Wednesday, 28 November 2012

BHEL facing difficulties due to delay in power projects

State-run BHEL is facing some difficulties on account of the delay of new and under construction power projects, Parliament was informed today.


The Department of Heavy Industry constantly endeavour to further cause of BHEL including that of obtaining orders, Minister of Heavy Industries and Public Enterprises Praful Patel said in the Rajya Sabha.

"We are taking up issues of BHEL with the other ministries, providing level playing field vis-a-vis foreign suppliers of electrical equipment," Patel said.

He said that the ministry is also developing a 10-year Mission Plan for the development of domestic electrical industry in general.

"We are pursuing with Ministry of Power regarding feasibility of having a condition ofPhased Manufacturing Programme in case of orders for Super-critical power plants," he said.

The ministry is also arranging bulk order of super-critical sets from NTPC, he added.


IOCL planning Rs 30,000 Cr Refinery

Indian Oil Corp planning Rs 30,000 crore refinery on west coast in Gujarat or Maharashtra.

NEW DELHI: State-owned Indian Oil Corp (IOC) today said it is planning a Rs 30,000-crorerefinery on the west coast in Gujarat or Maharashtra as part of its plans to raise the refining capacity to 100 million tonnes.

IOC has seven refineries totalling 54.2 million tonnes and a 11.5 million tonne subsidiary inChennai Petroleum Corp Ltd (CPCL). It so far has no coastal refinery, impairing its ability to process cheaper difficult crude oils.

"We are looking at options to set up a 15 million tonnes refinery on the west coast," IOC Director (Refineries) Rajkumar Ghosh said here.

IOC, he said, is looking for sites for the new unit in Gujarat and Maharashtra.

The company has been offered land by Adani Group at Mundra in Gujarat as well as by Shapoorji Pallonji Group in Saurashtra.

IOC already has a 13.7 million tonnes refinery at Koyali in Gujarat but does not have a presence in Maharashtra. All of its refineries are landlocked. It is building a coastal refinery at Paradip in Orissa by September 2013.

"We have commissioned Engineers India Ltd to do a configuration and location study for the west coast refinery," Ghosh said, adding the study is likely to come-in by year-end after which the company will commission a detailed feasibility report (DFR).

The refinery on the west coast is to come up by the 13th Five Year Plan.

Ghosh said IOC has plans to raise its refining capacity to 100 million tonnes by 2021-22. Koyali refinery to 18 million tonnes at the cost of Rs 4,858 crore by 2014.

Mathura refinery is being considered for expanding capacity 11 million tonnes from current 8 million tonnes.

Also, an expansion of Panipat unit to 18 or 21 million tonnes from current 15 million tonnes.

Its under construction 15 million ton Paradip refinery in Orissa would be expanded to 20 million tonnes in future.

"Paradip refinery will be commissioned by next year end," he added.

IOC plans to invest Rs 56,200 crore in the 12th Five Year Plan ending March 31, 2017, he said adding a majority of Rs 27,159 crore is planned to be spent in expanding refining capacity.

Betting big on petrochemicals, the company has planned to set up a polypropylene unit at Paradip at the cost of Rs 3,150 crore while also building similar units at Gujarat and Panipat refineries.

Paradip refinery, he said, is nearing mechanical completion.


Saturday, 3 November 2012

Art of Leadership

Just as great Generals can inspire soldiers to make great sacrifices on the battlefield, compassionate leaders can take their teams to great heights. — KAMAL NARANG
Just as great Generals can inspire soldiers to make great sacrifices on the battlefield, compassionate leaders can take their teams to great heights. — KAMAL NARANG

Genuine leadership is of only one type - supportive. It leads people, it doesn't drive them. It involves them, and doesn't coerce them. It never loses sight of the most important principle governing any project involving human beings - that people are more important than things.

Consider a situation in which none of the above statements might seem valid — the battlefield. To a General, the most important thing, obviously, is victory. In the cause of victory he must commit men to possible, and sometimes even to certain, death. Is not victory, then - an abstraction, a thing - more important to him than the people he leads?

Yet, the difference between great Generals and mediocre ones may be attributed to the zeal great Generals have been able to inspire in their men. Some excellent Generals have been master strategists, and have won wars on this strength alone. Greatness, however, by very definition implies a great and expanded view. It transcends intelligence and merely technical competence. It implies an ability to see the lesser in relation to the greater; the immediate in relation to the long term; the need for victory in relation to needs that will arise once victory has been achieved.

