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The grid in India is pretty broken. My dad had dreams of going back to India to retire, but on his last trip he told me housing was now super expensive, the pollution was still terrible, the air not fit to breath and the water still unsafe to drink. In other countries we take a national grid for granted. In Europe, power can be bought and sold from country to country. India may be lacking in capacity, but even if they're not, the grid is fragile, unreliable and not a national one. There are over a billion people living there too, in a land mass way smaller than their more populous neighbour to the north (and let's not forget all of China's trouble with pollution as well). |
http://www.china-mike.com/china-travel-tips/tourist-maps/chi...
PS: You can draw a strait line in China with 6% of the population on the larger half, and 94% of the population on the smaller half.
http://www.undertheraedar.com/2012/06/population-of-china.ht...