From conservation, Brajesh Singh transitions into another discussion of energy transition. He cites Ladakh’s green hydrogen hub as an important case study in India’s renewable energy ambitions. This tells us that the region’s climate conditions make it ideal for producing hydrogen, aligning with India’s net-zero 2070 vision, while adding, “green hydrogen is not just energy, it is independence. It means India won’t have to rely on foreign imports with the right infrastructure, hydrogen can be stored, transported, and supplied to regions with high demand. It can also electrify remote areas where power has yet to reach.”
He believes the Ladakh model can be replicated across India, decentralizing energy production so that it isn’t concentrated only in major cities. Localized micro-grids, he argues, are the future of India’s energy map.
Water: The Approach Needed
Brajesh Singh also touches on water management based on his extensive work in the sector, a subject he feels India must urgently address. Currently, water consumption is largely unregulated, with households in many areas not paying for usage.
“When something is free, it is taken for granted,” he says. “If water is billed into our economic framework, people will begin to understand its value. It is not an unlimited resource.” His vision involves stronger regulation, monitoring, and pricing of water, ensuring not only supply but also conservation through tech to restore water levels in drought susceptible areas and mitigating disasters during floods.
Corporate Expertise, Ecological Heart
What makes Brajesh Singh’s perspective compelling is how his two worlds merge, his experience advising corporates, governments, and research organizations on energy, water, and digital infrastructure enables him to speak with authority on policy and ESG frameworks. His life in Kanha jungle and his wildlife photography align those insights in a truly lived appreciation for ecosystems and biodiversity.Through this dual lens, he advocates for an effective and optimistic model of growth that is ambitious yet respectful, progressive yet protective. “Development should never come at the cost of nature, the challenge and the opportunity is to build responsibly co-existing with environment.”
As a corporate advisor and nature lover Brajesh Singh emphasizes on the balance India must strive for, as the nation builds its future, his story reminds us that true progress will be measured not only in GDP but in the health of its forests, rivers, and wildlife. To watch the full episode featuring Brajesh Singh, visit the Voice of MOSAIC YouTube channel at www.youtube.com/@Voiceofmosaic
What started as a way to unwind soon became a devotion, his lens captured the forest’s many moods from the stillness of dawn, the graceful flight of birds, the regal presence of tigers.