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Wlosseyou think he is the "worst"? Is it because he is delaying the murky billion dollar defense procurements and stressing on indegenous equipments. He has Inducted the Tejas and the Dhanush and has made it clear that to the air force and army that they will have to support the local industry. Decades have been lost and we have earned the title of largest importer of weapons. First time we have a minister and a govt. which is giving us hope of losing the title. We may be a few squadrons short of fighters and a quality assault rifle. But we have to tighten our belts for India to stand on its feet militarily. He is also from IIT and will have understanding of technology and also he his honest.

So are you taking responsibility for those who lose, give up and sacrifice their lives , not fighting enemy but faulty equipment ? Please try to give the same logic to the children of those men who gave up lives flying those junks. If they are satisfied , I am too.
 
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So are you taking responsibility for those who lose, give up and sacrifice their lives , not fighting enemy but faulty equipment ? Please try to give the same logic to the children of those men who gave up lives flying those junks. If they are satisfied , I am too.
Any death or injury is sad. Even Russian planes are called flying coffins. Many test pilots lost their lives in WW2. But it has to start from somewhere. I am just giving him the credit for encouragement of indigenous weapons. I am not a defense expert but I hope locally manufactured weapons will be of decent quality and will get better with further testing post induction.
 
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हरे कृष्ण हरे कृष्ण,कृष्ण कृष्ण हरे हरे
हरे राम हरे राम, राम राम हरे हरे
06-09-2016

#Economy:Urjit Patel in his first monetary policy statement which will be delivered on October 4 may not be able to cut policy rates immediately as food prices rise along with the recent rise in fuel prices will create doubts over inflation movement.

#Finance:The RBI tightened the screws on banks clean-up further by mandating that banks can subscribed only a limited amount of loans sold to asset reconstruction companies and ordered two independent valuation where bad loans worth Rs 50 crores are being sold to ARCs.

#India's coffee exports rose by 18% to 1,63,615 tonnes in the first five months of the ongoing 2016-17 fiscal, despite lower value realisation, according to the Coffee Board.

#Mera Bharat Mahaan: PM said the country's priority will be to work towards trade facilitation agreement for services, a move that will help in movement of professionals.

भारत माता की जय
 
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Stumbled on this news. I think this will be interesting to you railway fans.

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Indian Railways to acquire high speed technology to run trains
By Debeshi Gooptu | 2016-09-06

India’s Railway Minister Suresh Prabhu is relying on technology to fast track the modernization drive.

From using space technology to high speed technology for faster movement of trains, Prabhu is leaving no stone unturned to revamp India’s rail network.

Prabhu has recently revealed that the Indian Railways is in the process of acquiring ultra high speed technology to run trains at maximum speeds of 500 kmph and above.

"It is the dream of the Railways to take not more than 12 hours to travel from one part of India to the other and the idea is to enhance the average speed of all trains, so that everyone benefits," Prabhu said. The Minister was inaugurating the global meet on technology for ultra high speed rolling stock for operation at maximum speed of 500 kmph and above.

Earlier this year, Prabhu’s Budget announcement indicated the Railways’ plan to use geospatial and enhanced use of space technology in various sectors of governance. The Ministry of Railways also went ahead and signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) for developing Remote Sensing and Geographic Information System (GIS) for Remote Sensing at unmanned railway crossings and other uses.

The agreement aimed for developing applications in the field of Remote Sensing and Geographic Information System (GIS) for Remote Sensing at unmanned railway crossings including all geospatial solutions and customized software solutions for providing reliable, efficient & optimal solutions to the Railways in its various areas of operations thereby benefiting the rail user. Space technology tools would be utilized in providing passenger information system in all trains indicating the next station, stoppage, real time train tracking, survey of new rail route alignments particularly in hilly and difficult terrains, helping to conduct track vulnerability studies, mapping of assets and introducing web enabled rail user centric services.

Nationalised in 1951, the Indian Railways currently is the largest rail network in Asia and the world’s second largest network operated under a single management. It has 115,000 km of track length, running 12,617 trains to carry over 23 million passengers daily and connects more than 7,172 stations.

Regarding the plan to use ultra high speed technology, Prabhu explained that the Railways wanted to develop it, implement it under the Make in India initiative to use it indigenously and export it."

