Tag: India

  • India, Iraq explore ways to diversify trade from oil to non-oil sectors

    India, Iraq explore ways to diversify trade from oil to non-oil sectors

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    New Delhi: India and Iraq on Monday discussed ways to further increase and diversify trade from oil to non-oil sectors, while stressing the importance of expanding economic partnership and technology engagement.

    The two sides held wide-ranging talks during the second round of the India-Iraq Foreign Office Consultations in Baghdad where the Indian delegation was led by Ausaf Sayeed, Secretary (CPV & OIA), while Iraq’s delegation was led by Hisham Al Alawi, Undersecretary for Political Planning Affairs from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Iraq.

    Sayeed also called on Iraq’s Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Oil Hayyan Abdul Ghani, Iraq’s Minister of Trade Atheer Dawood Salman, Iraqi National Security Adviser Qasem Al Araji and Iraq’s President of Sunni Awqaf Board Mesh’an Al Khazraji, and discussed a range of bilateral, regional and international issues of mutual interest, a statement issued by the Ministry of External Affairs said.

    Both the sides noted the warm and friendly traditional relations, and comprehensively reviewed the current status of bilateral relations in all fields including political, economic, defence, security, trade and investments, development partnership, scholarship programme and capacity building, cultural relations and people-to-people contacts, the statement said.

    Detailed discussions were held on further strengthening of the bilateral relations and the future direction of the growth of bilateral cooperation, the statement said.

    Both sides expressed their satisfaction about the bilateral trade, which exceeded USD 34 billion for 2021-22 and discussed ways and means to further increase and diversify trade from oil to non-oil sectors, it said.

    The Indian and Iraqi sides noted the importance of expanding economic partnership and technology engagement.

    They also noted opportunities for investment, particularly in the fields of oil and gas, infrastructure, healthcare, power, transport, agriculture, water management, drugs and pharmaceuticals, ICT, and renewable energy.

    They urged business community to engage closely for mutual benefit.

    A sizeable number of candidates from Iraq have been benefiting from our capacity-building programme, including ITEC and higher education scholarships. Both sides are keen to enhance the level of economic engagement and people-to-people exchanges.

    The secretary (CPV & OIA) also announced that an artificial limb fitment camp (Jaipur Foot) will be organised in Iraq soon, the MEA said.

    Sayeed interacted with the Indian community, Indian and Iraqi business leaders and Indian Technical and Economic Cooperation and Indian Council for Cultural Relations alumni from Iraq.

    He also inaugurated the newly-constructed Indian Consular Application Centre (ICAC) in Baghdad which will facilitate Indian and Iraqi nationals, seeking visas and consular services.

    Both sides agreed on the importance of continuing the upward momentum in the relationship through exchanges of regular visits and consultations, and agreed to hold the next India-Iraq Joint Commission Meeting at Oil Ministers’ level in New Delhi at a mutually convenient date, the statement said.

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    #India #Iraq #explore #ways #diversify #trade #oil #nonoil #sectors

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Coal India Limited Sr Medical Specialist & MO 2022 Provisional Selection List Released

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    Coal India Limited Sr Medical Specialist & MO 2022 Provisional Selection List Released

    Name of the Post : Coal India Limited Sr Medical Specialist & MO 2022 Provisional Selection List Released

    Total Post : 41

    Coal India Limited (CIL) has Announced a notification for the recruitment of Sr. Medical Specialist (E4)/ Medical Specialist (E3) & Sr. Medical Officer (E3) Vacancy.

    Important Links

    Provisional Selection List : Click here 

     

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    [ad_2] #Coal #India #Limited #Medical #Specialist #Provisional #Selection #List #Released( With inputs from : The News Caravan.com )

  • Awakening feeling of nationalism will make India powerful: Bhagwat

    Awakening feeling of nationalism will make India powerful: Bhagwat

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    Bareilly: Hailing the Indian family system, RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat on Sunday said the country will become powerful when the feeling of nationalism is awakened in every family and urged Sangh members to work towards ending “casteism, inequality and untouchability” in society.

    He said the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) will take up the cause of environmental protection and called for encouraging people to join the campaign of planting “One tree in the name of the nation”.

    “Till now, the Sangh has been mainly doing the task of nation-building through individual development. The effect of Sangh’s efforts is now visible in various fields,” he said.

