Indian Economy: News and Discussion

Adioz

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Govt drops the idea of an India EV policy
There is no need for any India EV policy now, says transport minister Nitin Gadkari, in a breather to many carmakers unprepared for the switch to electric vehicles

The government has decided against formulating an electric vehicle (EV) policy in an apparent U-turn from its position so far, providing a breather to many carmakers that are unprepared for an abrupt shift to the clean-fuel technology.

“There is no need for any policy now,” Nitin Gadkari, minister for road transport, said at a press briefing on Thursday. He was addressing reporters along with Amitabh Kant, chief executive of government think tank NITI Aayog.

This is a remarkable volte-face, given that as recently as last month, Gadkari said the policy was awaiting approval from the union cabinet. He had earlier outlined the government’s ambitious plan to shift to electric vehicles by 2030. Companies such as Toyota Kirloskar Motor Pvt. Ltd, the local unit of Toyota Motor Corp., have been publicly voicing concerns about the proposed India EV policy.

“What we need is just action plans,” said Kant, backing Gadkari’s stand on the policy.

“Everyday, new technology is coming into the market. Technology is always ahead of rules and regulations. And in India, it becomes very tough to change rules and regulations, so let there be just actions,” Kant said, explaining the reason behind the decision.



Maruti Suzuki India Ltd chairman R.C. Bhargava said companies will now have the flexibility to choose a technology they want. “The fact that the government will allow the industry to work on any form of sustainable technology is itself a policy. So, if there isn’t a policy on electric vehicles, it is not a problem at all,” said Bhargava.

The government’s decision to have an EV policy had created uncertainty in the automobile industry for the past year, although several companies had outlined their strategies for EVs or lobbied the government to drop the idea.

“Implementing an EV policy package would need huge investments and with empty coffers, it is not possible for the government. So, the idea is left to the open market, manufacturers and the consumers,” a senior government official said,requesting anonymity.

Mahesh Babu, chief executive of Mahindra Electric Mobility Ltd, the country’s biggest EV maker, said the industry needs continued support from the government.

“We have already stated that the existing FAME (incentive) scheme should continue for another two years and electric vehicles should continue to be taxed at the current level. If these things continue, then there should not be a problem,” said Babu.



Electric vehicle sales are low in India because of few available models and a lack of charging infrastructure. Sales rose 37.5% to 22,000 units in fiscal 2016 from 16,000 in the previous year, according to automobile lobby group Society of Manufacturers of Electric Vehicles (SMEV). Only 2,000 of these were, however, cars and other four-wheelers.

To overcome some of the problems for electric vehicles, NITI Aayog, along with Colorado-based Rocky Mountain Institute, in their 2017 report on the future of shared, electric and connected mobility future in India, had suggested setting up “a manufacturer consortium for batteries, common components, and platforms to develop battery cell technologies and packs and to procure common components for Indian original equipment manufacturers”.

The report said that adoption of electric and shared vehicles could help India save $60 billion in diesel and petrol, along with cutting down as much as 1 gigatonne of carbon emissions by 2030.
 

Prashant12

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Bain Capital-backed consortium is said to be highest bidder for Binani Cement

An investor group led by Dalmia Bharat with backing from Bain Capital submits the highest bid for Binani Cement, which is being sold under India’s insolvency process

Mumbai: An investor group led by Dalmia Bharat Ltd with backing from Bain Capital submitted the highest bid for India’s Binani Cement Ltd, which is being sold under the country’s insolvency process, people with knowledge of the matter said.

The Dalmia Bharat consortium made a final offer of more than Rs6,300 crore ($981 million), according to the people, who asked not to be identified because the information is private. That topped the proposal from Indian billionaire Kumar Mangalam Birla’s UltraTech Cement Ltd, which bid just above Rs6,200 crore, the people said.

While Dalmia Bharat offered the most money, there’s no certainty its bid will be selected as the best offer, according to the people. UltraTech, which is India’s biggest cement manufacturer, scored higher on some other evaluation criteria, the people said. A decision on the winning bidder could be made within the next week, one of the people said.

A new Indian bankruptcy law designed to clear out distressed assets has set off a contest for more than Rs4 trillion ($62 billion) of deals and has spurred interest from both foreign and domestic companies and funds.

Representatives for Aditya Birla Group, which controls UltraTech, and Dalmia Bharat declined to comment. A representative for Binani Cement didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment outside regular Indian business hours.

Dalmia Bharat made a joint offer with India Resurgence Fund, which is backed by Bain Capital Credit and local conglomerate Piramal Enterprises Ltd, the people said. Both the Dalmia Bharat consortium and UltraTech offered around a 20% stake to Binani Cement creditors, the people said.

http://www.livemint.com/Companies/0...-consortium-is-said-to-be-highest-bidder.html
 

Prashant12

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Tata Steel pips JSW Steel in race for Bhushan Steel with Rs 35,000 cr bid

JSW Steel, which was the favourite till the end of the race, was second placed with a bid of Rs 29,700 crore


Tata Steel has emerged as the highest bidder for Bhushan Steel with a surprise bid of Rs 35,000 crore. JSW Steel, which was the favourite till the end of the race, was second placed with a bid of Rs 29,700 crore.

A senior bank executive aware of the development confirmed the allotment to Tata Steel and the bid amount.

Bhushan Steel is one of the 12 large corporate accounts identified by the Reserve Bank of India that accounted for almost 25 percent of exposure to bad loans for the entire banking sector.

The Neeraj Singal-led company had accumulated debt of over Rs 50,000 crore, of which bank dues amounted to around Rs 44,000 crore.