According to Prabhu, the focal point of high speed rolling stock is to enhance customer experience, safety, bring in speed and augment capacity. He said that advance technology always plays a great role in the nation building. The Railways are exploring the possibility of using other high end technologies such as vacuum tubes and hyperloop which are faster and efficient.

International companies such as HyperLoop Transport Technology, USA, Quadralev USA, Talgo, Spain, RTRI Japan, Siemens Germany, Knorr Bremse, Germany, Prose Switzerland are queuing up showcase some of the latest high speed technologies.

The global meet took place before the opening of an Expression of Interest tender for developing, constructing and running a Ultra High Speed Railway system in India on PPP basis.

It is expected that the EOI will give a full view of emerging technologies available in the world in this frontier area of railway technology and enable Indian Railways to move to the next step of sanctioning a project.

Trains can run at more than 350 km per hour speed with the use of levitation technology which is operational in Germany, China and Japan, among other countries.

The one-day international conference on September 2 was organised to bring focus on development ultra-high speed railway systems in the country.

Recently, China’s largest high speed train maker has announced that its first US $ 63.4 million joint venture plant in India to repair and manufacture railway locomotive engines has started operations.

The state-run China Railway Rolling Stock Corporation (CRRC) is the first foreign company to set up assembly line of rail transportation equipment in India after Prime Minister Narendra Modi unveiled his ‘Make in India’ campaign in 2014.

It will also provide technology support to India’s rail system and supply electric transmission systems to oil drilling, wind power generation and mining equipment making in India, the report said.

This is China’s first major investment in Indian Railways after the two worked out a multi-pronged collaboration for Chinese participation in the modernisation of Indian railway systems.
 
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What is the status ahead of Katra? Any significant progress made ?
Posted an article today on same.

This is China’s first major investment in Indian Railways after the two worked out a multi-pronged collaboration for Chinese participation in the modernisation of Indian railway systems.
Finances not withstanding, i suppose Chinese co-operation is the best course of action for India to consider for HST. The reasons are as follows:
  1. China itself is rapidly expanding its domestic HST network and given its future plans, it is given that more resources would be devoted to R&D as well. This implies that future HST technologies that come out from China will have benefits of using modern materials, manufacturing technologies and advances in general communication, vehicle technology and railway safety protocols. This will form a sort of guarantee that the technology you buy is most up to date and field proven.
  2. If India succeeds to go about its ambitious plans for HST, this means a huge market and Chinese companies would find it lucrative to offer products and services to a comparable market to that in China. Passenger travel estimation point of view, i suppose India should match numbers to that in China (Based on projected Passenger Traffic data available).
  3. No other country has experience of laying very long distance (1500+ kms) HSTs and given distances in India, Chinese civil engineering experience (more specifically Seismic region designs) could be a off great value.
I guess if both nations find out a method of financing these projects (maybe through soft loans or allowing private equity through JV formation by Chinese companies in India), this could well be a very doable scenario.

@AndrewJin @TaiShang Your views Gentlemen!
 
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Posted an article today on same.


Finances not withstanding, i suppose Chinese co-operation is the best course of action for India to consider for HST. The reasons are as follows:
  1. China itself is rapidly expanding its domestic HST network and given its future plans, it is given that more resources would be devoted to R&D as well. This implies that future HST technologies that come out from China will have benefits of using modern materials, manufacturing technologies and advances in general communication, vehicle technology and railway safety protocols. This will form a sort of guarantee that the technology you buy is most up to date and field proven.
  2. If India succeeds to go about its ambitious plans for HST, this means a huge market and Chinese companies would find it lucrative to offer products and services to a comparable market to that in China. Passenger travel estimation point of view, i suppose India should match numbers to that in China (Based on projected Passenger Traffic data available).
  3. No other country has experience of laying very long distance (1500+ kms) HSTs and given distances in India, Chinese civil engineering experience (more specifically Seismic region designs) could be a off great value.
I guess if both nations find out a method of financing these projects (maybe through soft loans or allowing private equity through JV formation by Chinese companies in India), this could well be a very doable scenario.