    Addressing RSS members and their families, Bhagwat said it is the responsibility of the ‘Sangh Pracharak’ to remove discrimination and create a social environment free from all evils.

    “Casteism, inequality and untouchability have to be removed from society. Social arrogance and inferiority complex both should end. We have to do the work of connecting the society,” he said.

    Bhagwat also stressed the need for adopting native languages, attires, music and food to stay connected to the country’s traditions and culture.

    He said that the Sangh has expanded a lot in the last one hundred years and people of the country were looking towards the organisation with hope.

    “People want to progress by staying connected to their native traditions and culture,” the RSS chief.

    Bhagwat was addressing “Karyakarta Parivar Milan” programme attended by RSS volunteers and their families at the Atal Auditorium of Mahatma Jyotiba Phule Rohailkhand University.

    “The family is the economic, social and cultural unit of the society. The Sangh has been trying to strengthen society and the country by trying to establish better coordination, mutual cooperation and harmony among families through ‘Kutumbh Probodhan’ programmes,” Bhagwat said, adding the Indian family system was the best in the world.

    “The nation will become powerful when the feeling of unity and nationalism is awakened in families,” he said.

    “That’s why it is the effort of the Sangh to empower society by connecting the families of volunteers with the basic concepts of Indian culture. People have to adopt their ‘mool bhasha, veshbhoosha, Bhajan, bhavan, Brahman and bhojan’ (native language, attire, music, architecture, travel destinations and food) to stay connected with their traditions and culture,” he said.

    The Sangh’s image in society is built only by the conduct of the volunteers, he said.

    “The volunteers must sit at least one day a week with their and friends and families and have food and discuss topics related to the nation and cultural heritage,” he said.

    He also said that many social and economic problems will automatically be resolved if there is cooperation between affluent and deprived families.

    The meetings held during Bhagwat’s visit saw special discussions on dealing with the crisis created by the indiscriminate exploitation of natural resources.

    It was decided that environmental protection programmes will be taken up to make the earth and human life safe.

    Bhagwat asked the volunteers to go to every village and serve the people and expand RSS branch in every district from the city to villages.

    He said volunteers would plant saplings in homes and take care of them. He said people should be associated with the ‘One tree in the name of the nation’ campaign.

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    #Awakening #feeling #nationalism #India #powerful #Bhagwat

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Telangana is Afghanistan of India, KCR is Taliban, says YS Sharmila

    Telangana is Afghanistan of India, KCR is Taliban, says YS Sharmila

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    Mahabubabad: YSRTP Chief YS Sharmila on Sunday said that Telangana is the Afghanistan of India and KCR is its Taliban.

    While talking to mediapersons in Mahbubabad, Sharmila said, “He (Telangana CM KCR) is a dictator, he is a tyrant, there is no Indian Constitution in Telangana, there is only KCR’s Constitution. Telangana is the Afghanistan of India and KCR is its Taliban.”

    On Sunday, Telangana Police detained YS Sharmila for allegedly making inappropriate remarks against the Mahabubabad MLA and BRS leader Shankar Naik.

    The police moved her to Hyderabad to avoid any law and order problems in the town of Mahabubabad. They registered a case against her under section 504 of the Indian Penal Code Intentional insult with intent to provoke breach of the peace] and section 3(1)r of the SC ST POA Act.

    Addressing a public meeting, YS Sharmila allegedly attacked the Mahabubabad MLA for not fulfilling his promises and said, “You gave many promises to the people, which you have not fulfilled. If you are not fulfilling your promises, that means you are a kojja [castrate],” she said in a public meeting on Saturday.

    Following the incident, the Bharat Rashtra Samithi (BRS) staged a sit-in protest in the district against YS Sharmila for her alleged derogatory remarks against Mahabubabad MLA.

    The protestors on the road were showing their rage against the YSRTP chief by sloganeering “Go Back Sharmila” and burning the hoardings and flexes of the party. (ANI)

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    #Telangana #Afghanistan #India #KCR #Taliban #Sharmila

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • India reaps pricing benefits of crude oil imports from Russia

    India reaps pricing benefits of crude oil imports from Russia

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    Chennai: In the case of oil imports, India till now is on a firm path of sourcing the product cheaply from Russia since the latters invasion of Ukraine.

    This is much against the wishes of the western powers who want to bring down the Russian economy by curbing its oil revenue.

