
NCC cadets to undertake fresh expedition soon, peaks shortlisted: DG
Two peaks have been shortlisted by the NCC — Mt Yunam (6,111 m) in Himachal Pradesh and Mt Shalang Dhura (5,678 m) in Uttarakhand.
'One of the two peaks will be selected based on weather conditions. The team has equal number of male and females cadets, and the planned mission is in line with promoting a spirit of adventure among the youth," DG of NCC, Lieutenant General Gurbirpal Singh told PTI.
Both are basic or beginners' peak, he said.
The National Cadet Corps (NCC), the largest uniformed youth organisation in the world, was raised in 1948.
Earlier in May this year, an expedition team of the NCC summited Mt Everest — the world's highest peak.
'We are now looking for the next expedition. We are still to decide on a peak, but it will be either Mt Yunam located in Lahaul in Himachal Pradesh or Mt Shalang Dhura, located in Uttarakhand," Singh said.
An NCC team has earlier scaled Mt Yunam but, it will be the 'first attempt" by cadets to summit Mt Shalang Dhura, he added.
This will be a post-monsoon expedition, so depending on rainfall and other weather conditions, it is likely to begin around either end-September or October, he added.
The NCC DG said the Corps has already put together a team for this upcoming expedition.
Around fifteen days ago, nearly 150 cadets had come to Delhi after being shortlisted by their respective directorates, and from that pool, the 20 cadets were finalised, he said.
The NCC has 17 directorates spread across the country, with a total sanctioned strength of 20 lakh. It has two divisions — Junior Division and Senior Division.
After they join, in the first year of Senior Division, the caders are made to train at various training academies as part of different courses, and mountaineering is also part of their training.
After selection for a mountaineering expedition, they get trained for 7-10 days in Uttarkashi generally, but due to natural disaster there recently, 'we are trying to do this at another place in Uttarakhand", the DG said.
Lieutenant General Singh expressed pride that 2,000 NCC cadets along with 500 My Bharat volunteers were part of the team that sat in front of the Red Fort ramparts here during the 79th Independence Day celebrations, in a formation of the 'Naya Bharat' logo.
The NCC DG also attended the celebrations at Red Fort on August 15, where the defining spirit was the success of Operation Sindoor — India's decisive four-day military action in May in the wake of Pahalgam attack.
'75,000 NCC cadets participated in civil defence and other related activities across the country, during the four-day period when Operation Sindoor was underway," he said.
The cadets helped in traffic management and crowd control. As also in hosting blood donation camps, thus contributing to nation-building which they are trained for, the DG said, adding, that they also took part in mock drills that took place around that period.
On the upcoming expedition, Lt Gen Singh said, besides the 20 cadets (average age 20-21 years), at least three officers and 10-15 support staff will be part of the team.
He said every year, two expeditions are planned, one pre-monsoon and another post-monsoon.
For putting together an NCC expedition team for scaling Mt Everest (8,848 m), 'we take 1.5-2 years", the DG added.
Mt Everest was first conquered by New Zealand's Edmund Hillary and his sherpa guide Tenzing Norgay in 1953, and has ever since fascinated climbers and mountaineers to scale the famed peak in the mighty Himalayas.
