A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, April 29, 2016
Mahindra to build India's first automobile shredding plant
The steering wheel of a Mahindra e2o electric car is seen in London, Britain April 15, 2016.
REUTERS/STEFAN WERMUTH
BY ADITI SHAH-Thu Apr 28, 2016
A unit of autos-to-technology group Mahindra intends to set up a network
of automobile shredding plants, an executive told Reuters on Thursday
after announcing plans to build India's first such facility with a state
firm.
India is considering introducing a policy to scrap old vehicles, like
the cash-for-clunkers programme the United States tried during the
global economic recession to boost auto sales.
India also plans to enforce stricter vehicular emission rules,
potentially opening up an opportunity for companies like Mahindra,
India's top utility vehicle maker by sales with a market capitalisation
of $17 billion, to recycle older cars and trucks.
Mahindra Intertrade will set up the first plant in partnership with
state-controlled MSTC Ltd near a port, aiming to begin operations within
a year, said Sumit Issar, Mahindra Intertrade's managing director.
Issar did not disclose exact investment plans but said the equipment to
scrap vehicles alone would cost more than 1 billion rupees ($15
million), apart from land and construction costs.
"I see a huge opportunity in India. The idea is to make the first plant
successful and then expand pan-India," Issar said, adding the company
was open to scrapping ships and machines too.
India currently does not have an organised car breaking industry, with
most of the dismantling done by independent workshops that do not have
the right tools for recycling.
As a result, most of the scrap needed by steelmakers and other
industries is imported. The planned shredding plant could replace
imported scrap and cut India's foreign exchange outflow, the steel
ministry said in a statement.
Though vehicles are typically licensed to run for only 15 years in
India, there are about 30 million vehicles on roads that pre-date 1990.
"Even if you take a percentage of that you can imagine the kind of feedstock you can get over a period of time," Issar said.
Issar did not detail the likely size of the plant, but said it would
need to be able to handle at least 100,000 units a year to be viable.
Mahindra Intertrade has the largest network of steel service centres in
India and processes automotive steel as well as electrical steel for
power and home appliance applications.
Setting up a shredding unit will feed into its own business and Mahindra
could also provide scrap to India's steelmakers and other industries,
said Issar.
($1 = 66.5015 Indian rupees)
(Reporting by Aditi Shah; Editing by Ruth Pitchford)

