cancellation of subscription ambiguous, latent, confusing, cumbersome. 6. Interface interference 'Interface interference' means a design element that manipulates the user interface in ways that (a) highlights certain specific information; and (b) obscures other relevant information relative to the other information; to misdirect a user from taking an action desired by her. Illustrations: a. Designing a light colored option for selecting 'No' in response to a pop-up asking a user if they wish to make a purchase or concealing the cancellation symbol in tiny font or changing the meaning of key symbols to mean the opposite. b. An 'X' icon on the top-right corner of a pop-up screen leading to opening-up of another ad rather than closing it. c. Designing a virtually less prominent designing a light colored option for selecting 'No' in response to a pop-up asking a user if they wish to make a purchase. 7. Bait and switch 'Bait and switch' means the practice of advertising a particular outcome based on the user's action but deceptively serving an alternate outcome. Illustrations: A seller offers a quality product at a cheap price but when the consumer is about to pay/buy, the seller states that the product is no longer available and instead offers a similar looking product but more expensive. 8. Drip pricing 'Drip pricing' means a practice whereby i. elements of prices are not revealed upfront or are revealed surreptitiously within the user experience; or ii. revealing the price post-confirmation of purchase, i.e. charging an amount higher than the amount disclosed at the time of checkout; or iii. a product or service is advertised as free without appropriate disclosure of the fact that the continuation of use requires in-app purchase; or iv. a user is prevented from availing a service which is already paid for unless something additional is purchased Illustrations: a. A consumer is booking a flight, the online platform showcases the price as X at the checkout page, and when payment is being made, price Y (which is more than X) has been charged by the platform to the consumer. b. A consumer has downloaded a mobile application for playing chess, which was advertised as 'play chess for free'. However, after 7 days, the app asked for a payment to continue playing chess. The fact that the free version of the game is available only for a limited time, i.e., 7 days in this case, was not disclosed to the consumer at the time of downloading the mobile application. c. A consumer has purchased a gym membership. In order to actually use the gym, the user must purchase special shoes/boxing gloves from the gym, and the same was not displayed at the time of offering the gym membership.


News18
16 hours ago
- News18
Nadda In Delhi, BJP CMs In States & Focus On Wins: BJP's 11-Year Celebration Blitzkrieg Revealed
The nationwide campaign, set to begin on June 9, will highlight the achievements of the Modi administration and outline its vision for the future The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has planned a series of high-profile press conferences across India to commemorate 11 years of the Narendra Modi-led government, details of which have been exclusively accessed by News18. The nationwide campaign, set to begin on June 9, will highlight the achievements of the Modi administration and outline its vision for the future. The initiative will see top BJP leaders, including central ministers, chief ministers, and senior party functionaries, addressing the media in state capitals, Union Territories, and district headquarters. Kick-Off By Nadda The campaign will commence on June 9 with a press conference led by BJP national president JP Nadda in New Delhi. Nadda's address is expected to set the tone for the nationwide initiative, focusing on the Modi government's transformative policies, economic reforms, and contributions to India's global stature over the past 11 years. The event will underscore the party's narrative of 'Viksit Bharat' (Developed India) and its roadmap for the coming years. State-Level Press Conferences On June 10, prominent BJP leaders, including chief ministers and central ministers, will hold press conferences in state capitals and Union Territories to highlight region-specific achievements under the Modi government. The schedule is meticulously planned to cover every corner of the country. According to sources in BJP, the deployment on June 10 will be as follows: Goa (Panaji): Chief Minister Pramod Sawant Gujarat (Gandhinagar): Chief Minister Bhupendra Patel Himachal Pradesh (Shimla): Union minister Sanjay Seth Jharkhand (Ranchi): Former Union minister Smriti Irani Karnataka (Bengaluru): Union minister Pralhad Joshi Kerala (Thiruvananthapuram): Union minister Suresh Gopi Madhya Pradesh (Bhopal): Chief Minister Dr Mohan Yadav Maharashtra (Mumbai): Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis Meghalaya (Shillong): Union minister Sarbananda Sonowal Mizoram (Aizawl): National secretary Anil Antony Odisha (Bhubaneswar): Chief Minister Mohan Charan Majhi Rajasthan (Jaipur): Chief Minister Bhajanlal Sharma Sikkim (Gangtok): Union minister Pabitra Margherita Tamil Nadu (Chennai): Union minister Gajendra Singh Shekhawat Telangana (Hyderabad): Union minister Dharmendra Pradhan Tripura (Agartala): Chief Minister Dr Manik Saha Uttarakhand (Dehradun): Chief Minister Pushkar Singh Dhami Uttar Pradesh (Lucknow): Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath West Bengal (Kolkata): Union minister Bhupendra Yadav Jammu & Kashmir (Srinagar): Union minister Manohar Lal Khattar (on June 12) Ladakh (Leh): National spokesperson Pradeep Bhandari Lakshadweep (Kavaratti): National vice-president Abdulla Kutty Andaman & Nicobar (Port Blair): Union minister Shantanu Thakur Chandigarh: Former Union minister Anurag Singh Thakur Dadra & Nagar Haveli and Daman & Diu (Silvassa): Union minister Nimuben Bambhaniya Puducherry: Union minister L Murugan District-Level Outreach on June 11 Following the state-level events, the BJP has planned an extensive outreach at the district level on June 11. According to sources, party leaders will address press conferences in district headquarters across the country, ensuring that the Modi government's achievements reach grassroots audiences. This multi-tiered campaign reflects the BJP's strategy to engage with citizens at all levels, from metropolitan cities to rural districts. Focus on Modi Government's Achievements The press conferences are expected to spotlight key accomplishments of the Modi government, including economic growth, infrastructure development, digital transformation, and social welfare schemes. Leaders will likely highlight flagship programmes such as Make in India, Digital India, Ayushman Bharat, and PM Awas Yojana, alongside reforms like the Goods and Services Tax (GST) and the abrogation of Article 370. The campaign will also emphasise India's rising global influence, including its leadership in forums like the G20 and its advancements in space exploration and renewable energy. Political Context and Strategy The nationwide campaign comes at a time when Prime Minister Narendra Modi has been riding high on the success of Operation Sindoor. It is expected that Pakistan and the recent conflict are bound to figure in the political discourse during the blitzkrieg. Get Latest Updates on Movies, Breaking News On India, World, Live Cricket Scores, And Stock Market Updates. Also Download the News18 App to stay updated! tags : BJP BJP President JP Nadda pm narendra modi smriti irani Location : New Delhi, India, India First Published: June 07, 2025, 15:41 IST News politics Nadda In Delhi, BJP CMs In States & Focus On Wins: BJP's 11-Year Celebration Blitzkrieg Revealed