@AndrewJin @TaiShang Your views Gentlemen!
The potential of cooperation is huge.
China will lay another 20,000km HSRs in the next decade.
During the 13-14th 5-year plans, there will be more technological improvement, including the test of continued 500-600km/h HSR (not just reaching a max. speed of 500-600km/h) and massive commercialisation of Chinese standardised EMUs with gradual elimination of old EMUs. More lines will be constructed on China's geologically complicated regions, such as seismic karst landforms in Southwest China, extremely cold Northeast, tropical and subtropical islands and coast, desert and plateau.

Financially, AIIB, in which India is a major signature, will play a crucial role in developing countries' infra investment. China is willing to offer finance and expertise.

logovip.jpg
1433751906940_586.jpg


China Trunk HSR 2030
中长期高铁规划.jpg


 
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Cargo supremacy: Jury still out on roads vs railways

Over the past fifteen years, the share of freight on railways compared with roads has declined in every key rail network of the world

Subhomoy Bhattacharjee | New Delhi
September 6, 2016 Last Updated at 00:25 IST

1424865873-1776.jpg

The plans to decarbonise Indian transport sector by carting a larger share of freight traffic on railways instead of roads doesn't have any global success to lean on.

The rail ministry wants to capture at least 45 per cent of the total freight traffic by 2046-47, from the current share of less than 30 per cent. International experience shows this will be a first of sorts if it happens. Over the past fifteen years, the share of freight on railways compared with roads has declined in every key rail network of the world.

Whether it is the mega railway networks of USA, China or Russia or the small but efficient rail networks of Japan and Switzerland, the railroads have lost out to roads.

The success or failure of the shift of freight traffic to rail has pivotal implications for India's chance to meet the Intended Nationally Determined Contribution (INDC) targets to reduce its energy intensity by 33-35 per cent by the year 2030 from the level of 2005. A lower intensity means higher efficiency in powering gross domestic product (GDP) growth. It was committed by India at Paris in November last year.

The railways strategy is thus twofold. One of this aims to lower its own energy footprint from the current levels by shifting from diesel to electric traction. At the same time it wishes to capture more share of the freight business from the roadways.

Dinesh Mohan, one of India's leading authority on transport sector, says the Indian Railways is flying in the face of international experience in assuming such a large volume of freight traffic will gravitate towards it.

1473107450-6253.jpg


Data from European Union (EU) countries show rail freight traffic as percentage of total surface transport has declined to only 23 per cent by 2014 from close to 37 per cent in 2001. In the US, it has dipped from 42 per cent to 39.5 per cent in the same period. Canada has also followed the same route and so has China.

This has implications. While greenhouse gas emissions has stabilised over most sectors by the 2000s, the share of transport in emissions of carbon dioxide has risen. The share of transport in worldwide carbon dioxide emissions is now one fourth compared with one sixth in the 1980s.

Most of the rise is now coming from non-OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) countries, typically China and India. And within transport sector the biggest jump comes from road transport. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change data show its carbon footprint outdistances other forms of transport 3:1. The volume is expected to double by the year 2050. Within road transport the largest share of these gas will come from freight transport. It thus makes enormous sense to plan a shift away from road to rail for freight transport.

In 2015, the rail ministry under Suresh Prabhu identified the challenge and set up a directorate of environment. And typical of government functioning it has been saddled with some other responsibilities too like housekeeping. Also typical of the government it does not have much of powers to enforce a change in business practices within the railway empire. Chief of the department, K Swaminathan, advisor, environment, however, exudes an air of confidence. "We are confident of a phase change once the work on the Western and Eastern Dedicated Freight Corridors gets completed." The work should be largely over 2020 according to railway estimates. By then the railways estimates it will carry 1,117 billion traffic kilometres at a compound average growth rate or CAGR of 9 per cent. This is a huge level of expectations.

Saon Ray, senior fellow at Icrier, is sceptical about the numbers. The author of a recent report on decarbonisation of Indian Railways, her calculations show railway freight traffic has grown at a CAGR of much lower 5.43 per cent between 2003 and 2015. "The trend of low growth in freight transport is expected to continue till (railways) improves the speed and quality of freight service." She does not see that happening for the next five years.

The numbers are difficult. To come anywhere close to even retain the current share of goods traffic business, the railways has to double the single line tracks at the rate of 2000 kilometres every year till 2020. This is in addition to the 400 kilometres of new track it must lay out at the same time.

To begin to wean freight traffic from the road sector, the railways must depend on the addition in route length which will come from the dedicated freight corridor. The target is 3,376 kilometres.