    However, the Indian government has categorically said that it would source what it needs from where the price is advantageous.

    The government also said its three oil marketing companies are not buying crude from Russia but only the private companies are the ones who are buying, refining and shipping out.

    According to reports, India’s exports of petroleum products shot up to $78.58 billion for the period April 2022 to January 2023, from $50.77 billion shipped out during the previous year corresponding period.

    Fueled by the imports of crude oil, India’s imports from Russia went up by about 384 per cent to $37.31 billion during April 2022-January 2023. As a result, Russia became India’s fourth largest import partner up from 18th position in 2021-22.

    The soaring oil imports from Russia have prevented India from paying for the commodities in Rupees.

    Queried about the impact of the Russia-Ukraine war on the Indian oil sector, Sweta Patodia, AVP, Analyst, Moody’s Investors Service told IANS: “Crude oil and international fuel prices have surged following the Russia-Ukraine war. Net realized prices for the oil marketing companies in India, however, have not increased at the same pace which has resulted in significant marketing losses for them.

    “While the marketing losses were steep in the first half of the fiscal year, it has narrowed since then.”

    According to Patodia, the EU imposed price cap on Russian crude purchases will have an impact on the overall crude oil market but any assessment of specific impact will be speculative.

    On the Russian announcement of cutting down oil production following the price cap, Patodia said: “Reduction in oil production from Russia, if not met by a corresponding increase in production from other producers or demand moderation, will reduce the overall supply relative to demand and may strengthen the crude oil prices.”

    According to a recent credit rating report by ICRA on Oil and Natural Gas Corporation Limited (ONGC), the latter’s subsidiary OVL’s assets in Russia were impacted due to geopolitical issues and normal operations in these are expected to resume shortly.

    Moody’s in a research report last March said ONGC, Oil India, Indian Oil Corporation and Bharat Petroleum Corporation Ltd (BPCL) have invested in upstream oil and gas assets in Russia.

    According to Moody’s import bans and international sanctions on Russia may constrain the future cash flow-generating capacity of these assets and lead to impairment losses for the companies.

    Indian companies, however, have not announced an exit from their Russian investments. An immediate impairment in the value of investments will be limited, especially in the current oil price environmentChennai, Feb 18 (IANS) In the case of oil imports, India till now is on a firm path of sourcing the product cheaply from Russia since the latters invasion of Ukraine.

    This is much against the wishes of the western powers who want to bring down the Russian economy by curbing its oil revenue.

    However, the Indian government has categorically said that it would source what it needs from where the price is advantageous.

    The government also said its three oil marketing companies are not buying crude from Russia but only the private companies are the ones who are buying, refining and shipping out.

    According to reports, India’s exports of petroleum products shot up to $78.58 billion for the period April 2022 to January 2023, from $50.77 billion shipped out during the previous year corresponding period.

    Fueled by the imports of crude oil, India’s imports from Russia went up by about 384 per cent to $37.31 billion during April 2022-January 2023. As a result, Russia became India’s fourth largest import partner up from 18th position in 2021-22.

    The soaring oil imports from Russia have prevented India from paying for the commodities in Rupees.

    Queried about the impact of the Russia-Ukraine war on the Indian oil sector, Sweta Patodia, AVP, Analyst, Moody’s Investors Service told IANS: “Crude oil and international fuel prices have surged following the Russia-Ukraine war. Net realized prices for the oil marketing companies in India, however, have not increased at the same pace which has resulted in significant marketing losses for them.

    “While the marketing losses were steep in the first half of the fiscal year, it has narrowed since then.”

    According to Patodia, the EU imposed price cap on Russian crude purchases will have an impact on the overall crude oil market but any assessment of specific impact will be speculative.

    On the Russian announcement of cutting down oil production following the price cap, Patodia said: “Reduction in oil production from Russia, if not met by a corresponding increase in production from other producers or demand moderation, will reduce the overall supply relative to demand and may strengthen the crude oil prices.”

    According to a recent credit rating report by ICRA on Oil and Natural Gas Corporation Limited (ONGC), the latter’s subsidiary OVL’s assets in Russia were impacted due to geopolitical issues and normal operations in these are expected to resume shortly.

    Moody’s in a research report last March said ONGC, Oil India, Indian Oil Corporation and Bharat Petroleum Corporation Ltd (BPCL) have invested in upstream oil and gas assets in Russia.