NCC cadets in the past, have successfully climbed other peaks too, including Mt Kang Yatse II (6,250 m) and Mt Abi Gamin (7,335 m). PTI KND OZ OZ
(This story has not been edited by News18 staff and is published from a syndicated news agency feed - PTI) view comments
First Published:
August 17, 2025, 16:15 IST
Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


News18
6 hours ago
- News18
NCC cadets to undertake fresh expedition soon, peaks shortlisted: DG
New Delhi, Aug 17 (PTI) A newly constituted NCC expedition team consisting of 20 cadets, is set to embark on a mountaineering adventure post monsoon when they will attempt to scale a peak in northern India, the Corps' director general said. Two peaks have been shortlisted by the NCC — Mt Yunam (6,111 m) in Himachal Pradesh and Mt Shalang Dhura (5,678 m) in Uttarakhand. 'One of the two peaks will be selected based on weather conditions. The team has equal number of male and females cadets, and the planned mission is in line with promoting a spirit of adventure among the youth," DG of NCC, Lieutenant General Gurbirpal Singh told PTI. Both are basic or beginners' peak, he said. The National Cadet Corps (NCC), the largest uniformed youth organisation in the world, was raised in 1948. Earlier in May this year, an expedition team of the NCC summited Mt Everest — the world's highest peak. 'We are now looking for the next expedition. We are still to decide on a peak, but it will be either Mt Yunam located in Lahaul in Himachal Pradesh or Mt Shalang Dhura, located in Uttarakhand," Singh said. An NCC team has earlier scaled Mt Yunam but, it will be the 'first attempt" by cadets to summit Mt Shalang Dhura, he added. This will be a post-monsoon expedition, so depending on rainfall and other weather conditions, it is likely to begin around either end-September or October, he added. The NCC DG said the Corps has already put together a team for this upcoming expedition. Around fifteen days ago, nearly 150 cadets had come to Delhi after being shortlisted by their respective directorates, and from that pool, the 20 cadets were finalised, he said. The NCC has 17 directorates spread across the country, with a total sanctioned strength of 20 lakh. It has two divisions — Junior Division and Senior Division. After they join, in the first year of Senior Division, the caders are made to train at various training academies as part of different courses, and mountaineering is also part of their training. After selection for a mountaineering expedition, they get trained for 7-10 days in Uttarkashi generally, but due to natural disaster there recently, 'we are trying to do this at another place in Uttarakhand", the DG said. Lieutenant General Singh expressed pride that 2,000 NCC cadets along with 500 My Bharat volunteers were part of the team that sat in front of the Red Fort ramparts here during the 79th Independence Day celebrations, in a formation of the 'Naya Bharat' logo. The NCC DG also attended the celebrations at Red Fort on August 15, where the defining spirit was the success of Operation Sindoor — India's decisive four-day military action in May in the wake of Pahalgam attack. '75,000 NCC cadets participated in civil defence and other related activities across the country, during the four-day period when Operation Sindoor was underway," he said. The cadets helped in traffic management and crowd control. As also in hosting blood donation camps, thus contributing to nation-building which they are trained for, the DG said, adding, that they also took part in mock drills that took place around that period. On the upcoming expedition, Lt Gen Singh said, besides the 20 cadets (average age 20-21 years), at least three officers and 10-15 support staff will be part of the team. He said every year, two expeditions are planned, one pre-monsoon and another post-monsoon. For putting together an NCC expedition team for scaling Mt Everest (8,848 m), 'we take 1.5-2 years", the DG added. Mt Everest was first conquered by New Zealand's Edmund Hillary and his sherpa guide Tenzing Norgay in 1953, and has ever since fascinated climbers and mountaineers to scale the famed peak in the mighty Himalayas. NCC cadets in the past, have successfully climbed other peaks too, including Mt Kang Yatse II (6,250 m) and Mt Abi Gamin (7,335 m). PTI KND OZ OZ (This story has not been edited by News18 staff and is published from a syndicated news agency feed - PTI) view comments First Published: August 17, 2025, 16:15 IST Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.


