BHEL strengthens on plan of developing a 20 MW solar power plant at Manamunda | |
Sep 17,2014 01:07 Hrs IST | |
Bharat Heavy Electricals is currently trading at Rs. 217.30, up by 1.30 points or 0.60% from its previous closing of Rs. 216.00 on the BSE.
The scrip opened at Rs. 217.00 and has touched a high and low of Rs. 218.45 and Rs. 215.10 respectively. So far 173146 shares were traded on the counter.
The BSE group 'A' stock of face value Rs. 2 has touched a 52 week high of Rs. 291.50 on 26-May-2014 and a 52 week low of Rs. 126.40 on 18-Sep-2013.
Last one week high and low of the scrip stood at Rs. 225.65 and Rs. 215.00 respectively. The current market cap of the company is Rs. 53174.11 crore.
The promoters holding in the company stood at 63.06% while Institutions and Non-Institutions held 32.52% and 4.42% respectively.
Bharat Heavy Electricals (BHEL) is planning to develop a 20 MW solar power plant at Manamunda industrial estate in Boudh district. The engineering and manufacturing major will also operate and maintain the plant for a period ten years.
The solar plant at Manamunda will be set up over 100 acres of land entailing an investment of about Rs 150 crore.
BHEL is currently engaged in the design, engineering, manufacture, construction, testing, commissioning and servicing of a wide range of products, systems and services for the core sector companies in the field of power, transmission, transportation, renewable energy, oil and natural gas and defence.
|
Wednesday, 17 September 2014
BHEL strengthens on plan of developing a 20 MW solar power plant at Manamunda
Steel Ministry mulls removal of customs duty on iron ore
Steel Ministry mulls removal of customs duty on iron ore | |
Sep 17,2014 10:46 Hrs IST | |
In the face of rising imports of iron ore from international markets by Steel Industry on account of dwindling domestic supplies, Steel Ministry is now contemplating an option of withdrawing import duty of iron-ore, which would give some relief to steel companies facing raw material crunch.
India's iron ore production has come down to an all-time low of 144 million tonnes (MT) in FY14 from the peak level of 218 MT in FY10. The production is expected to drop further to a level of 90-95 MT in current fiscal. On account of paucity of iron-ore in the domestic market, JSW Steel has been importing around 0.5 MT monthly, while Tata Steel, which so far had never had any crunch to run its Jamshedpur plant due to iron ore shortage, may also follow suit after its Noamundi mine in Jharkhand was recently closed by the state.
In a related development, in a memorandum to Commerce Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, industry body Assocham too highlighted that drop in domestic iron ore production was forcing steel industry to import iron ore from international markets and suggested government of reducing import duty on iron ore to zero from the current levy of 2.5%. Besides, Miners' body FIMI also estimated of country importing around 15 MT of iron ore in current fiscal and become a net importer with just 8-9 MT exports.
Lastly, paucity of iron-ore in the domestic market and consequent imports might tarnish the prospect of many firms also hitting the prospect of having 300 MT capacity by 2025 from around 100 MT presently.
|
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)