    According to Moody’s import bans and international sanctions on Russia may constrain the future cash flow-generating capacity of these assets and lead to impairment losses for the companies.

    Indian companies, however, have not announced an exit from their Russian investments. An immediate impairment in the value of investments will be limited, especially in the current oil price environment.

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    #India #reaps #pricing #benefits #crude #oil #imports #Russia

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • India to record highest number of cashless transactions in world: Jaishankar at Raisina@Sydney

    India to record highest number of cashless transactions in world: Jaishankar at Raisina@Sydney

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    Sydney: India is moving ahead to record the largest number of cashless transactions in the world, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar said on Saturday at the Raisina @ Sydney Business Breakfast.

    “If you look at our cashless transactions, the UPI, I think we record the largest number of cashless transactions in the world. So there’s been a kind of a technology leapfrogging in the psyche of people, and that’s been actually a very big difference,” Jaishankar said at the Raisina@Sydney Business Breakfast.

    Raisina@Sydney Business Breakfast was organized jointly by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI) and India’s Observer Research Foundation (ORF) at the InterContinental Hotel in Sydney.

    “The digital was ensuring the integrity of delivery and transaction that would not have been possible equally on the financial side because we encouraged people to open bank accounts, sometimes bank accounts with no money.

    But we were, again, during the same period, put money into the bank accounts of 415,000,000 people who are the lowest income in the country. And if you ask me, how did you get through COVID, I cannot overstate the importance of financially supporting people and feeding people and ensuring that this works on the ground,” he said.

    Jaishankar also stated that digital governance has now become the basic mechanism today to do socioeconomic delivery.
    “India is trying to demonstrate that the country can construct a social, comprehensive social welfare system, even at the scale of income. And the scale of income is USD 2,000 per capita,” he said.

    Talking about the social programs, Jaishankar said that in the last four years, India has been able to cover about 500 million people in health schemes, about the same number covered by pension schemes.

    “There was a program to replace firewood with cooking gas. And the cooking gas, the initial lot of cooking gas, you get free of cost. Now, that program was as big as 80 million people.

    We have a housing program, a housing program. We have already delivered 30 million houses, and at five people, a family in India, which means 150,000,000 people have been covered,” Jaishankar said.

    “So I’m giving you these numbers because it actually tells you the scale which digital backbone makes possible.We couldn’t have done this ten years ago because we didn’t have that backbone, and we didn’t have the strategic understanding to activate and utilize that backbone. And you can see this in the lifestyle of people as well today,” he added.

    He also said that Australia will get really deployable 5G technology from India this year and which is something that will be of great global interest. “Today you can see the change in infrastructure in India. The transformation has happened because of an integrated infrastructure policy,” he added.

    Raisina@Sydney Conference, which began today with ‘Business Breakfast’, will involve ministerial and high-level government representations as well as participation from industry and civil society.

    This mega event will also include panel and keynote addresses by leading regional think tanks on issues ranging from geopolitics to technology and economics.

    After the keynote address of Jaishankar, a panel session will be held that would cover topics like “Next steps in the Australia-India economic partnership: stability, security and sovereignty,” and it will be addressed by keynote speakers: Vivek Lall, Chief Executive, General Atomics Global Corporation; Jodi McKay, National Chair, Australia-India Business Council; Vikram Singh, Vice President, and Country Head – ANZ, Tata Consultancy Services and facilitated by Bec Shrimpton, Director, The Sydney Dialogue, Australian Strategic Policy Institute.

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    #India #record #highest #number #cashless #transactions #world #Jaishankar #RaisinaSydney

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • South Africa translocates 12 cheetahs to India

    South Africa translocates 12 cheetahs to India

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    New Delhi: South Africa on Friday translocated 12 cheetahs to India in a Cooperation Agreement, an official said, adding the animals were sent to India as part of an initiative to expand the cheetah meta-population, and to reintroduce cheetahs to a former range state following their local extinction due to over-hunting and loss of habitat in the last century.

    A media statement in this regard was also issued by the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment, South Africa.

    The cheetahs will join eight of the mammals relocated to India’s Kuno National Park from Namibia in September 2022.

    Earlier this year, the governments of South Africa and India signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on Cooperation on the Reintroduction of Cheetah to India.