There are further complications. By the year 2030, the railways as part of INDC plans to move 80 per cent of its passenger traffic and 100 per cent of its freight traffic to electric haulage. That is just 15 years away with the current railway electric traction at 40 per cent of its total route length. Ray points out since electric engines are 10 per cent less effective to start a train and also when pulling the wagons along, the railways will have to invest correspondingly much more on electric locomotives. So the transformation to a less carbon footprint can actually mean loss of freight traffic share by the railways.

A data sheet created by NITI Aayog for the railway ministry shows just to retain its share of freight business the number of additional diesel locomotives needed to be brought into service in the next five year is 1,866. The number of electric locomotives has to go up by 1,859 in the same time. The railways add less than a 100 each year every year to its rolling stock.

There are a host of reasons why freight transport is skittish about rail. In Europe the share of EU-28 nations' inland freight that was transported by road in 2014 was 74.9 per cent or more than four times as high as the share transported by rail at 18.2 per cent. There are different reasons for variations across the countries but the results hold true. In Mexico, for instance, the share of rail in freight went down sharply to less than 20 per cent in 2001 due to under investment. It recovered under a World Bank supported programme but has stagnated thereafter.

In the Indian Railways' directorate of environment, Swaminathan's team is concentrating on non-rolling stock items to make the railway divisions more aware of their environment footprint. The railways currently use 1000 million litres of water daily ranging from washing the trains and tracks to serving its employees and passengers. He has set a target of converting at least a fifth of the total to recycled water within the next three years.
 
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Modi’s position in G20 group photo shows he’s important in China’s eyes: Expert
  • Sutirtho Patranobis, Hindustan Times, Hangzhou|
  • Updated: Sep 05, 2016 19:44 IST
g20-summit_cef74060-7360-11e6-86aa-b218fe1cd668.jpg

Prime Minister Narendra Modi before a meeting with British Prime Minister Theresa May on the sidelines of the G20 Summit in Hangzhou, China, on Monday.(PTI)


Every photograph might not be worth a thousand words but the G20 Summit group photo could throw up a thousand interpretations about where each leader stands in the hierarchy of power. At least, according to what China thinks.

The photo features the 36 leaders who gathered in Hangzhou for the 11th G20 Summit, including 21 heads of state or government, seven representatives of international organisations and eight leaders from guest countries.

According to an analysis by a top international expert from the prestigious Renmin University in Beijing, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s positioning in the group shows his stature and power in the eyes of China.

Wang Yizhi, director of the Institute of International Affairs at the university, explained to Zhejiang Online why he thought so.

Read | Two years, two pictures: How a G20 photo indicates a shift in world politics

According to the rules, the order usually followed from the front row to the row behind for group photos taken at international meetings is heads of the state (presidents and kings), governmental leader (prime ministers, chancellors) and representatives of international organisations.

g20-summit-in-hangzhou_fa3687aa-735f-11e6-86aa-b218fe1cd668.jpg

Prime Minister Narendra Modi with other G20 leaders and their spouses in a group photo during the G20 Summit in Hangzhou, China on Sunday. (PTI)
“In each row, the leaders would be positioned from the centre to the sides according to the time they took office,” Wang said.

“Prime Minister Modi has also been arranged in the first row, together with 13 leaders, including 11 heads of state and (Angela) Merkel, Chancellor of the next host country, Germany,” the website reported.

“Positioning the Indian Prime Minister in the first row has demonstrated China’s attention to India as a developing country and a rising power,” Wang said.

Read | ‘One nation spreading terror’: Modi takes swipe at Pakistan in G20 speech

Modi’s positioning also shows what China feels about how the participation of developing and emerging countries has helped G20’s transformation into a long-term mechanism.

Wang said: “In the future if you look back, the Hangzhou G20 summit is bound to be a historical watershed.”

The arrangement of leaders standing near the host also shows the intimacy among nations, Wang said. Host countries could make some autonomous arrangements under the general framework, he added.

In Wang’s view, the group photo was “thoughtfully arranged”. He said putting the “troika” leaders in the centre has ensured the transformation of the G20 from a mechanism focussing on short-term policies and emergencies to a long-term policy and system.

