Promoting India Latin America Collaboration

Foreign air cargo players upbeat about Indian industry, to add capacity

The Economic Times

Indian air cargo industry does not seem to suffer from the kind of tumultuous upheaval that air passenger industry is subjected to now-a-days. In
fact, air cargo movement in the country is going to gather further momentum with international airlines planning to increase their capacities into Indian market.

Carriers from the Middle East like Emirates are expanding to India and are also offering onward connections from the Gulf. Egypt Air, British Airways and some carriers from China are also expected to increase their connections to India.

Thanks to these capacity augmentation programme of airlines, industry sources expect, cargo movement will gain momentum with increased capacity to support export of pharmaceuticals, vaccines, garments, chemicals, meat, fruits, vegetables, etc. to Middle East, Africa, Europe and America.
Read the rest of this entry »

Popularity: 3% [?]

European Scientists: ‘Let’s Set Up A Global Solar Energy Grid’

Makes sense for the Indian, Brazilian and Mexican scientists to get behind this.
Triple Pundit

The ground tone at the recent European Science Foundation conference about Nanotechnology for Sustainable Energy was overly clear about it; Europe is ready to accelerate development of nano technologies. The conference focused on solar rather than other sustainable energy sources such as wind, because that is where nanotechnology is most applicable and also because solar energy conversion holds the greatest promise as a long-term replacement of fossil fuels.

Solar energy can be harvested directly to generate electricity or to yield fuels such as hydrogen for use in engines.
Such fuels can also in turn be used indirectly to generate electricity in conventional power stations. “The potential of solar power is much, much larger in absolute numbers than that of wind,” according to Professor Bengt Kasemo, who chaired the conference and who is attached to the Chalmers University of Technology.

If solar energy is harvested where it is most abundant, and distributed on a global net (easy to say – and a hard but not impossible task to do) it will be enough to replace a large fraction of today’s fossil-based electricity generation,” said Kasemo. “It also would solve the day/night problem and therefore reduce storage needs because the sun always shines somewhere.”

Technorati Tags:

Popularity: 4% [?]

Intelligent Power Transmission

GOOD

Wind turbines and solar panels may be the sexy, new stars of a clean energy future, but they’ll be nothing but a side note unless the grid that powers them gets a much-needed makeover.

While it’s widely noted that a new, national “smart grid” is a fundamental step in the spread of clean, renewable energy projects, there’s little chatter about building the grid itself. Why? Well, as Worldchanging founder Alex Steffen notes: infrastructure is boring. He has a point, but we better start talking.

Last month I listened to a panel of energy experts explain to the New York City Council’s Infrastructure Task Force that Gotham’s grid simply couldn’t handle a proposed new supply of electricity flowing in from rooftop solar and offshore wind. Why? Because our current grid is dumb and wildly inefficient.

A blind system of transmission lines and converters, today’s grid funnels electricity one-way—from big centralized power plants to our factories, streetlights, shops, and homes. The utilities can’t detect fluctuations in energy demand; so, to ensure there are no shortages, the power plants run at full tilt, burning greenhouse gas-emitting fossil fuels around the clock. Not to mention, there is a lot of juice lost from coal-fired plant to the socket–5 to 10 percent due to “line loss” in the transmission wires alone. It’s also dreadfully vulnerable to disruptions, whether a break in the system—like a heavy branch taking down a roadside line—or an influx of power from an unexpected source. That’s bad news anyone who wants to plug his solar panels and sell electricity back to the grid.

[A] smart grid would be networks, microprocessors and digital sensing technologies, a “web” of clever, hi-tech components that will be as flexible as it is intelligent. (The Wall Street Journal recently drew up a handy interactive model of such a system.) Supercomputers will let the utilities predict and manage system-wide demand and capacity, with batteries and other storage mechanisms ensuring that there’s always enough power to handle consumers’ needs. Power from distributed carbon-free sources such as rooftop solar, wind turbines, and combined heat and power systems will feed into the grid without causing breakdowns, so customers will be able to buy electricity for their homes and businesses, as well as sell power they generate back. “Smart meters” in buildings and homes will show the real-time cost of energy and assure that those that energy contributed to the grid receive payment. These distributed energy sources will require power to travel less distance, eliminating some electricity waste or “line loss.” Finally, internal building controls will adjust power demand, and new substations will take feedback from sensors along the transmission lines to better route electricity flow.

Popularity: 4% [?]

Wood scarcity hurting Indian paper sector

The Economic Times

Paper demand in India is increasing nearly 8% annually and supply has not been able to keep pace. Globally also paper capacity is shrinking. Wood
prices, stable for several years, are going up due to farmer revolts over plantation land in South America, exorbitant export duty on wood by Russia, warm weather in Scandinavia reducing forest harvest, illegal forest cutting in Indonesia and forest environmental issues in Canada, the US, Finland and Sweden. In India no greenfield wood based capacity has been added for more than two decades. No MNC or international paper maker has set up paper making capacity in India though other BRIC nations — Brazil, Russia and China — have attracted huge investments in this sector.