    The MoU facilitates cooperation between the two countries to establish a viable and secure cheetah population in India; promotes conservation and ensures that expertise is shared and exchanged, and capacity built, to promote cheetah conservation.

    This includes human-wildlife conflict resolution, capture and translocation of wildlife and community participation in conservation in the two countries.

    Conservation translocations have become a common practice to conserve species and restore ecosystems.

    South Africa plays an active role in providing founders for the population and range expansion of iconic species such as cheetahs.

    “It is because of South Africa’s successful conservation practices that our country is able to participate in a project such as this — to restore a species in a former range state and thus contribute to the future survival of the species,” said the South African Minister of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment, Barbara Creecy.

    The cheetah was declared extinct in India in 1952.

    Restoring cheetah populations is considered by India to have vital and far-reaching conservation consequences, which would aim to achieve a number of ecological objectives, including re-establishing the function role of cheetah within their historical range in India and enhancing the livelihood options and economies of the local communities.

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    #South #Africa #translocates #cheetahs #India

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • India can mitigate risks like Joshimath instead of embracing them

    India can mitigate risks like Joshimath instead of embracing them

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    By Feroze Varun Gandhi

    On Dec 24, 2009, a tunnel boring machine drilling into the mountain on which Joshimath resides punctured an aquifer ~3km away from Selang village – this resulted in water being discharged at ~700-800 litres per second (enough to sustain the needs of 20-30 lakh people per day) (Upadhyay, Kavita, Jan 2023). Soon after, groundwater sources in Joshimath started drying up – over time, the discharge reduced but never stopped. Meanwhile, Joshimath, built on a mountain slope with deposits from a landslide, has no system to manage wastewater. Instead, most buildings use a soak-pit mechanism, which leads to sewage entering the ground and potentially exacerbating land sinking. In addition, ongoing infrastructure projects (e.g. the Tapovan Vishnugad dam, Helang-Marwari bypass road) may have exacerbated the situation (Upadhyay, Kavita, Jan 2023). This irreversible loss is a harbinger of worse to come.

    Sadly, land subsidence incidents in hilly urban India are increasingly common. ~12.6% of India’s land area is prone to landslides, with some of this falling in hilly urban regions of Sikkim, West Bengal, Uttarakhand etc. Urban policy makes this worse – as per the National Institute for Disaster Management (and in the National Landslide Risk Management Strategy, Sep 2019), construction in such landscapes is often driven by building byelaws that ignore local geological and environmental factors (Moudgil, Manu, Oct 2020). Consequently, land use planning in Himalayan towns and the Western Ghats is often ill-conceived when planned, and primarily unplanned – all adding up to slope instability. As a result, landslide vulnerability has risen, exacerbated by tunnelling construction that weakens rock formations.

    A first step towards enhancing urban resilience with regard to land subsidence requires credible data. We need to map landslide risk at a granular level. The Geological Survey of India has conducted a national mapping exercise (at a 1:50,000 scale, with each cm denoting ~0.5km). Urban policymakers need to take this further, with additional detail and localization (e.g. at a 1:1000 scale) (Moudgil, Manu, Oct 2020). Areas with high landslide risk should not be allowed to expand large infrastructure, with a push to reduce human interventions and adhere to carrying capacity. Select examples show the way – Aizawl, in Mizoram, is in Seismic Zone V, and is built on very steep slopes – an earthquake with a magnitude greater than 7 would easily trigger over 1,000 landslides, collapsing 13,000 buildings (Moudgil, Manu, Oct 2020). The city has prepared by developing a landslide action plan (with a push to reach 1:500 scale), and updated regulations to guide construction activities in hazardous zones. The city’s landslide policy committee is cross-disciplinary in nature, and seeks inputs from civic society and university students, with a push to continually update risk zones.

    Furthermore, any site development in hazardous zones requires assessment by a geologist (w.r.t soil suitability and slope stability) and an evaluation of the potential impact on nearby buildings. Corrective measures (e.g. retention walls) are then required, with a push to prohibit construction in hazardous areas. In Gangtok, Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham has helped set up a real-time landslide monitoring and early warning system, with multiple sensors highlighting the impact of rainfall infiltration, water movement and slope instability (Moudgil, Manu, Oct 2020).