The Print
6 hours ago
- The Print
Left in the dark: Western UP's migrant workers lose light, faith with unmaintained solar panels
Once a symbol of self-reliance that lit up his hut and powered a fan through scorching summers, the panel is now coated in grime, barely functioning — a casualty of lack of maintenance, guidance and rising air pollution. 'Yeh toh roshni ka sahara tha. Par ab pehle jaise nahi chalta. (This was our source of light. But now it doesn't work like before,' he said. Aligarh/Bulandshahr, Aug 17 (PTI) In a dusty brick kiln colony on the outskirts of Aligarh, 32-year-old migrant worker Kamal Singh stands beside a lifeless solar panel mounted on his hut. As India expands its renewable energy footprint, stories like Kamal have revealed a troubling gap between solar adoption and solar maintenance. Many migrant workers across the dusty interiors of western Uttar Pradesh — Hathras, Bulandshahr, Aligarh — embraced solar as a lifeline to meet their energy needs but are now finding themselves disillusioned. Some even pooled money to install small solar panels on their huts using their savings from months of labour under the sun and for a while, it even worked: two bulbs lit up their rooms, a fan offered respite from the heat, and mobile phones stayed charged. But today, the lights flicker weakly and the fan barely moves. 'We don't know what went wrong. When we took it to the shop, they said dust had accumulated on it. Then we cleaned it properly with a cloth, but it's still not working like before,' said Kamal's wife, Rashmi. Neeraj Jain, director at Solar Square, an Indian company focused on residential solar energy solutions, pointed out that cleaning must be done gently and correctly. 'Leaning or scrubbing too hard can cause micro-cracks or damage the anti-reflective coating, which significantly reduces the panel's lifespan,' he cautioned. But this knowledge hasn't reached the brick kiln workers of western Uttar Pradesh, who often rely on second-hand information or trial-and-error methods. With little formal training and no local technicians to guide them, families clean panels with the same cloth and phenyl solution they use to mop floors or dust it the way they do dusting at home. Some lean directly on the glass surface while scrubbing, unaware they may be damaging the very panels they depend on for electricity. In these informal settlements, where electricity theft, outages, and diesel costs once made solar seem like a breakthrough, the lack of aftercare and support has quickly turned innovation into frustration. 'I saved Rs 3,000 on electricity last year. But now, the panel stopped working properly. No one ever told us how to take care of it,' said Kishore Kumar, a migrant construction worker in Nanau village. Others tell similar stories. 'We bought it thinking it would help during nights as we were either dependent on oil lamps or pilfering electricity, but it became more headache than help,' said Sangeeta, who migrated from Bihar's Gaya to work in a brick kiln in Nanau village of Uttar Pradesh's Aligarh district. Experts agree that while solar systems are marketed as low-maintenance, they are not maintenance-free. 'Within 90 days, performance drops by up to 35 per cent if not cleaned,' said Jain. 'In rural, off-grid areas, the panels often face poor air quality, dust, bird droppings, and no guidance on upkeep. After a year or two, many just abandon them,' he added. Shopkeepers in surrounding areas like Pilakhana and Bijauli also report declining use. 'Earlier, families came to us to buy DC fans and LED bulbs for their solar setups,' said Virendra Singh, who owns a shop in Pilakhana. 'Now some of them come asking for kerosene lamps again.' The problem isn't the technology but the lack of education and support. Like Jain said that solar panels do not need complicated maintenance. 'But users must know not to rub too hard, not to use saltwater, and to avoid leaning on them. Even small cracks or residue can ruin them,' Jain said. When PTI reached out to the shops selling solar panels, the shopkeepers said that they themselves are not sure how to ensure effective maintenance and just tell the people to wipe it properly with wet and dry cloth. 'Like we do dusting at home,' said a shopkeeper in Bulandshahr. Air pollution is further making the situation worse. 'In Delhi and surrounding regions, performance falls by at least 15'20% during peak pollution. And this isn't just about fog'¦it's the dust, the particulates, everything in the air that blocks sunlight,' said Jain. Researchers at IIT Delhi's Centre for Atmospheric Sciences (2001-2018) found that particulate pollution reduces direct sunlight radiation (called atmospheric attenuation) and causes soiling (i.e. particle deposition). As a result, solar panel efficiency in India declines by approximately 12 per cent for fixed panels and up to 41 per cent for dual-axis tracking systems. In the eastern and northern power grids, reductions in received sunlight range from 12-16 per cent. For families relying on solar for basic needs — charging a phone, running a light or fan — such a drop makes a system nearly unusable. Indrajit Singh, Managing Director of the Uttar Pradesh New and Renewable Energy Development Agency (UPNEDA), acknowledged the issue. 'We've focused on expanding solar access, but now we are scaling up training and 30,000 Surya Mitras are being trained in UP for installation and maintenance,' he said. 'We've also started pilot programs with women's self-help groups in rural areas to take on local repair and upkeep,' he said. So far, over 5,000 individuals have been trained and 3,000 vendors registered, according to Singh. But such programs are yet to reach the migrant belts of western UP in any meaningful way. India is home to over 450 million internal migrants, according to the 2011 Census, with current estimates by independent researchers suggesting the number could now exceed 600 million, as many move in search of work, education, or better living conditions. Among them, Uttar Pradesh is both a major sending and receiving state, with millions of migrant workers moving seasonally between states like Bihar, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, and Maharashtra. For these workers, access to reliable and affordable energy is not a luxury — it is essential for their empowerment, said Nirmal Gorana, convenor of the National Campaign Committee for the Eradication of Bonded Labour, who has extensively documented labour conditions in kilns. But without basic maintenance support, even this modest progress begins to unravel. 'We turned to solar with hope and invested our hard-earned savings in it. To buy this panel, we made sacrifices'whether it meant cutting back on better food, medicine, or even sending money home. So when the panel stops working, it isn't just a financial loss'it shatters our trust in the system,' said Kamal. (This content was developed and produced under an arrangement with Internews' Earth Journalism Network). PTI UZM NB NB This report is auto-generated from PTI news service. ThePrint holds no responsibility for its content.


