Thursday, 31 May 2012

ITC to set up its second noodle manufacturing plant in Kolkata

ITC has set up its second manufacturing unit for Sunfeast Yippee Noodles in Kolkata in partnership with city-based Keventer Group. The proposed Rs 50 crore plant with a capacity to manufacture 50 tonnes of instant noodles per day will be the second such plant for noodles in the country. 

The technology for the plant is sourced from Japan and Taiwan and is capable of packing 450 packets per minute. 

""This investment is part of ITC's overall plan for developing West Bengal's economic capacity through our vibrant and high quality driven foods business,"" says Kurush Grant, executive director at ITC Ltd. 

""West Bengal has been home to ITC's headquarter for over a century, and we have also established several manufacturing plants that create value for the state. ITC's packaged food products with brands such as Aashirvaad, Sunfeast, Bingo! and Yippee! are gaining market share,"" said Grant. 

Keventer also announced its plans to set up a food safety laboratory in its Kolkata facility at an investment of Rs 35 crore. The laboratory will operate under the name of Edward Food Research and Analysis Centre and is an approved project by the ministry of food processing industries.

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RINL ready for expansion to 12MTPA

State-owned Rashtriya Ispat Nigam (RINL), which is in the final stages of expanding its capacity to 6.3 million tonnes per annum (mtpa) from 2.9 mtpa, has now prepared a feasibility report for enhancing it further to 12 mtpa with an investment of Rs 30,000 crore.



In its recent presentation to the steel ministry, the Vizag-based company said the feasibility report, envisaging capacity expansion to 12 mtpa, has been prepared.



The ministry also said it hoped to implement the expansion policy in four years from the time of getting the government go-ahead.



According to plans, a capacity of 12 mtpa would be achieved in three phases. While the first phase would focus on setting up of a Hot Rolled (HR) Coil mill with an investment of Rs 22,000 crore, the second and third phases would involve construction of a silicon mill and a coll-rolled mill respectively at an investment of Rs 4,000 crore each.



RINL has already sought the approval of the ministry and hopes to get the clearance by August this year.



The company said the new mills would mainly produce high- end flat products.



RINL has also initiated talks with lenders to raise Rs 22,500 crore debt in tranches over the next 3-4 years to fund the capacity expansion to 12 mtpa.



It submitted the draft red herring prospectus with the market regulator Sebi recently for an initial public offer.



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POSCO to revive 12MTPA Odisha Steel Project with fresh terms

POSCO, the South Korean steel giant, has agreed to a fresh set of terms and conditions stipulated by the Odisha government to kick off its much-delayed 12-million tonne mega steel project near Paradip in Odisha.

Reviving the MoU for a project announced in 2005 was possible after Posco, in a significant shift, softened its stand on swapping of low-grade iron ore with some foreign countries such as Brazil for import of high-grade ore. In another concession, the South Korean steel maker agreed to implement the policy of the state government regarding employment of domiciles in the proposed plant.

"As per the new arrangement, the company has agreed to swap low-grade iron ore from its 'yet-to-be-obtained' captive mines within country through the state-run Orissa Mining Corporation (OMC). Besides, it has consented to give priority in recruitment to local youth in various posts," a senior official engaged in negotiation process with Posco India team told ET on Monday.

Sources further added that the Odisha government, Posco India and its parent organisation Posco, would sign a tripartite agreement on the new arrangement very soon. Posco was not available for an immediate comment. The official negotiators representing the Odisha state had made it clear to the Posco team that the steel project could not be thrust upon the locals.

"We have asked them to earmark at least 100 crore for local area development. We want to earn the confidence of the people by developing infrastructure in the project-affected villages, provide piped water supply and create livelihood opportunities to end the six-year long confrontation," the official said.

However, the progress in the MoU is just one of the many hurdles before the steel maker. The green tribunal has set aside the conditional forest clearance granted to Posco in 2011. The company has tweaked its project by deciding to make do with a 8-million tonne capacity plant, instead of 12 million, that it has originally decided by resolving to setting up infrastructure on land that is not disputed.

The allocation of mines to Posco has been challenged in the courts. The hearing will resume after the court reconvenes after the summer vacation.