Wood is a key raw material for paper making and India is a wood deficient nation. Landed cost of wood has risen sharply in last few years. World Bank has estimated India’s timber supply deficit as 39 million m3 (cubic meter) in 2006. (M3 is a unit for expressing wood quantity. Wood can also be expressed in MT but the problem is of moisture. In a standing tree moisture is almost 50% of total weight which evaporate slowly after cutting. M3 does not change by moisture content. One m3 is normally equivalent to 0.7 to 0.75 MT on standing tree basis.)
Read the rest of this entry »

Popularity: 4% [?]

Economic crisis hits as Brazil builds

 Los Angeles Times

[I]n recent weeks, the credit crunch has begun to affect plans near and dear to Lula’s heart, including a $250-billion Growth Acceleration Program in partnership with private industry. The plan was designed to make up for a 25-year deficit in public works construction since currency devaluations and hyperinflation plagued Brazil in the 1980s and 1990s.

Central Bank President Henrique Meirelles, who last month said the nation had enough reserves to protect the currency, is taking a more cautious tone these days. He told reporters Friday the “situation is very, very serious. We should stop making jokes about it.”

The gravity became evident Friday, when the leader of a 160-member group of the nation’s largest contractors, known by its initials ABDIB, pleaded with Lula to establish a $5-billion emergency loan fund to provide short-term credit for infrastructure projects already in progress or about to begin construction.

“Credit is closing down or getting expensive,” said spokesman Jose Casadei of ABDIB. He added that $40 billion in hydroelectric projects, some situated in the Amazon, were among those in jeopardy.

Last week, Brazil announced it was putting off an auction for building the $3.5-billion Rio Madeira high-tension power line stretching from the Amazon basin to the outskirts of Sao Paulo. State-controlled oil company Petrobras indicated it may delay a deadline for proposals from companies interested in exploring a promising offshore field called Pre-salt, a project that could put Brazil in the major league of oil exporters.

Read the rest of this entry »

Popularity: 3% [?]

Laying foundations of a world of green buildings in India

The Financial Express

Green construction is getting popular by the day. Today, green buildings covering 67 million sq ft are being constructed all over the country, up from the 20,000 sq ft in 2003, according to the CII-Godrej Green Building Council, Hyderabad. The figure is expected to be one billion sq ft by 2014.

Developed by the US Green Building Council, LEED or the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design is a green building rating system, which has standards for environmentally sustainable construction.

Green buildings are costlier than conventional buildings because builders typically factors in the extra costs incurred in procuring eco-friendly material, glazed glass, twin flow toilets, solar paneling etc. In the longer run, green buildings prove cheaper, though. Explains Jain, “Green buildings are 3-20% costlier to construct, but it gets paid back in 3-7 years.”

While every 20,000 sq ft of a centrally air-conditioned shopping mall or commercial complex consumes about 150-160 units of power per hour, green buildings consume about 30-50% less energy and 30-70% less water with the help of eco-friendly material, better design and maintenance and waste disposal, resulting in reduction of operating costs for such buildings.

Green buildings also helpful in the fight against climate change. Says Varun Pahwa, vice-president, business development, Dessicant Rotors International, “Buildings are energy-guzzlers and account for 30-40% of global energy use. It means improving energy efficiency itself can help reduce global warming.”

Read the rest of this entry »

Popularity: 3% [?]

Larsen and Toubro to foray into Brazil by 2009

Describing Brazil as a place with spiraling inflation is ridiculous. Some copy editing mishap I  presume.
The Economic Times

Larsen and Toubro Ltd (L&T), India’s largest engineering and construction conglomerate, will enter Brazil and South Africa by early next year.

“We are planning to foray into South Africa and Brazil in all verticals – oil and gas, cement, paper and everything possible,” a top company official who is also responsible for business development in Brazil and South Africa told IANS on condition of anonymity.

“We should be stationed in the country by this year end or early next year,” he said, even while admitting that the planning was at a nascent stage, and that the exact way forward was to be crystallised.

When asked why the company had chosen Brazil where not only are operating costs high but there is also spiralling inflation in the economy, he said: “Profit margins will touch a new high as we can keep our prices higher as compared to any other country.”

The official said the company’s bottomlines are already under pressure due to the liquidity crunch that as pushed up capital costs.

L&T is a Mumbai-based Indian conglomerate, with diverse interests such as construction, hydraulic equipment, electrical and electronic power services, fertiliser projects, medical electronics, financial services and information technology.

Popularity: 4% [?]