“As the leader of the next host country of the G20 Summit, Merkel stands at the right side of President Xi Jinping, and at Xi’s left hand side is Turkish President Erdogan, the leader of the last G20 host country. This is the first time the leaders of the ‘troika’ stood together.”

++
http://m.hindustantimes.com/world-n...says-expert/story-Pn4Bg0E4RzvWjExOFkWM4K.html
++

Pretty interesting article or is it just me?
 
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Cargo supremacy: Jury still out on roads vs railways

Over the past fifteen years, the share of freight on railways compared with roads has declined in every key rail network of the world

Subhomoy Bhattacharjee | New Delhi
September 6, 2016 Last Updated at 00:25 IST


The plans to decarbonise Indian transport sector by carting a larger share of freight traffic on railways instead of roads doesn't have any global success to lean on.

The rail ministry wants to capture at least 45 per cent of the total freight traffic by 2046-47, from the current share of less than 30 per cent. International experience shows this will be a first of sorts if it happens. Over the past fifteen years, the share of freight on railways compared with roads has declined in every key rail network of the world.

Whether it is the mega railway networks of USA, China or Russia or the small but efficient rail networks of Japan and Switzerland, the railroads have lost out to roads.

The success or failure of the shift of freight traffic to rail has pivotal implications for India's chance to meet the Intended Nationally Determined Contribution (INDC) targets to reduce its energy intensity by 33-35 per cent by the year 2030 from the level of 2005. A lower intensity means higher efficiency in powering gross domestic product (GDP) growth. It was committed by India at Paris in November last year.

The railways strategy is thus twofold. One of this aims to lower its own energy footprint from the current levels by shifting from diesel to electric traction. At the same time it wishes to capture more share of the freight business from the roadways.

Dinesh Mohan, one of India's leading authority on transport sector, says the Indian Railways is flying in the face of international experience in assuming such a large volume of freight traffic will gravitate towards it.



Data from European Union (EU) countries show rail freight traffic as percentage of total surface transport has declined to only 23 per cent by 2014 from close to 37 per cent in 2001. In the US, it has dipped from 42 per cent to 39.5 per cent in the same period. Canada has also followed the same route and so has China.

This has implications. While greenhouse gas emissions has stabilised over most sectors by the 2000s, the share of transport in emissions of carbon dioxide has risen. The share of transport in worldwide carbon dioxide emissions is now one fourth compared with one sixth in the 1980s.

Most of the rise is now coming from non-OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) countries, typically China and India. And within transport sector the biggest jump comes from road transport. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change data show its carbon footprint outdistances other forms of transport 3:1. The volume is expected to double by the year 2050. Within road transport the largest share of these gas will come from freight transport. It thus makes enormous sense to plan a shift away from road to rail for freight transport.

In 2015, the rail ministry under Suresh Prabhu identified the challenge and set up a directorate of environment. And typical of government functioning it has been saddled with some other responsibilities too like housekeeping. Also typical of the government it does not have much of powers to enforce a change in business practices within the railway empire. Chief of the department, K Swaminathan, advisor, environment, however, exudes an air of confidence. "We are confident of a phase change once the work on the Western and Eastern Dedicated Freight Corridors gets completed." The work should be largely over 2020 according to railway estimates. By then the railways estimates it will carry 1,117 billion traffic kilometres at a compound average growth rate or CAGR of 9 per cent. This is a huge level of expectations.

Saon Ray, senior fellow at Icrier, is sceptical about the numbers. The author of a recent report on decarbonisation of Indian Railways, her calculations show railway freight traffic has grown at a CAGR of much lower 5.43 per cent between 2003 and 2015. "The trend of low growth in freight transport is expected to continue till (railways) improves the speed and quality of freight service." She does not see that happening for the next five years.

The numbers are difficult. To come anywhere close to even retain the current share of goods traffic business, the railways has to double the single line tracks at the rate of 2000 kilometres every year till 2020. This is in addition to the 400 kilometres of new track it must lay out at the same time.

To begin to wean freight traffic from the road sector, the railways must depend on the addition in route length which will come from the dedicated freight corridor. The target is 3,376 kilometres.