Last week the state-run Industrial Infrastructure Development Corporation (IDCO) chairman PK Jena visited the project area and interacted with villagers likely to be displaced or partially affected. "We are reworking on the entry road to the project keeping opposition from a minuscule section of villagers. We want to carry the villagers with us by bringing substantial benefits to them even before the project is launched. Posco also has given its nod to a pro-people strategy," Jena said.

On June 22, 2005, Posco India had signed a new memorandum of understanding (MoU) with the Odisha government to set up a 12-MTPA steel project in Odisha with an investment of 52,000 crore, the highest ever foreign direct investment (FDI) in the country.

However, the project's first phase, which was scheduled to be commissioned in 2011, failed to take off because of protests by the local people against land acquisition.As per the project report of the company, Posco India requires 4,004 acres of land for its integrated green field steel project.


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1980MW Dhopave Thermal Power Project faces opposition

The 1,980-MW thermal coal power project, which has been planned at Dhopave village in Ratnagiri district of Maharashtra, is facing serious opposition from local villagers.

For the last five days, the villagers are not allowing officials from the State Revenue Department to undertake a survey of 500 hectares at Dhopave and the two surrounding villages.

Villagers fear that the hot water and coal ash, which would be spewed by the power plant, will destroy their fragile local ecosystem.

The plant is being developed by Maharashtra State Power Generation Company Ltd (Mahagenco).

After land acquisition, Mahagenco will call for bids and handover the plant site to a private company. The company will build, own and operate the plant.


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BHEL commissions fifth unit of 250MW

State-run BHEL today commissioned the fifth 250 MW unit of Parichha thermal power project in Uttar Pradesh, which would feed 6 million units of power to the National Grid.



"BHEL has commissioned a 250 MW unit at Parichha Thermal Power Station (1,140 MW), in Uttar Pradesh. With this, 6 million units of electricity will be added to the grid of the power deficit state, every day," a company statement said.



This order was placed on BHEL by Uttar Pradesh Rajya Vidyut Utpadan Nigam Limited (UPRVUNL).



BHEL's job in the contract involves manufacture, supply, erection, testing and commissioning of the main plant package along with associated auxiliaries and civil works for the main plant package for this power project, it said.



The equipment for the project has been supplied by BHEL's Haridwar, Trichy, Ranipet, Hyderabad, Bangalore, Bhopal and Jhansi plants, while BHEL's Power Sector, Northern Region, is undertaking erection and commissioning of the equipment.



The company has established the capability to deliver power plant equipment of 20,000 MW capacity per annum.



Meanwhile, BHEL recently commissioned another 500 MW unit at NTPC's Rihand thermal power plant in Uttar Pradesh. The unit has been commissioned for Stage III of the Rihand Super Thermal Power Station.



For NTPC , BHEL is also presently executing contracts at Barh (2x660 MW), Jhajjar (1x500 MW), Vallur (2x500 MW), Rihand (1x500 MW), Mouda (1x500 MW), Vindhyachal (2x500 MW), Bongaigaon (3x250 MW), Muzaffarpur (2x195 MW) and Nabinagar (4x250 MW).



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Indian companies to conduct due diligence on Afghan Mines

The Indian consortium shortlisted for copper and gold mining in Afghanistan are shortly expected to conduct a due diligence on the deposits.



The consortium members, which include state-owned PSUs such as Hindustan Copper, Nalco, SAIL and MECL, will meet after June 5 to decide on the equity shareholding and also take a call on whether to include private sector companies as part of the consortium. Sterlite Industries, Monnet Ispat & Energy and Jindal Steel & Power are among the private players who have also been shortlisted by the Afghan mines ministry.



"We have sent four teams to Afghanistan for site visit. We will study their reports and do a due diligence on the reserves. The last of these teams will return on June 5. We are scheduled to meet after that to take a call on equity shareholding among the consortium members. We are getting feelers from other private players interested in joining the consortium and will decided on whether to invite them as part of the team," Shakeel Ahmed, HCL chairman & managing said.