    Beyond land subsidence, flood risk is also becoming frequent. In August 2019, the township of Palava City (Phase I and II) in Dombivli in Maharashtra was flooded, with ~5 ft water depth in much of Phase I – incessant rain led to vehicles being submerged and electricity connections being switched off (Gupta, Pradeep, Aug 2019). Residents were stranded in their flats until the water was drained out using pumps. While seasonal downpours have increased in intensity, the impact of seasonal flooding was worsened by a simple fact – the township, spread over 4,500 acres, was built on the flood plains of the river Mothali! When planned townships are approved, with a distinct lack of concern for natural hazards, such incidents are bound to occur. Such tales are awfully familiar – Panjim was hit by floods in July 2021 – incessant rains led to local rivers swelling up and flooding homes, with urban settlements along the Mandovi affected in particular (Lobo, Aaron Savio, Bhandari, Ashali, Kuppu, Karthikeyan, Mar 2022). Again, urban planning had a role to play – the city, built on the marshlands that lie astride on the floodplains of the river Mandovi, was once fringed by mangroves and fertile fields, which helped bolster its flood resilience.

    Meanwhile, other cities continue to face a high risk of flooding in the near future – in Delhi, there are ~9,350 households living in Yamuna floodplains (Hargovind, Abhinaya, Mar 2022). IPCC’s report (in March 2022) highlighted that Kolkata faced a significant risk of subsidence due to a rise in sea levels and flooding. Poor urban planning, combined with climate change, will mean that our cities will be perennially flooded.

    Flood-proofing our cities will require measures on various axes – urban planners will have to temper the push to fill up local water bodies, canals and drains and focus on enhancing sewerage and the stormwater drain network. Existing sewerage networks need to be expanded, in coverage and depth, to enable wastewater in low-lying urban geographies to drain away. Additionally, there needs to be a push to desilt rivers that frequently overflow, along with a push for coastal walls in areas at risk from sea rise. Beyond this, greater spending on building flood-resilient architecture (e.g. constructing river embankments, constructing flood shelters in coastal areas), along with flood warning systems, is necessary (Parida, Yashobanta, Bharadwaj, Parul, Sahoo, Prakash Kumar, Aug 2022). In addition, there needs to be a push for protecting “blue infra” areas – i.e. places that act as natural sponges for absorbing surface runoff, allowing groundwater to be recharged. As rainfall patterns and intensity change, urban authorities will need to invest in simulation capacity to determine flooding hotspots and flood risk maps, along with integrating relief efforts (Prakash, Anjal, Goswami, Aishani, Aug 2020).

    Urban India doesn’t have to embrace such risks. We can mitigate them – if our cities proactively incorporate environmental planning, with a push for enhancing natural open spaces. Urban master plans need to consider the impact of climate change and extreme weather (e.g. planning for ~125 mm per hour peak rainfall in Bengaluru in the future, vs 75 mm currently; Shakeel, Shobhan, Nov 2022). Urban authorities in India should continually assess and update disaster risk and preparedness planning. Early warning systems will also be critical (Rajshekhar, M., Jan 2021). Finally, each city needs to have a disaster management framework in place, with a push for having large arterial roads that allow people and goods to move in and out of the city at pace. Our urban journey is not limited to an election cycle – we must plan for a multi-generational process.

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    #India #mitigate #risks #Joshimath #embracing

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • BBC profits not commensurate with operations in India: Tax officials

    BBC profits not commensurate with operations in India: Tax officials

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    New Delhi: The income and profits shown by various BBC group entities are “not commensurate” with the scale of their operations in India and tax has not been paid on certain remittances by its foreign entities, the income tax authorities said Friday, a day after they ended a three-day-long survey operation against the British media organisation.

    The Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) issued a statement without identifying the company but said the survey was conducted at the business premises of group entities of a prominent international media company which is engaged in the business of development of content in English, Hindi and various other Indian languages, advertisement sales and market support services, etc.

    Officials said the statement pertains to the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC).

    The I-T department had launched the survey exercise on February 14 at BBC offices in Delhi and Mumbai and it ended after about 60 hours on Thursday night.

    The CBDT is the administrative authority for the tax department.

    The statement alleged various tax-linked irregularities against the London-headquartered company and accused it of using “dilatory tactics” during the course of the survey.

    “The survey revealed that despite substantial consumption of content in various Indian languages (apart from English), the income/profits shown by various group entities (of BBC) is not commensurate with the scale of operations in India.”