Lead from the front

Leadership implies running at the head of the pack, and not driving it from behind. This is true also in military matters. Those who serve under a great General know well that he asks nothing of them that he would not first do himself. Such a General feels himself at one with his men, not superior to them. He knows that he and they are simply doing a job together.

A great general is a man of vision — necessarily so, for only with vision can he inspire his men to heroic action; only with vision can he make them desire victory as ardently as he does. He persuades them not by angry commands, but by the power of his own conviction. He involves others in his vision, and inspires them also to be visionaries.

People, even in warfare, are more important than things. Yet, there are circumstances in which people can fulfil themselves perfectly only by total self-offering to whatever they believe in. There are times when, for the welfare of the greater number, individual lives must be sacrificed. The great General inspires his soldiers because he believes it also for himself, the realisation that whatever may be demanded by the exigencies of war, death in a great cause is a life lived victoriously.

A great General is also loyal to his soldiers. Only in that spirit of loyalty does he demand loyalty of them in return. Thus, we see that even in critical times when stern command is necessary for proper leadership, the essence of genius in leadership is supportive, not dictatorial. An example of a great General, though not always a great tactician, was George Washington. Rather than billet his tired and hungry soldiers on civilian homes, and rather than feed them by foraging, he chose — for himself as much as for his army — discomfort, cold, and hunger. Historians who have concentrated only on his need to win the war have criticised him as impractical, if not even indecisive, but Washington understood that the need of the hour was as much to draw people to the concept of revolution as it was to win the revolution itself. It was his breadth of vision, and his concern for human values, as well as his greatness as a man of honour that made him one of the great Generals of history.

If it is true even in the military that leadership means leading others, and involving them, not driving and coercing them, then how much more is it true in matters where total self-sacrifice is not the issue. More can be accomplished by working with people than over them.

Handle with care

Leadership is an art. Bad leadership is usually due more to clumsiness than to ill will. Leaving aside the natural bullies - most of whom, except in circumstances where bullying has been imposed as the norm, have neither the intelligence nor the perceptivity to earn positions of real authority - people who fail as leaders usually do so simply because they are ill at ease in positions of leadership. They are like the untrained singer who bellows loudly to conceal his inability to produce a pure tone; and like the actor who bludgeons his audience with bombast because he hasn't learned how to win them with subtlety.

Any tailor knows you can't merely jam a thread through the eye of a needle. The strands must be brought carefully to a point, then inserted cautiously into it, allowing not a single one of them to escape.

The same is true of any art. One cannot bluster. One must attune himself sensitively to the requirements of the medium he is using. To paint fine lines, an artist must use a thin brush, not a thick one. To depict loneliness, a composer may well limit himself to a simple melodic line; certainly he won't use crashing chords.

Bluster, unfortunately, is the response of many people in positions of leadership to even sensitive issues, issues where finesse and patience are essential if the support of one's subordinates is to be won. At such times, especially, the temptation often arises to consider things more important than people. Often, indeed, in such situations, one hears the justification, "But it's a matter of principle!" Is it? Sometimes, perhaps. But even then, is not kindness also a principle?

People in positions of leadership need to see their roles not as 'big shots', but as artists whose medium is the dynamics of human cooperation.

Because the suggestions offered in these pages are people-oriented rather than job-oriented, they will prove helpful as well to anyone whose lot it is to work with others, whether in a position of leadership or not - for example parents, teachers, store salesmen or anyone wanting to win others to a point of view.

Even people who live and work alone may find suggestions in these pages for drawing the best out of themselves.

(The author is a spiritual teacher and founder of the Ananda World Brotherhood Community.)

Just as great Generals can inspire soldiers to make great sacrifices on the battlefield, compassionate leaders can take their teams to great heights. — KAMAL NARANG

ArcelorMittal gets 2,569 acres in Bellary to set up a six-million tn steel plant at an investment of 30K cr



ArcelorMittal gets 2,569 acres in Bellary to set up a six-million tn steel plant at an investment of 30K cr
IND'L GOODS/SVS-NEWS BY INDUSTRY-NEWS-THE ECONOMIC TIMES | 2 NOVEMBER 2012
http://pulse.me/s/eZUFM
ArcelorMittal has received allotment of 2,569 acres in Bellary, Karnataka, where it proposes to set up a six-million tonne ... Read more

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Regards,
Anup Shah
Adroitt Flow Control
Cell +91 9820501463

(sent from iPhone)