Incidentally, the shortlisted candidates also include big investors from the Emirates, Canada and Australia. Mr Ahmed said the Indian consortium's move would be on the lines of Afisco, the consortium of PSUs and private players, which successfully beat global competition to bag the rights for exploring nearly a billion tonnes of iron ore reserves in remote Hajigak.



Asked if they would seek sovereign guarantees for mining the copper and gold reserves in Afghanistan, Ahmed said: "We will follow on the lines of Afisco."



"The only concern is security and infrastructure. India and Afghanistan share historical ties and both the government and the locals have been very friendly when our team visited the country. We are keen to explore the reserves in that country since it is in our interest to secure our mineral needs," he added. Closer home, HCL is planning to add greenfield mines to raise output. It is planning a 51:49 joint venture with Rajasthan Mines & Minerals



and take up exploration of four copper deposits at Alwar, Bhilwara and Dungarpur. While RMML holds the mining lease in these properties, HCL will provide the mining expertise.



HCL posted a 44% jump in net profit at 323 crore in 2011-12 against 224.1 crore in the previous fiscal, riding on a significant 28% rise in sales volume during the year. The country's only vertically-integrated copper company posted vastly improved results driven by mining operations, despite a drop in average price realisation.



The benchmark copper prices on the London Metal Exchange dipped 14% in the fourth quarter of FY12 on low demand from China, eurozone fears and the Greek debt crisis. During the fourth quarter, net profit zoomed to 137 crore against 61 crore in the previous corresponding quarter. Sales shot up a significant 97% to 644 crore against 327 crore in the same period last year. By recording net profit for three consecutive years, HCL has posted a turnaround and thus managed to come out of the ambit of the Board of Reconstruction of Public Sector Enterprises.



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SABIC developed high clarity polypropylene

To meet the need of converters for materials that deliver better finished products and that can be produced cost-effectively, SABIC has developed two new high clarity SABIC® PP Qrystal polypropylenes. These random copolymers, typically for injection moulding, were specially designed with unique flow behavior, providing processors with the flexibility to produce parts faster and with lower energy consumption.



SABIC® PP QR674K, with a melt flow rate (MFR) of 40g/10min, was typically developed for more sensitive food contact applications, owing to its improved organoleptic performance (low odor). Typical target applications are caps and closures, houseware, kitchenware and food/non-food containers. SABIC® PP QR678K, with its high MFR of 80 g/10 min, is better suited to production of parts with complex shapes and/or long and narrow flow paths. Customer trials have shown around 15% higher flow than a standard PP random at the same MFR level, allowing machines to run at lower processing temperatures and 15% faster cycle times, potentially decreasing production costs.



The PP Qrystal range, which was launched in 2010, now comprises four grades, with MFRs ranging from 25 to 80 g/10 min. All PP Qrystal grades can be processed at much lower temperatures than many other commonly used copolymer polypropylenes from the market, leading to significant reductions in cycle time and energy consumption, as a sustainable solution to decrease the molded article carbon footprint. They also have a good balance of impact strength and stiffness and enable customers to produce parts with no loss of transparency or aesthetics. The SABIC® PP Qrystal grade family is produced both in Europe and the Middle East and can be delivered globally.



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BHEL bags Rs 1143 cr NTPC contract for thermal power project

State-run Bharat Heavy Electricals Ltd (BHEL) said it bagged a Rs 1143 crore contract from NTPC for supply and installation of the main plant package for a thermal power project in Madhya Pradesh. 

The contract envisages setting up a 500-mw thermal power generating unit at NTPC's Vindhyachal super thermal power station. 

With the present order, 86 numbers of 500-mw thermal sets have been contracted by BHEL in the country so far, the company said in a statement. 

With the commissioning of this unit, the cumulative generating capacity of the power station will be enhanced to 4,760-mw, making it India's largest power generating station. 

BHEL's scope of work in the contract envisages design, engineering, manufacture, supply and erection and commissioning of steam generator and steam turbine generator along with associated auxiliaries and controls. 

The equipment for the project will be manufactured at BHEL's Trichy, Ranipet, Haridwar, Hyderabad, Bangalore and Bhopal Plants, while the company's power sector in western region will be responsible for erection and commissioning of the equipment, the statement said.

