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Letters: Sachin's best century
Sachin Tendulkar scored his best century on the day he completed 20 years in international cricket. By telling the Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS) that he was an Indian first and a Maharashtrian later, Tendulkar has made several points. He has, of course, snubbed the MNS, but he has also told top professionals that they need to stand up and be counted. Just recently, Karan Johar apologised for calling Mumbai “Bombay” in a movie — while Johar and others fear the MNS will burn cinema halls showing their movies, Sachin has no such fear since the MNS can never hope to succeed in preventing fans from watching Sachin play. Interestingly, during the Mumbai riots, it was the original Little Master Sunil Gavaskar who used his stature in a similar manner to prevent mobs from killing Muslims.

Bharati hikes open offer for Great Offshore to Rs 560/share
Bharati Shipyard today said it has hiked the open offer price to acquire stake in offshore service provider Great Offshore to Rs 560 per share.

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Singur land not 'formally' sought: Industry minister
The West Bengal government had not sought return of the land at Singur from Tata Motors ‘formally’, said West Bengal commerce and industry minister Nirupam Sen, a day after Ratan Tata said the government had not approached for the land. Speaking on the sidelines of a seminar organized by Assocham in association with the Bengal Chamber of Commerce & Industry and Merchants’ Chamber of Commerce, Sen said, though the government had not formally asked for the land, the company had been informed about the Bhel proposal and later the Railways proposal. Sen said, unless the Railways submitted a formal proposal, the government would not ask for the land back. With Sen’s comments, it appears that Singur was once again in limbo, as Railways has made it clear that it would not visit the land as it belonged to Tata Motors.
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Mittal plans 6 mt plant in Karnataka

Investment likely to be Rs 30,000 crore. - FIIs net buyers Rs 394cr in F&O on Monday - Asian markets lacklustre in morning trades - US markets surge on homes sales data - F&O Outlook: Nifty may test new high before expiry - In talks with Nepal govt to break IOC supply monopoly - HCL Tech in Rs 940-cr deal with UK insurer ArcelorMittal India has sought approval for a six-million tonne steel plant in Karnataka from the single window clearance committee of the state government, over and above the two 12-million tonne greenfield steel plants in Jharkhand and Orissa already in the pipeline. Sources close to the development said the application was for a six-million tonne plant at an investment of Rs 30,000 crore. A captive power plant is also in the pipeline. The application was made last Saturday. Asked about the project, an ArcelorMittal spokesperson said the details on cost, capacity and timeline would be decided once the technical studies were completed in three-four months. Having run into delays with the Jharkhand and Orissa projects, ArcelorMittal appears to be treading more cautiously on the Karnataka project. “Setting up an integrated plant in the state would depend finally on a host of techno-economic factors,” said the company. The statement on Karnataka comes a little more than a month after chairman LN Mittal said that ArcelorMittal might pull out its $20 billion plan to build steel plants in Jharkhand and Orissa due to delays in land acquisition. About 10 days ago, Sudhir Maheswari, member of group management board responsible for corporate finance, M&A and business development (including India) and risk management of ArcelorMittal, said in Kolkata that the company was fully committed to the greenfield projects in both the states, but was looking for alternatives to accelerate realisation of the plans. The company is facing huge delays with the Jharkhand and Orissa projects. The memorandum of understanding for the Jharkhand project was signed in 2005, while the Orissa project was signed in 2006. However, there were delays in land acquisition as the company faced resistance from farmers. The land requirement for the Jharkhand project was around 11,000 acres and for Orissa, 9,000 acres. PLANS PAINS * Investment of Rs 30,000 crore * Land acquisition delays * 6 million tonne steel plant in Karnataka * Resistance from farmers * Captive power plant * Threat to pull out $20 bn investment * Two 12 million tonne greenfield projects in Jharkhand, Orissa * Dispute over Chiria iron ore supply There were issues with mines, too. Though the company had bagged licences for coal in Jharkhand and Orissa, and a mining lease for iron ore in Jharkhand, the world’s largest steelmaker was eyeing the Chiria iron ore mines, the largest in Asia. The Jharkhand government had assured ArcelorMittal supply of ore from Chiria, though the leases actually belonged to Steel Authority of India Ltd (SAIL). Four out of 10 leases were disputed as they were not renewed by the state government. However, SAIL and the Jharkhand government had recently settled the issue with the state agreeing to allocate one billion tonne of iron ore to SAIL, while the balance would be negotiated with the public sector and linked to its greenfield project. The settlement implies that very little ore would be left to be distributed to ArcelorMittal or any other private player.


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