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Reinventing chemical technology

Chief Guests Address by

Mukesh D. Ambani

Chairman and Managing Director

Reliance Industries Limited

Mumbai University Institute of Chemical Technology


Foundation Day Celebrations

Respected Professor M.M. Sharma,


Dr. Mashelkar,
Professor J.B. Joshi,
Members of the Board of Governors,
Faculty and Staff Members,
Distinguished Guests,
My Dear Students,
Thank you Professor Joshi for giving me the opportunity to participate
in this Foundation Day celebrations.
I had the privilege to participate, last week, in the meeting of the Board
of Governors of MUICT, under the chairmanship of Dr. Mashelkar.
I have great admiration for Dr. Mashelkars stewardship.
Under his dynamic leadership, all of us on the Board of Governors are
committed to build MUICT as an institution of great repute.
This resolve was evident in the deliberations during our meeting.
It was the very first meeting following the grant of autonomy to MUICT
by the University.
Autonomy is an important turning point in the history of MUICT.
Professor M.M. Sharma worked untiringly to bring eminence to MUICT.
And Prof. Joshi worked persistently to gain independence for MUICT.
Future generations of students and faculty will eternally cherish their
momentous contributions.
So would I, as an alumni of MUICT.
For me, a visit to MUICT is always filled with nostalgia.
I came here in 1974 as a young student eager to learn chemical
engineering.

I spent five years here as a student of Professor MM Sharma and a team


of exceptional faculty.
I can count those five years as among the best years in my life.
UDCT, as it was known those days, transformed my eagerness for chemical
engineering into an abiding engagement.
After earning my degree in chemical engineering, I decided to pursue
business management studies at Stanford University.
I then came back in 1981 to help my father Dhirubhai Ambani manage the
growth of Reliance.
The education and training that I received on this very campus was
instrumental in a significant way in evolving new initiatives of Reliance.
Reliance is a creation of chemical engineering.
From a textile company, Reliance progressed into chemical engineering
domains of polyester, petrochemicals, plastics, petroleum refining and oil
and gas.
Like me, this renowned institution has turned out thousands of well-trained
technology professionals over the last seventy years.
They have built the edifice of the chemical, pharmaceutical and other allied
industries in India.
MUICT is also an eloquent example of an institution of higher learning
with an intense engagement with industry.
Equally, it is a testimony of how the pursuit of research-led education can
help build world-class institutions.

Chemical Technology Perspective


Friends,
Pursuing chemical engineering at MUICT instilled in me an appreciation
for a wide range of science and engineering subjects.
Chemical engineering students those days learnt everything other than
chemical engineering most of the time.

From basic sciences, humanities, mechanical engineering, electrical


engineering to civil engineering, everything was thrown in.
Some would joke that chemical engineers are ones who talk chemistry to
engineers, engineering to chemists and politics when both engineers and
chemists are present.
Those were hey days for chemical engineers.
The years 1960 to 1980 represented a golden period for the global chemical
industry.
Chemical sciences were intersecting with other disciplines to create new
technologies.
The energy industry was seeing intense activity, spurred by high crude oil
prices.
Chemical technology was contributing with new secondary and tertiary
recovery methods.
The petrochemical industry was in a phase of explosive growth.
Chemical technology was bringing new plastics, elastomers, fibres and
chemicals to daily life.
A number of new polymers discovered during the previous three decades
had started to make an impact on society.
The engineering industry was shaping and riding the industrial age.
A new breed of performance materials was making inroads into engineering
applications.
These ranged from polycarbonate and polyphenylene oxide to thermoplastic
elastomers.
This golden period for the chemical industry then gave way to the computing
industry.
Chemical technology took backstage in the midst of tectonic shifts in
information technology and communications.
Since 1980 we are seeing the golden age for information technology and
communications unfold before us.

This will go well upto the year 2010.


During the last twenty years, processing power has grown 200 fold to 40
million transistors on a microprocessor.
Storage capacity has grown 5,000 times to 30,000 megabits per square inch.
And communications capacity has grown 60,000 times to 6,000 gigabits
per second on a single optic fibre.
The complexity of computing is portending to outgrow the human ability
to manage it.
Computings sphere of influence promises to extend everywhere.
It would impinge areas such as cognitive sciences to create smart devices.
Technology is taking centre stage in driving economic growth and
development.
In fact, two-thirds of global growth in GDP in the ensuing future will come
from technology sectors.

Re-inventing Chemical Technology


Ladies and Gentlemen,
All is not lost for chemical technology.
On the contrary, a renewed golden age awaits it.
Chemical technology has the opportunity to reinvent itself.
Convergence will be the dominant theme of technology in the twenty-first
century.
Synergies created by different domains would have far greater impact than
any single one.
Convergence of nanotechnology, biotechnology and accelerated computing
is expected to bring about a new Molecular Economy in the twenty-first
century.
The world of technology is envisaged to move to the micro, nano and
molecular scale.