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Wednesday, 30 May 2012

Robust Growth for Indian Petrochemical Sector


APIC '12: Strong growth eyed for India petrochemical industryIndia's petrochemical industry is expected to register robust growth in the years ahead provided it continues with efforts towards enhancing its competitive advantage, an industry executive said on Friday.

"The petrochemical industry in India is expected to accelerate growth in the remaining months of 2012 – a trend which is projected to continue in the coming years," said Kamal Nanavaty, vice president of the Chemicals and Petrochemicals Manufacturers Association (CPMA) of India.

Nanavaty was speaking at the 34th annual Asia Petrochemicals Industry Conference (APIC) being held in Kuala Lumpur on 17-18 May.

"In the aftermath of 2008 [financial] crisis, [the] prognosis for the petrochemical industry of India is still bright and analysts expect it to grow at a 15% CARG [compound annual rate of growth]," Nanavaty said.

He said competitiveness is key to sustained economic growth at the global, regional and national level.

"Hence, irrespective of whether the industry is at the peak or trough of the cycle, it is vital that we pursue every available avenue to enhance competitiveness," he added.

India's polymer demand growth is expected to grow at a faster pace of 8-12% in 2012-2013, after registering a subdued demand growth of 4.6% in 2011, according to the country's petrochemical industry association in a report released on Friday.

India's ethylene capacity increased by 8% to 4.03m tonnes in 2011, while its propylene capacity grew 3.4% to 3.96m tonnes, with some 807,000 tonnes/year of capacity expected to be added by 2013.

Butadiene (BD) demand in the country registered a nominal growth of 0.8% in 2011 and is expected to grow at a faster rate of 2% in 2012.

By 2013, demand for butadiene is expected to jump by 50% with the expected start-ups of new styrene butadiene rubber (SBR) and butadiene rubber (BR) plants.

Meanwhile, India does not produce styrene locally and is fully dependent on imports.

Its demand for styrene totalled 525,000 tonnes/year in 2011, registering a growth of 11%. India expects the same demand growth this year and next year.

In 2011, paraxylene (PX) demand increased by 3.5% and is expected to moderate to 2.1% in 2012, before recovering in 2013, when an 8.7% growth is expected.

India's domestic PX capacity stood at 2.50m tonnes/year in 2011, with no new capacity coming up in 2012 and 2013, according to the report.


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Solvay Inaugurates R&D Centre in India

Solvay has inaugurated its new Research, Development and Technology Centre at Savli, Gujarat State, India. The Centre will focus its efforts mainly on the development of high-performance polymers, organic chemistry, nano composites and green chemistry. Housed in a new and high-performance sustainable building, it will employ over 200 researchers when fully operational. The RD&T Centre will tap the country's huge innovation talent potential and carry out open innovation in collaboration with premier institutes in India. The Centre has also established three fellowships for research in sustainable chemistry, nano technology and polymer science at the Maharaja Sayajirao University in Vadodara. The collaboration between university, research institutes and business organizations is essential to foster breakthrough innovation, speeding up the design process and the launch of new products in the market.



"I am convinced that India offers to Solvay significant growth opportunities and this Center will be a key contributor to implement our strategy in the country", said Jean-Pierre Clamadieu, CEO of Solvay during the inauguration ceremony. "We will focus on customer-tailored innovation for the region by leveraging the various strengths of the Group and the innovation potential of the regional academic world," added Sanjay Charati, Head of the Research, Development and Technology Centre in India.



The Solvay Group has been active in India since 2000. With 7 production sites and about 900 employees in the country, it principally manufactures specialty polymers, engineering plastics, surfactants and special chemicals. The Group generated EUR 180 million of net sales in India last year and has the ambition to double its sales in the country within the next 3 years.



