20 September 2009

RIL's gas output may be 4 times the estimate

RIL's gas output may be 4 times the estimate



The D-6 fields of Reliance Industries in the Krishna-Godavari (KG) Basin have the potential to produce gas that is over four times the estimated peak output of 80 million cubic metres a day (mmscmd).

VK Sibal, director general, directorate-general of hydrocarbons, told Business Standard, "The 50 wells in D-6 were earlier estimated to produce a total of 80 mmscmd gas (at the rate of 1.6 mmscmd per well). However, each well can produce about 6 to 7 mmscmd, so you can estimate the potential.”

Sibal said that the government was usually conservative in approving the proven reserves as the exact potential could be ascertained only after actual production starts.

Sibal had said earlier that 18 wells had been drilled in the D-1 and D-3 gas fields in the D-6 block, but only eight had been opened, while testing was going on at two wells.

Reliance Industries has already stepped up gas production from 28 mmscmd in June to about 36-37 mmscmd now. The production will soon reach 42 mmscmd once the supply to the Dabhol power plant is increased in the first week of October, said a company official.

The Karnataka government has recently written to the Centre seeking 40-45 mmscmd of natural gas for industry in the state.

The two gas discoveries (Dhirubhai-1 and -3) and one oil discovery (in Dhirubhai-26) are amongst the 19 discoveries (18 gas and one oil) announced so far by Reliance Industries in its D6 KG basin block off the Andhra coast.

Reliance owns 90 percent in the venture, while Niko Resources of Canada holds the remainder. In the east coast, about six to seven belts are rich in gas and oil. So far, India has drilled about 0.16 wells per 1,000 sq km, which is very less as compared to 50-60 wells per 1,000 km in West Asia.

The demand for oil and gas is rising 30 per cent per annum. “We are importing about 95 to 96 per cent of our demand. The commencement of production by Cairn Energy will cater to 25 per cent of the demand,” Sibal later told reporters in Gandhinagar today.

Talking about the ongoing roadshows for bidding of hydrocarbon blocks under the New Exploration Licensing Policy VIII, Sibal said that the response has been very good and on an average about 60 companies participated in the overseas roadshows.

Sibal said he was happy with the decision of auditing gas-field costs by the Comptroller and Auditor General of India.

Asked if the Ambani feud will impact NELP VIII, he said that any corporate feud will have a negative impact anywhere in the world.


Src: Business-Standard.com <RIL's gas output may be 4 times the estimate>

Forbes — The 50 Top Microfinance Institutions ( an old article)

THIS ARTICLE MIGHT BE A OLD ONE(2 yr ago).....

BUT WILL GIVE SOME DETAILS ABOUT

MICRO FINANCE INSTITUTIONS IN THE WORLD...

THIS ARTICLE WAS PUBLISHED BY

WWW.FORBES.COM


ForbesThe 50 Top Microfinance Institutions







Microfinance
The 50 Top Microfinance Institutions
Matthew Swibel 12.20.07, 6:00 PM ET

Rank Name Country Scale Efficiency Risk Returns
1 ASA Bangladesh 14 83 56 40
2 Bandhan (Society and NBFC) India 108 49 42 1
3 Banco do Nordeste Brazil 46 27 213 25
4 Fundación Mundial de la Mujer Bucaramanga Colombia 58 72 193 1
5 FONDEP Micro-Crédit Morocco 119 26 196 1
6 Amhara Credit and Savings Institution Ethiopia 56 126 118 42
7 Banco Compartamos, S.A., Institución de Banca Múltiple Mexico 15 24 295 11
8 Association Al Amana for the Promotion of Micro-Enterprises Morocco Morocco 17 212 133 1
9 Fundación Mundo Mujer Popayán Colombia 53 181 141 1
10 Fundación WWB Colombia - Cali Colombia 27 206 155 4
11 Consumer Credit Union 'Economic Partnership' Russia 82 300 19 1
12 Fondation Banque Populaire pour le Micro-Credit Morocco 59 126 219 1
13 Microcredit Foundation of India India 75 142 7 185
14 EKI Bosnia and Herzegovina 66 102 242 1
15 Saadhana Microfin Society India 263 79 73 1
16 Jagorani Chakra Foundation Bangladesh 136 176 128 1
17 Grameen Bank Bangladesh 8 280 100 62
18 Partner Bosnia and Herzegovina 64 169 230 1
19 Grameen Koota India 209 106 156 1
20 Caja Municipal de Ahorro y Crédito de Cusco Peru 48 99 222 119
21 Bangladesh Rural Advancement Committee Bangladesh 10 159 126 205
22 AgroInvest Serbia 84 195 222 1
23 Caja Municipal de Ahorro y Crédito de Trujillo Peru 20 163 220 101
23 Sharada's Women's Association for Weaker Section India 229 207 55 13
24 MIKROFIN Banja Luka Bosnia and Herzegovina 60 240 205 1
25 Khan Bank (Agricultural Bank of Mongolia LLP) Mongolia 19 149 280 59
26 INECO Bank Armenia 96 173 202 39
27 Fondation Zakoura Morocco 51 268 194 1
28 Dakahlya Businessmen's Association for Community Development Egypt 200 215 102 1
29 Asmitha Microfin Ltd. India 80 254 73 111
30 Credi Fe Desarrollo Microempresarial S.A. Ecuador 28 252 206 34
31 Dedebit Credit and Savings Institution Ethiopia 50 246 80 154
32 MI-BOSPO Tuzla Bosnia and Herzegovina 128 120 283 1
33 Fundacion Para La Promocion y el Desarrollo Nicaragua 173 89 171 100
34 Kashf Foundation Pakistan 123 194 219 1
35 Shakti Foundation for Disadvantaged Women Bangladesh 170 221 151 1
36 enda inter-arabe Tunisia 198 90 257 1
37 Kazakhstan Loan Fund Kazakhstan 120 118 320 1
38 Integrated Development Foundation Bangladesh 300 134 140 1
39 Microcredit Organization Sunrise Bosnia and Herzegovina 114 103 341 17
40 FINCA - ECU Ecuador 125 138 264 54
41 Caja Municipal de Ahorro y Crédito de Arequipa Peru 23 126 220 215
42 Crédito con Educación Rural Bolivia 135 152 298 1
43 BESA Fund Albania 109 135 345 1
44 SKS Microfinance Private Limited India 61 395 141 1
45 Development and Employment Fund Jordan 83 388 135 1
46 Programas para la Mujer - Peru Peru 292 82 242 1
47 Kreditimi Rural i Kosoves LLC (formerly Rural Finance Project of Kosovo) Kosovo 213 158 247 1
48 BURO, formerly BURO Tangail Bangladesh 137 207 186 91
49 Opportunity Bank A.D. Podgorica Serbia 49 234 319 23
50 Sanasa Development Bank Sri Lanka 86 206 93 241