    “…the department gathered several evidences pertaining to the operation of the organisation which indicate that tax has not been paid on certain remittances which have not been disclosed as income in India by the foreign entities of the group,” the CBDT said.

    The BBC, after tax teams left their premises on Thursday, said they will “continue to cooperate with the authorities and hope matters are resolved as soon as possible.”

    According to the CBDT statement, the tax authorities found that the services of “seconded employees” were utilised by the BBC for which reimbursement has been made by the Indian entity to the foreign entity concerned.

    “Such remittance was also liable to be subject to withholding tax which has not been done. Further, the survey has also thrown up several discrepancies and inconsistencies with regard to Transfer Pricing documentation.”

    “Such discrepancies relate to level of relevant Function, Asset and Risk (FAR) analysis, incorrect use of comparables which are applicable to determine the correct Arms Length Price (ALP) and inadequate revenue apportionment, among others,” the statement added.

    According to I-T rules, transfer pricing “generally refers to prices of transactions between associated enterprises which may take place under conditions differing from those taking place between independent enterprises. It refers to the value attached to transfers of goods, services and technology between related entities”.

    It also refers to the value attached to transfers between un-related parties which are controlled by a common entity.

    It said the survey has led to unearthing of “crucial evidences” by way of statement of employees, digital evidences and documents which will be further examined in due course.

    It is pertinent to state that the authorities recorded statements of only those employees whose role was crucial including those connected to, primarily, finance, content development and other production related functions, the CBDT said.

    It accused the media organisation of using “dilatory tactics” during the surprise operation.

    “Even though the department exercised due care to record statements of only key personnel, it was observed that dilatory tactics were employed including in the context of producing documents/ agreements sought. Despite such stance of the group, the survey operation was conducted in a manner so as to facilitate continued regular media/channel activity,” the statement said.

    The survey prompted Opposition parties to denounce the I-T department action as they termed it “political vendetta”.

    The BJP had accused the BBC of “venomous reporting” while the Opposition had questioned the timing of the action that came weeks after the broadcaster aired a two-part documentary, “India: The Modi Question”, on Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the 2002 Gujarat riots.

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    #BBC #profits #commensurate #operations #India #Tax #officials

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • ‘No contradiction’ in India remaining US partner & its buying crude oil from Russia: US

    ‘No contradiction’ in India remaining US partner & its buying crude oil from Russia: US

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    New Delhi: By driving a hard bargain with Russia in procuring crude oil at the lowest price possible, India is furthering the policy of G7 and Washington is “comfortable” with New Delhi over its approach in addressing issues relating to energy security, a top Biden administration official said.

    In an exclusive interview to PTI, Assistant Secretary of State for Energy Resources Geoffrey R Pyatt said there is “no contradiction at all” in India remaining one of the key global partners of the US and the country’s increasing procurement of discounted crude oil from Russia.

    The comments are the first clear articulation of the Biden administration’s position on India’s increasing procurement of discounted crude oil from Russia amid the Ukraine conflict.

    Asked whether the US will impose secondary sanctions on Indian banks if they use the Rupee-Rouble mechanism set up by India and Russia for bilateral trade, the top diplomat chose not to speculate on it but said Washington’s sanctions are only aimed at punishing Moscow.

    The US Assistant Secretary of State for Energy also said the Indian companies are “very successfully” negotiating the price for Russian crude oil which enabled Indian refiners to then put the product on the global market at a “very competitive and profitable price”.

    Pyatt, during his February 16-17, visit to New Delhi, said India is a critical partner for the US on everything around energy transition and both sides are looking at an array of options to significantly expand the collaboration including in areas of green hydrogen and civil nuclear energy.

    “Our experts assess that India right now is enjoying the discount of about USD 15 a barrel in the price that it is paying for its imports of Russian crude. So India, by acting in its own interest, by driving a hard bargain to get the lowest price possible, is furthering the policy of our G7 coalition, our G7 plus partners in seeking to reduce Russian revenues,” Pyatt said.

    “I think that is how we look at this. We have a very good dialogue with the government of India on these issues,” he said.

    “But I think what is very important for everybody to understand is that this is not a temporary state of affairs. There is going to be no return to business as usual with Russia as long as Vladimir Putin continues to choose this course of aggression,” Pyatt said.

    India, the world’s third-largest crude importer after China and the US, has been snapping discounted Russian oil after many Western countries shunned it as a means of punishing Moscow for its invasion of Ukraine.