There are further complications. By the year 2030, the railways as part of INDC plans to move 80 per cent of its passenger traffic and 100 per cent of its freight traffic to electric haulage. That is just 15 years away with the current railway electric traction at 40 per cent of its total route length. Ray points out since electric engines are 10 per cent less effective to start a train and also when pulling the wagons along, the railways will have to invest correspondingly much more on electric locomotives. So the transformation to a less carbon footprint can actually mean loss of freight traffic share by the railways.

A data sheet created by NITI Aayog for the railway ministry shows just to retain its share of freight business the number of additional diesel locomotives needed to be brought into service in the next five year is 1,866. The number of electric locomotives has to go up by 1,859 in the same time. The railways add less than a 100 each year every year to its rolling stock.

There are a host of reasons why freight transport is skittish about rail. In Europe the share of EU-28 nations' inland freight that was transported by road in 2014 was 74.9 per cent or more than four times as high as the share transported by rail at 18.2 per cent. There are different reasons for variations across the countries but the results hold true. In Mexico, for instance, the share of rail in freight went down sharply to less than 20 per cent in 2001 due to under investment. It recovered under a World Bank supported programme but has stagnated thereafter.

In the Indian Railways' directorate of environment, Swaminathan's team is concentrating on non-rolling stock items to make the railway divisions more aware of their environment footprint. The railways currently use 1000 million litres of water daily ranging from washing the trains and tracks to serving its employees and passengers. He has set a target of converting at least a fifth of the total to recycled water within the next three years.

Good to hedge with both! Dedicated Freight corridors versus ambitious Gadkari road expansion....battle of the titans with room for both (I feel)!
 
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Diesel Locomotives in operation as of today. http://www.indianrailways.gov.in/ra...loads/Traction/2016/Diesel_Loco_sept_2016.pdf


The comparison of the list with last months show that while DLW is building almost 2 dozen EMDs per month , DMW production has shrunk to a mere 2-3 WDM3Ds. Also to be noticed is that the production of WDG3As has come totally to a halt.

The list does not indicate shunting locomotives.
 
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http://www.railnews.co.in/jindal-rail-infra-ltd-to-start-supplying-head-hardened-rails-in-india/

New Delhi: Jindal Steel and Power Ltd said on Tuesday the company is set to supply rails for the high-speed railway and metro rail projects with itsRs.200-crore plant, set up in collaboration with SMS Meer, Germany, coming on stream.

The plant is capable of producing 30,000 tonnes of head hardened rails a month and it aims to substitute imports, which metro rail developers were forced to use till now.

“The declared metro rail projects itself give us a market of 0.5 million tonnes over the next two-three years. With this new line of products, we expect that our rail business will yield Rs.200 crore of revenues a month from this fiscal (2016-17) as compared to ₹45 crore a month in the previous fiscal,” said Ravi Uppal, Managing Director and Group Chief Executive Officer, Jindal Steel and Power Ltd.

Uppal said currently, the landed price of imported head hardened rails is around Rs.75,000 per tonne, while normal imported rails cost Rs.50-55,000 per tonne.

“We would aim to bring down this cost difference. Apart from getting head hardened rails at a cheaper price, buyers can also benefit from shorter delivery times and would also be able to order as much as they need rather than bulk orders, which they need to place for imports,” he added.
...
Already, the company’s order book for normal rails is 3 lakh tonnes, which would be delivered over the next few months.

Head hardened rails are typically used in metro rail projects as well as on high-speed freight corridors. Head hardening technology entails a special heat treatment process, which requires precise temperature control to achieve nearly 50 per cent higher hardness as compared to a normal rail.
 
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Jindal Steel & Power Limited (JSPL) partners German firm for high-speed rail tracks project

JSPL will be the first Indian firm to manufacture head-hardened rails—tracks capable of withstanding wear and tear from high-speed trains

railtracksramesh-kObG--621x414@LiveMint.jpg

The plant in Chhattisgarh, set up in technical collaboration with German SMS Meer Gmbh, has the capacity to deliver 30,000 tonnes of head-hardened rails per month. Photo: Ramesh Pathania/Mint


New Delhi: Jindal Steel and Power Ltd (JSPL) will invest Rs.200 crore to manufacture rail tracks meant for high-speed train transport, the company said on Tuesday. It has tied up with Germany’s Siemag Weiss Gmbh and Co. KG for the project.

JSPL will be the first Indian firm to manufacture the so-called head-hardened rails, which are high-strength tracks capable of withstanding wear and tear from high-speed trains travelling at higher frequencies.