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Polyplex Corp to invest in Turkey

Polyplex Corp Ltd. (PPC), Indian manufacturer of polyester film plans to build a US$150 mln plastics plant in Turkey and plans another investment of US$500 mln within 5-8 years to produce 600,000 tpa feedstock polyethylene terephthalate, as per Bloomberg. The plant will have exports of US$1 billion a year, Kapil Gupta, senior vice president for the company and will start operations within two to three years. Feedstock for PET will be purchased from local suppliers such as Petkim Petrokimya Holding AS (PETKM). Polyplex will start the construction of the plant in the Corlu tax-free zone, to the west of Istanbul, in H2-2012.



Polyplex is considering a joint venture with a Turkish or international partner for the additional investment at the site, Gupta said. "We are focusing first on PET resin investment and then will consider a resin raw material plant in 5 to 8 years with a partner," he said. Ilker Ayci, head of the investment agency, said Polyplex investment will help Turkey increase its foreign direct investment this year from 2011's $16 billion. "We may even break the 2007 record of $22 billion this year or next," Ayci said.



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OSHA Revises Rule On Hazardous Dust Explosions


In 2007, the Chemical Safety Board (CSB) released a study on reducing the risk of dust explosions, which concluded that existing efforts to address the hazards of combustible dust explosions were inadequate. On March 20, a revised Hazard Communication rule was filed at the Office of the Federal Register that effectively accomplishes recommendations made by the CSB report.

A statement on the OSHA website advises that "The Hazard Communication Standard (HCS) is now aligned with the Globally Harmonized System of Classification and Labeling of Chemicals (GHS). The update will provide a common and coherent approach to classifying chemicals and communicating hazard information on labels and safety data sheets.

Once implemented, the revised standard will help reduce trade barriers and result in productivity improvements for U.S. businesses that regularly handle, store, and use hazardous chemicals while providing cost savings for businesses that periodically update safety data sheets and labels for chemicals covered under the hazard communication standard.

Major changes focus on hazard classification, labels, and safety data sheets. OSHA has not provided a definition for combustible dust to the final HCS, as well as in the United Nations Sub-Committee of Experts on the GHS (UN/SCEGHS). However, combustible dust is now included in the definition of "hazardous chemical." 

In the final HCS, combustible dust hazards must be addressed on labels and SDSs. Label elements are provided for combustible dust in the final HCS and include the signal word "warning" and the hazard statement "May form combustible dust concentrations in the air."

Training is now specifically required to include combustible dust hazards. Employers will be required to train their employees by December 2013 with full implementation of the rule in 2015.


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Saudi Aramco & Sumitomo to build $7billion petrochemical project

Saudi Aramco, the national oil company of Saudi Arabia, and Japan's Sumitomo Chemical Co. will spend $7 billion to expand a petrochemical project in the kingdom, Reuters reported.

Sumitomo said it was pressing on with the Rabigh II project, due to start operations in early 2016, as it expects the market to pull out of a recent slump.

"The industry is now at a low point, but we are not worried about its long-term prospects," Osamu Ishitobi, vice president of Sumitomo Chemical, said.


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Rupee to Help Bharat Heavy Beat Chinese Rivals: Corporate India

The Indian rupee's tumble to a record low may help Bharat Heavy Electricals Ltd. (BHEL), the nation's biggest power-equipment maker, regain market share from Chinese rivals as the weaker currency pushes up import costs for generators.

The rupee has declined 19 percent against the U.S. dollar and 21 percent against the yuan in the past year, the worst performance in Asia, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The depreciation means companies such as billionaire Anil Ambani's Reliance Power Ltd. are paying more for foreign loans taken to purchase parts from China.

"This is a positive indicator and it certainly improves our cost competitiveness," P.K. Bajpai, finance director at New Delhi-based BHEL, said in an interview.

Orders won by BHEL for boilers, turbines and generators fell to the least since 2007 as of March 31 as suppliers including Shanghai Electric Group Co. (601727) and Dongfang Electric Corp. (600875) won business by offering discounts and quicker implementation schedules. A sliding currency will favor the Indian state-owned company's bids for contracts and reverse the stock's plunge to a five-year low, said Rohit Singh, an analyst at IDBI Capital Market Services Ltd. in Mumbai.

