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The new 'G' order - G14

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The New Indian Express 10.07.2009

The new 'G' order - G14



Group of Eight and Group of Five leaders participate in a group photo at the G8 summit in L'Aquila, Italy on Thursday. (AP)

L'AQUILA: It can be termed as the new 'G' order of the world where the presence of various nations spells out their international political and economic status.

The latest to join the 'G' ranks is G14 - a term used for the first time at the G8-G5 summit being held in this quake-hit Italian town, about 100 km northeast of Rome.

G14 is the grouping comprising G8, G5 and Egypt. The joint declaration of the G8-G5 summit was actually that of the G14. Egypt was specially called for the summit outreach meeting between G8 and G5 and comes in Friday to make up the G14.

G7, the group of the world's most wealthy and industrialized countries founded in 1975, is now better known as G8 after it included the Russian Federation a few years ago.

G8's membership comprises the main industrialised countries. It is not an international organisation, nor does it have an administrative staff with a permanent secretariat. It is a process that culminates in an annual summit at which the heads of state and government of the member countries hold talks with a view to finding solutions to the main world issues.

Italy hosted the 2009 G8 summit as it holds the presidency of the grouping.

G5 is the grouping of emerging economies comprising Brazil, China, India, Mexico and South Africa.

Over the years, the G7/G8 duty presidencies began inviting a number of emerging countries for specific sessions of talks on an ad hoc basis, as the emerging economies' increasing weight on the world scene made it necessary to involve them in identifying solutions to major global challenges.

The L'Aquila summit and its joint declaration by G8 and G5 has shown that the G5 is taken quite seriously by the world's most developed countries.

A number of demands of G5 - including restructuring of international financial and other institutions, including the United Nations, keeping the interests of developing countries in mind while initiating action to overcome the global financial crisis and concerns on food security and climate change - were included in the joint document this time.

Another grouping, G20, founded in 1999, was in the news for its London summit in April this year. This one includes the developed and developing countries and is considered a broader international platform.

Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has already expressed his reservations about these world groupings.

"The unworkability of the existing structures has led to greater reliance on plurilateral groupings. Some of these, such as G7, later expanded to G8, are to be seen as a group of countries with common interest, not necessarily representative of the global community," Manmohan Singh said in a vision document that forms part of a compendium on contemporary global issues at the summit here.

"The original rationale of G7 was the belief that it would evolve more effective consultation among the more powerful countries on one side of the bi-polar world of the 1970s and 1980s. Its expansion to G8 reflects the disappearance of that particular faultline by the collapse of the Soviet Union. However, while the group includes many of the economically powerful nations, it is obviously not representative as it does not include any developing country."

Though the prime minister has pointed out that these groupings do not have a special legitimacy under the UN system, he finds the G20 grouping more comprehensive of the present world order.

"Unlike the G8+5, this group has a composite identity since all member countries participate on equal terms, including in the preparatory process. However, the selection of countries remains arbitrary and can be questioned as to its representativeness," he stated in the vision document on how the world needs to be governed in the 21st century.

Last Updated on Friday, 10 July 2009 12:58
 

Tiruchi Corporation to take to e-tender system from today

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The Hindu 10.07.2009

Tiruchi Corporation to take to e-tender system from today

S.Ganesan

Bids for all works valued above Rs.10 lakh to be submitted online henceforth

 


The e-bids could be opened only after the expiry of the deadline for submission

Registered contractors have already been briefed about the system


TIRUCHI: The Tiruchi Corporation would take to the e-tender system from Friday.

Bids for all works valued above Rs.10 lakh would have to be submitted online henceforth and the corporation would no longer accept submission of bid documents in person, Commissioner, T.T.Balsamy told The Hindu.

Statewide initiative

The move comes as part of a state-wide initiative under which all corporations have been instructed to go for the e-bid system, introduced in association with the National Informatics Centre.Apart from enabling filing of bids from anywhere, the system was also expected to usher in transparency in the process.

The corporation has already made available tender notices and schedules online wherein contractors could download the schedules free of cost from the State government portal, tenders.tn.gov.in. But till now they were submitting the hardcopy of the bids.

Digital signature

From Friday, bids have to be uploaded online through the same portal. Special software has already been installed and senior officials including the Commissioner, City Engineer and Executive Engineers have been provided with digital signature cards for accessing and processing the bids.

The e-bids could be opened by the officials only after the expiry of the deadline for submission.

Officials said an approved private agency, which has been roped in to assist the civic body in implementing the programme, has been asked to nominate a couple of trained staff to assist and clarify doubts of contractors at the corporation office. Registered contractors have already been briefed about the system recently.

Leased line network

Meanwhile, the corporation has also decided to upgrade its own online network by going in for a managed leased line network of the Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited.

The present 256 Kbps leased lines has been found to be inadequate and too slow for the online services, especially the online tax payment facility.

The corporation would invest about Rs.11 lakhs for upgrading to 1/2 Mbps leased lines.

Last Updated on Friday, 10 July 2009 10:48
 

Pilloor II water supply scheme likely by mid 2010

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The Hindu 10.07.2009

Pilloor II water supply scheme likely by mid 2010

Staff Reporter

Rain brings relief and revives hopes for comfortable water supply

Photo: K. Ananthan

SPOT STUDY: Collector P.Umanath (left) and Corporation Commissioner Anshul Mishra (right) inspecting construction of a water treatment plant on Thursday at Velliangadu for the dedicated Pilloor Water Supply Scheme for the city. —

Coimbatore: The second phase of the Pilloor Drinking Water Supply scheme will be ready by mid 2010, said Collector P. Umanath and Corporation Commissioner Anshul Mishra here on Thursday.

They were talking to reporters at the Vellingadu water treatment plant about 45 to 50 km from here after inspecting the six packages of works under progress. Though the contract agreement period stretches up to September/October in all the six works, officials were confident of work being completed a few months ahead of schedule.

Once Pilloor II phase scheme was commissioned, Coimbatore Corporation would get about 200 mld.

At present, Siruvani scheme was getting about 65 to 70 mld per day while of the 120 mld withdrawn from Pilloor, the city was getting close to 65 mld.

When the dedicated Pilloor water supply scheme is commissioned, it would give 120 mld. The scheme has been designed in such a way that the infrastructure would hold good for the next 40 years.The supply of 65 mld drawn from the existing Pilloor water supply scheme would be then made available to the wayside habitations being served now and to 440-odd new habitations.The six packages of works included two pumping stations at Periyakombai Hills and Kattan hills and in other places the flow would be by gravity, officials said.

Regarding construction of overhead reservoirs, Mr. Anshul Mishra said that the work was being entrusted to consultants for deciding on the number of over head tanks, capacity and their locations.

Of the entire route length of 34.25 km, 9.4 km would be pre-stressed concrete pipes and the rest would be mild steel pipes.Once Pilloor scheme is commissioned, the dependency on Siruvani would come down to just 33 per cent, Mr. Mishra said.

Dr. Umanath and Mr. Mishra said that water level in Pilloor was comfortable and the storage in Siruvani scheme had improved to 870 ft as against the full reservoir level of 878.5 ft.

The reservoir area witnessed a rainfall of 115 mm, highest rainfall in the last one year. From a lowest of 864.9 ft, the storage had improved by more than 5 mts in the last two to three weeks.

With rainfall and inflow into the reservoirs continuing, officials said that if the rainfall level continued at the same rate the reservoir would surplus in the next 10 to 15 days.

Last Updated on Friday, 10 July 2009 10:36
 


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