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Tamil Nadu News Papers

MTC to get 300 new buses in September

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The Times of India 12.08.2009

MTC to get 300 new buses in September

CHENNAI: Come September and 300 new Metropolitan Transport Corporation (MTC) buses will be on the city roads. A couple of months later another 600 new buses will join the fleet. All the 900 will be semi-low floor buses, each costing Rs 20 lakh.

According to official sources, the state transport department recently issued orders to procure 1,500 new buses 900 for the MTC and 300 each for the Coimbatore and Madurai transport corporations under the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Mission (JNNURM) scheme.

Ashok Leyland will supply 1,000 buses and the Tata group 500. The department is expected to issue orders to procure 100 airconditioned buses in a couple of weeks, sources told The Times of India.

"About 300 buses are to be delivered by the end of this month and the remaining should be delivered in a phased manner by October-November. We are going to issue orders for 100 airconditioned buses soon and we hope the MTC will have 1,000 new buses by December this year,'' a senior transport official said.

The MTC presently has 3,350 buses of which 3,000 are on the road and 350 kept as spare vehicles in depots. The fleet includes 1,000 buses that are 10 to 12 years old; the normal life-time of a bus is 7-8 years. MTC officials said 40% of the new buses would be used to replace old vehicles and the remaining 60% inducted as additional buses. This would increase the fleet strength to about 4,000.

On the procurement of airconditioned buses, officials said all would be Volvo buses, eachi costing about Rs 80 lakh. The MTC currently has 30 airconditioned buses.

The expected induction of more new buses could increase the corporation's daily revenue by Rs 30 lakh. Presently, it earns an average of Rs 1.80 crore daily transporting about 50 lakh passengers on 650 routes in the city and suburbs. MTC buses make about 40,000 trips every day, or a distance of about 8.30 lakh km.

 

Civic body holds awareness camp

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Deccan Chronicle 12.08.2009

Civic body holds awareness camp

August 12th, 2009
By Our Correspondent

Chennai, Aug. 11: The danger posed by H1N1 virus can be rooted out only by the joint effort of doctors in the government and public sector, said Dr P. Kugananthan, city health officer, public health department.

He was speaking to doctors of various private city hospitals who had gathered to attend swine influenza awareness program organised by the Chennai corporation.

“At the individual level, the main infection control methods are maintaining hand hygiene, using masks, keeping respiratory hygiene and cough etiquette.

Since doctors come into direct contact with the affected it is very important that they take these measures and urge patients and their families to do so, he said.

Pointing out that public health department of the corporation has received 20,000 Tamiflu tablets, he said that doctors could request for tablets after submitting proper proof that the patient is infected.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 12 August 2009 04:27
 

Drought pushes up demand for farm pump sets

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The Business Line 12.08.2009

Drought pushes up demand for farm pump sets

Coimbatore units revving up capacity.

R. Yegya Narayanan

Coimbatore, Aug. 11 While the spectre of drought is looming large over the country sending the capital market into a tizzy, the pump set industry in Coimbatore has gone into an overdrive to meet the rising demand.

An industry veteran estimates that leading agricultural pump set producers here are working at 10-15 per cent more than their capacity for the last two months to meet the surge in demand which has come at a time when the industry generally witnesses a slump in demand and offers off-season discounts to its distributors to sustain the business momentum.

Monsoon failure

But this is not a cause for rejoicing since failure of monsoon may lead to contraction in demand during next year since the purchasing power of the rural population would decline and farmers may not opt for replacing old motors and pumps.

Speaking to Business Line, Mr G. Rajendran, Managing Director, CRI Pumps Private Ltd, said the depleting water table in most parts of the country has forced farmers to go for higher head pumps so as to extract water from greater depths. While the big farmers normally use pumps of 7 HP or 10 HP capacity, the smaller land owners use 5 HP pumps.

He said while the replacement cost for 10 HP pumps would come to about Rs 20,000, for 5 HP pumps it would be about Rs 10,000.

He said the size of the pump set market in the country is estimated at Rs 3,500 crore, of which the share of the submersible pumps used in agricultural operations is around 60 per cent (Rs 2,100 crore in value). The Coimbatore pump industry has about 45 per cent of the market share of the farm pump sets (about Rs 1,000 crore).

He said normally, the pump industry witnesses around 25 per cent fall in demand during July to September compared with other months due to the onset of the South-West monsoon. To sustain the demand momentum, manufacturers offer 2-3 per cent discount to their distributors to encourage them to stock pump sets ahead of the North-East monsoon season.

Mr Rajendran said due to deficit rainfall this year, the surge in demand was seen in Andhra Pradesh and States in the central and northern regions. The manufacturers of branded pumps here have not been able to meet the spike in demand.

The higher demand during lean season has lead to manufacturers withdrawing the price discount and to work in excess of normal capacity. The industry has generally been doing well even when others faced recession because of the incentives offered by the Government to the farm sector.

Lower water table

Mr Jayakumar Ramdass, President, Southern India Engineering Manufacturers’ Association (Siema), Coimbatore, said there is a surge in demand for a few farm pump set varieties. But the industry has to view this with caution since any prolonged dry spell would cause contraction in demand later.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 12 August 2009 03:31
 


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