“We are happy with bid offer and this is a good sign. We have provided over 50 percent. The haircut is about 35 percent,” the banker said.

An announcement may be made later tonight, or tomorrow, another source from the industry added.

The development follows a meeting between the lenders of Bhushan Steel and the resolution professional earlier in the day today. According to reports, the liquidation value of Bhushan Steel stood at Rs 15,000 crore.

Tata Steel and JSW Steel had submitted their bids on February 3. Initially, Tata Steel's bid was said to close to Rs 24,000 crore.

State Bank of India has one of the largest exposures to the debt-laden company at around Rs 6,000 crore, including external commercial borrowings. Other lenders include Canara Bank, Bank of India and Dena Bank.

In a consortium of 51 lenders, PNB is the lead banker for term loans to Bhushan Steel. SBI heads the consortium for working capital loans.

The company tried restructuring its debt under the RBI’s 5/25 refinancing scheme and S4A (Scheme for Sustainable Structuring of Stressed Assets). However, after failure to make any headway, the central bank referred the case to be resolved under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code.

While a source in the industry confirmed the development, officials from Tata Steel were couldn't be reached. Calls to its corporate communication executive went unanswered.

http://www.moneycontrol.com/news/bu...ushan-steel-with-rs-35000-cr-bid-2510045.html



 

Flame Thrower

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We should have tried it atleast. Boom goes my research on non-fossil vehicles.
:mad2::mad2::mad2::mad2:
For EVs, the most important thing is battery.

When Tesla is talking of Li based batteries, Samsung has surprised the world with Graphene batteries.

Though Li is a scarcely available material, Carbon is abundant on Earth. Future of EV is definitely Graphene batteries.

Before coming onto Indian policy bon EV, govt should have building blocks in place. Govt should work on Graphene batteries and cheap ways of producing Graphene. I hope these would be finished by 2025. Then we can come to EV policy, maybe by 2030
 
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Pandeyji

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For EVs, the most important thing is battery.

When Tesla is talking of Li based batteries, Samsung has surprised the world with Graphene batteries.

Though Li is a scarcely available material, Carbon is abundant on Earth. Future of EV is definitely Graphene batteries.

Before coming onto Indian policy bon EV, govt should have building blocks in place. Govt should work on Graphene batteries and cheap ways of producing Graphene. I hope these would be finished by 2025. Then we can come to EV policy, maybe by 2030
I am not working on EV but other alternate sources like compressed air & gasohol. Govt policy on banning fossils would have meant that I would have got investors interested in financing the R&D. But chances of that happening now are very close to zero.
 

Adioz

शक्तिः दुर्दम्येच्छाशक्त्याः आगच्छति
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We should have tried it atleast. Boom goes my research on non-fossil vehicles.
:mad2::mad2::mad2::mad2:
I am not working on EV but other alternate sources like compressed air & gasohol. Govt policy on banning fossils would have meant that I would have got investors interested in financing the R&D. But chances of that happening now are very close to zero.
Bro read the article again. This decision actually gives the industry more flexibility in building next gen cars. The EV policy was being opposed by industry cause it would have limited the industry's options. No policy is the best policy on EV, for now.
“What we need is just action plans,” said Kant, backing Gadkari’s stand on the policy.

“Everyday, new technology is coming into the market. Technology is always ahead of rules and regulations. And in India, it becomes very tough to change rules and regulations, so let there be just actions,” Kant said, explaining the reason behind the decision.
Maruti Suzuki India Ltd chairman R.C. Bhargava said companies will now have the flexibility to choose a technology they want. “The fact that the government will allow the industry to work on any form of sustainable technology is itself a policy. So, if there isn’t a policy on electric vehicles, it is not a problem at all,” said Bhargava.
The government’s decision to have an EV policy had created uncertainty in the automobile industry for the past year, although several companies had outlined their strategies for EVs or lobbied the government to drop the idea.
“Implementing an EV policy package would need huge investments and with empty coffers, it is not possible for the government. So, the idea is left to the open market, manufacturers and the consumers,” a senior government official said,requesting anonymity.
 

tharun

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..........................................................................
What a speech.............................:clap2:
He should be made the financial minister.
I bet he will change the country.
 

hit&run

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There was antithetical argument made by @Singh on investing in R&D /innovation vs being the end user.

I am not sure if he can recall but I would be good if we can revisit that argument in the light of Professor Solow's equation.
 

Prashant12

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Forex reserves up by USD 1.96 bn to USD 421.720 bn

The foreign exchange reserves rose by USD 1.960 billion to USD 421.720 billion in the week to January 16, due to increase in foreign currency assets, the Reserve Bank said today.

In the previous week, the reserves had declined by USD 2.154 billion to USD 419.760 billion.The reserves had touched a life-time high of USD 421.914 billion on February 9, FY18.

It had crossed the USD 400-billion mark for the first time in the week to September 8 but has since been fluctuating.In the reporting week, foreign currency assets, a major component of the overall reserves, rose by USD 1.925 billion to USD 396.572 billion.

Expressed in US dollar terms, the foreign currencyassets include the effect of appreciation or depreciation of the non-US currencies such as the euro, the pound and the yen held in the reserves.Gold reserves remained unchanged at USD 21.514 billion, the central bank said.

The special drawing rights with the International Monetary Fund rose by USD 13 million to USD 1.546 billion.

The country's reserve position with the Fund also increased by USD 21.7 million to USD 2.087 billion, RBI said.

http://www.business-standard.com/ar...1-96-bn-to-usd-421-720-bn-118022300748_1.html
 

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