Time of India
8 hours ago
- Time of India
Against all odds: On a hilltop in Chhattisgarh's Balrampur; 2 teachers trek 4 hours to keep the tricolour flying high
RAIPUR: High up in the rugged hills of Balrampur district, far from paved roads and city buzz, a little government primary school stood tall with tricolour hoisted top in pride. stands as a quiet beacon of hope. Braving the challenging terrain every single day, two dedicated school teachers in one of the remotest villages in Balrampur district of Chhattisgarh ensure to hoist the national flag on 79th Independence Day. They not only hoisted the national flag with pride but also brought sweets and goodies to celebrate the occasion with students. When there are reports of teachers coming to school drunk and making a mess on premises before the students, this Bachwar school has two teachers who walk nearly four hours every day to keep both the school and the spirit of the education alive. The school, perched on a hilltop in Bachwar village under Khadiya Damar panchayat, has just 13 students — all tribal children from nearby hamlets. But that doesn't deter teachers Pankaj Ekka and Shyam Sai, who have made it their mission to ensure no national festival goes unnoticed in this remote corner of north Chhattisgarh. On August 15, the duo trekked their usual two-hour route through thick forest, across a river, and up a winding pagdandi trail. After hoisting the national flag, they distributed sweets and goodies, turning the school courtyard into a miniature celebration ground. 'For us, it's important that the children feel the same pride and joy in national events as students anywhere else in the country,' says Ekka, who got his first posting at this school in 2010 and never left, even as others sought transfers to more accessible postings. 'The journey isn't easy, but it has become part of our lives.' The challenges are daunting: the path is broken, riddled with potholes, and cut through dense forest. The Channan river, which runs along the way, is mercifully shallow enough to cross, but the surrounding wilderness often makes the teachers uneasy. 'Sometimes the forest gives us goosebumps,' Ekka admits with a smile. There's no kirana shop in the village of 20-25 houses, hence, the teachers have to carry all the I-Day material on their back. Despite the odds, they rarely miss a day. While outsiders may take three hours to reach the school, the teachers, now hardened by routine, do it in two. After teaching Classes 1 to 5, they encourage their students to pursue further studies at nearby residential schools. The school was set up in 2005, and over the years many teachers have left, unwilling to cope with the daily ordeal. But for Ekka and Sai, their commitment has outlasted the hardships. 'Every morning we set out knowing we're not just teaching lessons but also giving these children reasons to dream and explore,' Ekka says. And every Independence Day, as the flag rises against the hilltop sky, those dreams seem just a little closer. District education officer D N Mishra said, 'This is a very touching gesture that teachers are taking such initiatives on a daily basis. I have requested all the teachers in district to ensure that they celebrate national festivals even if they are located in remote areas.' Stay updated with the latest local news from your city on Times of India (TOI). Check upcoming bank holidays , public holidays , and current gold rates and silver prices in your area.