Chemical technology has the opportunity to transform itself in this molecular


economy.
It has the potential to find common ground with biology, information and
communications, nanotechnology and material science.
Chemical technology so far drew lessons from mathematics, physics and
chemistry.
It now has the opportunity to learn from biology.
It has the opportunity to embrace new biopolymers, biofuels, bioprocesses,
biosensors and biopharmaceuticals.
Chemical technology also has much to gain from material science.
New conductive polymers for electronic components, imaging, devices and
fuel cells are on the anvil.
New semi-conductive polymers for LEDs, luminescent displays, storage
chips, solar cells and electronic paper are on the horizon.
Likewise, chemical technology has a lot to gain from information technology
and communications.
These opportunities range from cheminformatics, fuzzy logic control for
process modeling and optimisation and wireless data transmission and
sensor networks in process automation.
Finally, chemical technology has to embrace nanotechnology in the ensuing
future.
The paint and cosmetic industries in particular have the opportunity to
transform with nanomaterials exhibiting compelling properties at the nano level.
It is in the realm of possibility to develop paints that change colour and
paints that convert solar energy to power.
Chemical technology must embrace a vision of a molecular economy.
It must engage with building products and systems upwards from the
molecular scale.
At a broader level, the chemical technology will have to shift from processes
and products to presenting platforms for creativity.

Technology will be much more than the means to translate science into
socially useful tools.
Technology will graduate to be the means to create platforms for delivering
creative solutions in diverse areas to each person on this planet.

Imperatives for Chemical Technologists


Ladies and Gentlemen,
You may ask, What does all this mean for chemical technologists?
The answer to this question lies in seeing how chemical technologists in
world-class research-led universities are re-inventing themselves.
Chemical process modelers and simulators are learning downstream
processing and purification of proteins.
Polymer scientists are learning from cell biology to create new tissue
engineering constructs.
Chemical equipment manufacturers are learning bioprocesses to build new
fermentors, bioreactors and assist devices.
Pharmaceutical technologists are engaging with pharmacogenomics that tailor
drugs for each individual.
Pigment technologists are learning nanotechnology to create nanoconstructs
with highly specific colours, shades and hues.
Energy technologists are addressing the opportunity in building miniaturised
fuel cell devices to meet diverse distributed energy needs.
Above all, chemical engineers and technologists are collaborating and
cooperating more than ever before.
As knowledge from diverse disciplines intersect and converge, collaboration
and cooperation for horizontal integration is becoming a way of life.
I recently had the opportunity to visit several engineering schools in US
and to interact with their Deans.
It was interesting to see biology taking over engineering and chemical
engineers taking over biology.

You had to look hard to find a pure-blooded chemical engineering faculty


member.
In a lighter vein, it looks as though the old joke about chemical engineers
would need a remix.
Just as old Hindi songs are reincarnating as re-mixes.
A remixed chemical engineer of the future would probably talk biology to
engineers, engineering to biologists and chemical engineering to politicians.
The fact is chemical engineering faculty members would engage intensely
with biology.
Chemical engineers would work on problems in bioprocess engineering,
biomedical products and bioremediation technologies.
I think chemical engineers and technologists in India have a similar
opportunity.
And, chemical engineering education has the challenge of recasting syllabi
to encompass learning from biological sciences.
Just as chemical engineering education in yester years embraced other
disciplines of mechanical, electrical and civil engineering.
Chemical engineers also have the opportunity for shaping a technologyled India.
I am confident that India is destined to be a leading country in research
and development.
And chemical technology has the opportunity to make this happen.
It also has the potential to help India attain global leadership in technology.
For any country to attain global leadership, four frames of an institutional
technology infrastructure have to be vibrant.
The first frame is the university and educational institute research system.
MUICT falls in this category.
The second frame is national research laboratory system, which is a
repository of expertise and knowledge.

The third frame is the industrial company system, which create, access
or acquire technology.
The fourth frame is independent industry research and technology
organisations, which are focused on specific sectors.
Each one of these frames of a technology infrastructure has the
opportunity to help India attain global leadership based on research and
technology.
MUICT has a wonderful opportunity in this regard.
It has on its alumni a large science and technology manpower base.
MUICT is engaged in pharmaceutical research, an area in which India is
in an innovation mode.
MUICT has research programmes in bioprocess engineering.
MUICT is also creating a new pilot scale facility for chemical and
bioprocess development for access by academia and industry.
Above all, MUICT has now a new-found sense of optimism.
Gaining autonomy will unleash the full force of MUICT.
It can help a more intensive pursuit of research.
It can help bring learning from research to constantly upgrade educational
content.
It can help forge collaborative research and education programs within and
outside India.
It can help attract world-class faculty and bright young students from all
over the world.
Above all, it can help maintain the integrity of MUICT.
I am confident that we would leverage these strengths to spread a fever
of innovation and re-invention in chemical technology.
I am positive that we can help bring about a renaissance in the chemical
industry.

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I am upbeat that MUICT can enable India to be a leading research and


development country in the world.
MUICT would undoubtedly become a premier centre for research-led higher
education in a molecular economy.
MUICT can do it.

Conclusion
Friends,
India needs an environment where science is placed at the vanguard of
economic and social development.
Innovation is the very essence of progress in the age of technological
creativity.
In this age, resource and market advantages will not matter.
Intellect and innovation will.
India must ignite millions of intellects.
India must help them initiate, innovate and invent to attain global eminence.
Fertile minds like you have a great responsibility on your shoulders.
You are participants in and products of one of the best technology
institutions in the world.
You have both the privilege and opportunity to engage in path breaking
work.
I am convinced that the goal of technology leadership for India in the era
of creativity is realisable in your lifetime.
You can make this dream a reality.
Let us make India a technology country.
Let us make the twenty-first century the India century.
Thank you.

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Reinventing chemical technology

August 4, 2004 Mumbai

Mumbai University Institute of Chemical Technology


Foundation Day Celebrations

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