Negative Sentiment

Shares of BHEL have slumped 44 percent in the past year, compared with a 10 percent drop in the benchmark Sensitive Index (SENSEX), as Chinese suppliers expanded their market share in India while a shortage of coal stalled some projects. The stock, headed for its third annual loss, closed at 200.75 rupees on May 18, its lowest level since March 16, 2007, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. It traded at 217.95 rupees yesterday.

"The negative sentiment on the stock reflects the overall challenges faced by the power sector in India," Bajpai said. "Power is something that can't be ignored, and we are confident of bouncing back."

Most analysts don't share his optimism. The stock has 12 buy ratings versus 26 who grade it a sell, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

The local currency's weakness is temporary and many producers aren't in a hurry to place orders because of the fuel- supply bottleneck, said Lakshminarayana Ganti, a Mumbai-based analyst at the brokerage unit of Standard Chartered Plc.

"BHEL should brace for a long winter, a lull of at least a year for orders," he said in a telephone interview.

Expanding Market

Chinese equipment makers controlled 29 percent of the Indian market in the five years ended March 31, according to a presentation on BHEL's website, versus almost nothing in the previous period. Two calls to Shanghai Electric seeking comments weren't answered, while two to the office of Dongfang's Board Secretary Zhang Linchao went unanswered.

Reliance Power (RPWR) ordered $10 billion of equipment in October 2010 for its coal-fired plants and signed agreements for $12 billion of loans from Chinese banks. Lanco Infratech Ltd. (LANCI) said in September it was considering raising yuan loans to fund $3.8 billion of projects, while Jindal Steel & Power Ltd. (JSP) ordered equipment from Shanghai Electric about three years ago for its generation units in the states of Orissa and Chhattisgarh.

The rupee's drop is making banks "more cautious" in lending to new projects as capital and hedging costs increase for producers that have borrowed in dollars and yuan, Sushil Maroo, chief financial officer at Jindal Steel & Power, said in a telephone interview.

"The volatility in foreign-exchange rates will not be short-lived and the answer is more and more indigenization," he said. "Bharat Heavy is well poised to make big leads in the next plan orders."

Boosting Generation

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh plans to spend as much as $300 billion in the five years to March 2017 to boost generation capacity and reduce blackouts to accelerate economic growth from the slowest pace in three years. After failing to meet its targets dating back to 1951, the government's goal for the five- year period is to add 76 gigawatts. About one in four Indians lives without electricity as supplies aren't enough for the entire population.

"The concern with BHEL is the slowing pace of order intake and if that is fixed, the stock could rebound," said IDBI Capital's Singh, who has a buy rating on the stock. "If the rupee continues to slide for a longer time, it may turn things in favor of domestic manufacturers."

BHEL's orders in the financial year ended March 31 declined 63 percent to 221 billion rupees ($4 billion), the least in five years, according to Hitesh Kuvelkar, an analyst at First Global Stockbroking in Mumbai. The company expects a jump in contracts in the current year to about 600 billion rupees, he wrote in a report dated May 24.

Capacity Glut

Net income in the quarter to March 31 rose 21 percent to a record 33.8 billion rupees, beating estimates, according to a statement from the company last week. BHEL plans to double revenue in five years, with a target of $20 billion, Chairman B. Prasada Rao said on April 3.

India's total power-equipment capacity is 24 gigawatts annually, compared with a demand of about 22 gigawatts. BHEL and leading local rivals including Larsen & Toubro Ltd. (LT) and BGR Energy Systems Ltd. (BGRL) plan to increase that to 36 gigawatts in the next three to four years, in what could lead to a glut, IDBI Capital's Singh said.

Overcapacity in the local market and a weakening rupee may diminish interest in Chinese makers, according to Jindal Steel & Power's Maroo.

Adani Power's Chief Executive Officer Ravi Sharma didn't respond to questions sent by e-mail, while Reliance Power's CEO Jayaram P. Chalasani and Lanco's spokesman V. Sreenivas didn't answer two calls each made to their cell phones.

"What the weakening of the rupee means is that cash flow requirements from projects will become critical," Mehul P. Sukkawala, a Mumbai-based credit analyst at Standard & Poor's. "The preference for local equipment manufacturers will rise, provided they are able to meet the demand and the desired technology."


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