The plant in Chhattisgarh, set up in technical collaboration with German SMS Meer Gmbh, has the capacity to deliver 30,000 tonnes of head-hardened rails per month.

This will meet the country’s current projected demand of over one million tonnes of head-hardened rails over the next five years. India, at present, imports head-hardened rails.

“More than the boost to the infrastructure sector, I feel that the economy would benefit from the reduced import dependence and the improved investment demand due to domestic manufacturing of such rails,” said Devendra Kumar Pant, chief economist, India Ratings.

“At present there is a price difference of 35-40% between the normal rails and the head-hardened rails imported in India, but with the local availability of the head-hardened rails, this price difference will come down”, said Ravi Uppal, managing director and group CEO, JSPL.

This new addition of head-hardened rails to its product range will yield JSPL a monthly revenue of Rs.200 crore, much higher than the previous year’s Rs.45 crore a month.


“In line with the government’s thrust on ‘Make in India’, JSPL has successfully completed trials of head-hardened rails and is all set for commercial production. JSPL being the only producer of head-hardened rails in the country is poised to play an important role in the growth of India’s rail infrastructure,” said Naveen Jindal, chairman of JSPL.

http://www.livemint.com/Industry/3l...n-firm-for-highspeed-rail-tracks-project.html
 
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Railway stocks soar up to 40% since Budget, 240% since Prabhu took reins

NEW DELHI: Railway stocks have been on a firm track this year, with select counters rising as much as 40 per cent since the Rail Budget and up to 240 per cent since Railway Minister Suresh Prabhu assumed office on November 9, 2014 amid optimism that the government-led infrastructure push in the sector will keep the health of related companies in the pink of health.
The Finance Ministry recently gave nod to a proposal to merge the rail budget with the general Budget, i.e. there would not be a separate Rail Budget from FY17.

The news, though, has failed to put the brakes on rail stocks, which have performed well since the annual budget on February 27, thanks to swift project approvals.

Hind Ractifiers is ruling at Rs 86, up 40 per cent from Rs 61 level hit on the day of Rail Budget. Pitti LaminationBSE 7.57 % has surged 37 per cent, while Timken IndiaBSE 1.22 % has climbed 31 per cent in the same period.

Shares of Titagarh Wagons are up 28 per cent while Hercules Hoists and Siemens have jumped 27 per cent each since the budget. Kernex Microsys, BEML, Stone India, Texmaco Rail and Kalindee Rail have advanced up to 20 per cent during the same period.
A total of 12 rail-linked stocks have seen 25 per cent jump in market value since budget and 43 per cent during Prabhu's tenure so far.

The Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA) recently cleared 1,937 km of railway projects worth Rs 24,375 crore across nine states.


"To accomplish his vision, Prabhu has announced investment of $140 million over next five years to improve the infrastructure and mobility of services. He is in advanced stage of finalising a proposal to create a $5 billion fund to finance various infrastructure projects. Due to insufficient capital, expansion of infrastructure and capacity augmentation did not happen for a long time," said Abnish Kumar Sudhanshu, Director & Research Head at Amrapali Aadya Trading & Investments.

Ever since Prabhu assumed office, shares of MIC Electronics have surged 239 per cent, those of Titagarh Wagons 127 per cent, BEML 58 per cent, Siemens 43 per cent and Hind rectifiers 43 per cent.
"Gradually, infrastructure funds are getting a push and different projects are taking off. Railways is set to play a larger role in GDP creation. Hence stocks serving Railways are set to benefit. We believe ending of a separate railway budget is not going to impact these stocks negatively. It will give the Railways more operational freedom," Sudhanshu said.
In an interview to ET, the minister said: "I think it's the most logical thing if you want a financially healthy railway system... We should have a unified approach towards national priorities," Prabhu told ET in an interview.

"Railways shouldn't work in isolation. Nowhere in the world does the Railway have a separate budget," he said.

Meanwhile, shares of Kernex Microsys and Hercules Hoists fell 33 per cent and 14 per cent during the period. Stone India, Texmaco Rail and Kalindee Rail were some of the stocks which have gained up to 12 per cent during Prabhu's tenure so far.

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com...ce-prabhu-took-reins/articleshow/54042741.cms
 
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