    Also, the G7 (US,UK,Germany,France,Italy,Japan,Canada) imposed a cap on the oil price that came into effect in December and stopped countries from paying more than USD 60 a barrel to Russia for oil procurement with an aim to stop Moscow profiting from its oil exports.

    Pyatt, who served in Ukraine as US ambassador said Russian President Putin has not only lost his major market in Europe through his action, but he has also spurred the Europeans to double down their investment in the clean and most secure energy sources.

    “So, we are very comfortable with where India is on these issues, but most importantly we are strongly committed to a close dialogue with the Indian government on this and I will continue that dialogue in my discussions,” he said.

    To a question on whether he sees any contradiction in India remaining one of the strongest global partners of the US and its increasing procurement of crude oil from Russia, Pyatt said he does not think so.

    “No contradiction at all. To the contrary, we see India as a really critical partner for the United States on everything around both energy transition and also energy security,” he said.

    “We understand that energy security has been disrupted by the actions of Putin and…have to work together to build a more resilient system and to deal with the consequences of Moscow’s actions,” he added.

    On apprehensions among Indian banks to use the Rupee-Rouble mechanism Pyatt only said the Biden administration has not sanctioned third countries.

    “I don’t want to get into too much of a speculative scenario …but what I want to be clear is that our policy has been focused on punishing Russia, trying to change Russia’s behaviour. We have not sanctioned third countries as part of this effort. I will leave it there for now,” he said.

    “I am very comfortable with the status of the US-India conversation on this question of Russian crude oil,” Pyatt said.

    The US Assistant Secretary of State for Energy pointed out the cost of Russian aggression on the globe, especially in countries like India.

    “This disruption, I am fully aware, is imposing a cost not just on Europe but globally, but especially in countries like India. You see the effect on commodity prices and rising prices of fertilisers. Huge swings have taken place in the price of crude oil which affects every farmer,” Pyatt said.

    “The US has worked very closely with our partners to build a structure through the G7 price cap mechanism intended to reduce the resources which Vladimir Putin gets from his oil and gas, which he uses to pay for the brutal war of aggression, but at the same time to keep that product on the global market,” he said.

    Pyatt said the US recognises that India, as an energy importer, is severely affected by the disruption.

    “We have to remember why this happened. It happened because of one man and I think we also see an important role for India in the context of ensuring that this can never happen again,” he said.

    The US Assistant Secretary of State also said the policy of the G7 is working.

    “You can see it is working in the growing Russian deficits,” he said

    The Indian government has been vehemently defending its oil trade with Russia, saying it has to source oil from where it is the cheapest.

    Pyatt also accused Putin of weaponising Russian energy resources through his actions.

    “He has lost Russia’s traditional largest market for oil and gas in Europe. Everybody talks about European dependence on Russian oil and gas but they forget the other side of the coin which is Russia’s dependence on Europe. That market is gone,” Pyatt said.

    “We cannot lose sight of the fact that the only reason that the world has gone through this huge disruption is one man’s obsession with denying the reality of a sovereign Ukrainian state,” he said.

    “Let’s remember how we got here. We got here because 12 months ago, Vladimir Putin chose to invade a sovereign country because he denied its existence,” the US diplomat said.

    “He has caused untold suffering of innocent civilians. He has been responsible for the deaths of tens of thousands of Ukrainians including women and children. He tried to systematically destroy the Ukrainian energy grid,” Pyatt said.

    The senior diplomat said the crisis has created an incentive, particularly in places like Europe, to accelerate the energy transition.

    “It is important to understand that Putin thought he could bring Europe to its knees by holding back gas resources, (but) that has failed and now that it has failed, he cannot play that card again. We have to make sure that he is never in a position to do that to anybody else,” Pyatt said.

    The diplomat said the US and its G7 partners have put in place very rigorous sanctions against Russia not only against its product but also against the technology that the country uses.

    He also cited an assessment by the International Energy Agency that by the end of 2030, Russia’s oil and gas revenues will decline by half because of Putin’s actions.

    Pyatt served as US Ambassador to Ukraine from 2013 to 2016.

    He has also served at the US Embassy in New Delhi in different positions – Deputy Chief of Mission from 2006 to 2007, Political Counselor from 2002 to 2006, and Political Officer from 1992 to 1994.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )