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World Bank offers additional funds for SSA
With government’s flagship Sarva Siksha Abhiyan (SSA) scheme showing encouraging results in expansion of elementary education, the World Bank has come forward with an offer to provide additional funding of $ 500 million (Rs 2,325 cr approx) for the programme.

Bajaj Electricals Q1 net up 64% at Rs 16 cr
A better product mix, easing of cost pressures and better procurement helped consumer electronics and lightings manufacturer, Bajaj Electricals register a consolidated net profit increase of 64 per cent per cent for the quarter ended June 30, 2009, to Rs 16.4 crore, compared with Rs 10 crore in the corresponding quarter of the previous financial year.

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Rlys' land acquisition rules will be altered: Mamata
Railway Minister Mamata Banerjee on Monday said she had already altered the land acquisition template of the Indian Railways in a bid to ensure no land was forcefully acquired for projects undertaken by her ministry.
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PSU oil cos to buy ethanol at Rs 27 a litre

In a bid to salvage the ambitious ethanol-blended petrol programme, state-run oil firms have agreed to pay 25 per cent higher price at Rs 27 a litre for ethanol they will buy from sugar mills for doping petrol. - Essar Oil to become India"s third-largest refiner - CPSUs asked to tie up with 100 SMEs each - OVL joins hands with Petronas, Raspol for Venezuela fields - Oil firms agree to pay Rs 27 a litre for ethanol - Deora urges PM to issue 20,870-cr oil bonds - NPCIL needs Rs 1 lakh crore for capacity addition by 2020 Indian Oil, Bharat Petroleum and Hindustan Petroleum have agreed for Rs 27 a litre price, against Rs 21.50 per litre currently, for three years, sources in the know said. The companies will not float any new tender but will buy any ethanol offered at these rates. "Once availability of ethanol is established, the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs will be approached for fixing the ethanol price at Rs 27 a litre for three years," a source said. The government had in 2006 mandated that ethanol should be blended in 5 per cent ratio with petrol. Subsequently, it stipulated that the amount of ethanol in petrol may be optionally ramped up to 10 per cent from October 2007 and made it compulsory with effect from October 2008. But oil marketing companies (OMCs) — IOC, BPCL and HPCL — could not even implement the 5 per cent blend due to shortage of ethanol and Petroleum Ministry last month approached the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA) for keeping the 10 per cent compulsory blending plan in abeyance. The Cabinet had asked Petroleum Minister Murli Deora to ensure compulsory blending of 5 per cent ethanol in petrol and the higher price was a result of that, sources said.


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