Forbes' first-ever list of the World's Top 50 Microfinance Institutions were chosen from a field of 641 micro-credit providers. The list was prepared by the Microfinance Information Exchange ( www.themix.org) under the direction of Forbes magazine. To qualify, the institutions must have made available their audited financials and must have passed review by a Forbes panel of advisers.
This sortable table gives the rank (out of 641) for the top institutions according to scale, which is based on the size of their gross loan portfolio; efficiency, which considers operating expense and the cost per borrower as a percent of the gross national income per capita of their country of operation; risk, which looks at the quality of their loan portfolios, measured as the percent of the portfolio at risk greater than 30 days; and return, which is measured as a combination of return on equity and return on assets. Each category is equally weighted for an institution's overall ranking.
Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next >

Microfinance Movement


VERY INTERESTING ARTICLE.... THIS WILL VERY USEFUL FOR SELF HELP GROUPS, ENTREPRENEURS AND ETC.


Source:FORBES.com < ForbesThe 50 Top Microfinance Institutions >

Check out the top 10 highest salary-earners of India Inc

Check out the top 10 highest salary-earners of India Inc

The list of highest salary-earners
20 Sep 2009, 1120 hrs IST


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The best paid individuals in the country are promoters of their respective companies, says a survey by SundayET. The list of highest salary-earners is led by Anil Ambani, the head of Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group, who draws a salary of over Rs 30 crore per annum.

Flanking the junior Ambani at the top are Malvinder Mohan Singh of Ranbaxy who later sold the company to Daiichi and chairman of telecom giant Bharti Airtel, Sunil Bharti Mittal.

Image Courtesy: Reuters



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Check out the top 10 steel stocks


Top 10 steel stocks
20 Sep 2009, 0633 hrs IST


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After seeing a decline in the demand, the steel industry is witnessing revival. During the last quarter, both production and consumption of finished steel went up by around 3% and 6%. Steel demand in the domestic market is expected to grow further on the back of high demand from infrastructure sector. Since the steel prices have also gone up, however marginally, it will help increase the revenues of steel companies. Other sectors such as auto and consumer durable, which are buyers, are as well seeing revival in their demand.

Following are the top 10 steel stocks based on three-month returns as on September 18, 2009 on BSE.


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Top 10 stocks attracting MF money

Top 10 stocks attracting MF money
20 Sep 2009, 0449 hrs IST


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Money managers handling mutual funds are playing it safe and betting on the top 10 stocks in the bourses, ensuring that their funds perform in line with the overall market. In fact, these blue-chip companies are attracting 28% of mutual fund investment in the equity market.

According to a SundayET analysis, out of the Rs 143,860 cr being invested in stocks by mutual funds, as much as Rs 40,246 cr has been invested in just 10 scrips — Reliance Industries, Oil & Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC), Bharti Airtel, State Bank of India (SBI), ICICI Bank, Infosys Technologies, Larsen & Toubro (L&T), Bharat Heavy Electricals (BHEL), Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) and HDFC Bank. FULL STORY

Click NEXT to see the list of top 10 stocks attracting MF investments.



Source: Economic Times