Popular Articles

NSE, BSE volumes show y-o-y decline in August
While the key benchmark equity indices, Sensex and Nifty, have regained momentum and are trading at their yearly highs, the volumes have declined. Volumes in cash and derivatives segments declined 14 per cent and 6.3 per cent, respectively, on a month-on-month basis in August 2009, according to a study by domestic research house IDFC-SSKI.

Making banking mobile
Business Standard / New Delhi December 03, 2009, 1:34 IST

News of the day

Modi holds all-party meeting on swine flu
Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi today held an all-party meeting to discuss an action plan for tackling deadly swine flu, which has already claimed two lives in the state.
Business Ideas

Gas supply from KG basin to cut ferti subsidy by Rs 3,000 cr

The government today said that natural gas from Reliance Industries" Krishna-Godavari basin fields will help cut fertiliser subsidy by about Rs 3,000 crore in 2009-10 fiscal. - RIL will have to pay royalty on KG basin gas: Govt">RIL will have to pay royalty on KG basin gas: Govt - PSU oil refiners to invest Rs 66,250 cr in next two yrs - Conduct field inspection in Krishna-Godavari basin: HC - Fertiliser Min voices concern over gas supply to urea units - NEWSALERT: RIL keen to ink deals with NTPC to sell gas - GAIL to invest Rs 7,500 cr in Dabhol, Kochi pipelines "This (D6 field of RIL) has led to substitution of naphtha by natural gas in gas-based urea units, leading to an expected savings in subsidy of approximately Rs 3,000 crore in 2009-10," Minister of State for Chemicals and Fertilisers Raghuvansh Prasad Singh told the Lok Sabha today. The fertiliser sector has been given the highest priority in allocation of natural gas from KG basin and the existing shortfall in supply of gas to urea units has been completely met from here, he said. Fifteen urea manufacturing units have been allocated 14.97 million standard cubic metres per day of gas from RIL"s D6 fields. Citing reasons for rising fertiliser subsidy, Singh said, "The increase in expenditure on subsidy is mainly due to the increase in international prices of fertiliser inputs and finished fertilisers over the last few years." According to data submitted to Parliament, the government"s expenditure on fertiliser has increased more than two-fold to Rs 99,494.71 crore during 2008-09 compared with Rs 43,319.16 crore in last year. In the current year, the estimated requirement of fertiliser subsidy has been assessed at Rs 77,425.19 crore, Singh noted. The government, however, has taken steps to improve efficiency of production and reduce subsidy outgo, he said, adding that it is encouraging Indian companies to invest in joint venture projects in fertiliser sector abroad and also the conversion of non-gas based units to gas. Under the current fertiliser subsidy regime, farmers are getting inputs at subsidised rates, which are much below the production and import cost, he added.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):