Latin America Bets on Infrastructure

as-coa.org

At a time of global financial insecurity, Latin American countries have deepened economic ties through a series of large-scale infrastructure project connecting countries and oceans. While political integration also grows through multilateral organizations such as the Union of South American Nations and Mercosur, another sign of stronger bonds rests with governments’ demonstrated willingness to pledge billions and partner with neighbors to bring major construction projects to fruition.

Brazil stands as a leader on spearheading such infrastructure projects, shown by two mega projects through which it can gain access to the Pacific Ocean. In partnership with Ecuador, Brazil launched the $2 billion Manta-Manaus project that includes highways and waterways and stands as a transportation alternative for the busy Panama Canal. At the same time, the governments of Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and his Peruvian counterpart Alan García will oversee a project connecting Peru’s southern ports of Ilo, Maratani, and San Juan de Marcona with Brazil’s Rio Branco and Madeira River’s Porto Velho. As the Economist notes, these stronger ties come with another benefit for Brazilian firms: By producing sugarcane-based ethanol in Peru, the Brazilian ethanol industry can take advantage of Peru’s free-trade agreement with Washington to tap into the U.S. market, which remains elusive for Brazilians due to a hefty import tax.

A September 30 summit in the Amazonian city of Manaus brought together the leaders of Brazil, Ecuador, Venezuela, and Bolivia to discuss how to connect Caracas and La Paz via highway with the infrastructure projects underway with Peru and Brazil.

Projects are also flourishing in the Caribbean and Central America. Colombia, Panama, and Venezuela recently announced a new venture called Gran Ruta de las Américas, a road that will allow Central American visitors to drive to Cartagena and further east into Venezuela.

Technorati Tags:

Popularity: 1% [?]

Transportation Costs Are Stunting Exports in Brazil and LatAm

Over long distances, hauling freight by rail is the most economical option. Private companies in LatAm need to put building and upgrading rail lines to ports on the governmental agenda. Or do it themselves in conjunction with overseas investment partners where possible.

Brazil – Brazzil Mag

Latin American exports’ growth depends more on lower transport costs than on reduction of tariffs. This warning is in research “Unclogging the Arteries: A Report on the Impact of Transport Costs on Latin American and Caribbean Trade.”

Produced by the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), the study includes figures for nine countries: Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Paraguay and Uruguay.

The study should be presented on Wednesday, October 1st, in Brazilian capital Brasília, during seminar “Transport for Trade and Regional Integration”, promoted by the National Confederation of Industries (CNI) in partnership with the IDB. The participants should discuss relations between transport costs and foreign trade in Latin America and propose solutions to the logistics bottlenecks that affect Brazilian exports.

According to the study, a 10% reduction in the value of tariffs would increase exports by these countries by less than 2%. On the other hand, if the same reduction were made in transport costs, foreign sales to the United States would grow 39%. This calculation considers stability of other factors, like exchange rates and economic growth.

To IDB economist Mauricio Mesquita Moreira, one of the authors of the research, the governments of the countries in Latin America are more concerned with tariff and non-tariff barriers and forget other greater obstacles, like transport. “The trade policy in the region is out of focus,” criticizes Moreira.

The report also shows that if the countries in Latin America reduced freight costs by 10%, there would be trade growth of over 20% in the region. In case the reduction was in tariffs, the growth would be just 10%. The reduction of transport costs would benefit products made in Brazil, Chile, Ecuador, Peru and Uruguay and ore and metal exports by Argentina, Colombia and Paraguay.

Latin America spends 7% of export value on freight, almost double the 3.7% spent by the United States. In the case of Brazil, this cost is equivalent to 5.5% of the product price.

“Despite being lower than the Latin American average, the country has been spending much more with transport than the United States,” stated Moreira. “Customs costs are not the main obstacles to foreign trade, with a few exceptions, as is the case with alcohol, cotton and orange. In most products, transport cost may be as much as 50% higher than tariffs.”

The researcher points out that there is space for reduction in transport costs. However, he recognizes that the products exported by the countries in Latin America require greater freight allocation, which ends up increasing costs.

“The comparison between exports of one dollar of chips and one dollar of soy is very different, as the latter is significantly larger. If we divide the weight of the product by its value, transport cost is much higher for primary products than for electronic products,” he explained.

Transport costs in Latin American are almost double that of the United States. According to the study, Argentina spends 22% more than the North Americans, Chile twice, and Paraguay, over four times. Latin American and Caribbean exports to the United States pay ocean freight almost 70% higher than those paid by Dutch products.

The report also shows that around 30% of the transport costs in Latin America are due to port inefficiency. To Moreira, this is the most important figure for the establishment of sector public policies.

“One of the main causes for inefficiency is port competition, which is smaller in Latin America than in the United States and the Netherlands,” he pointed out. “In this area, it is possible to reduce government interference, like the agreements that restrict coastwise navigation.”

Another obstacle is in air imports. According to the research, airfreight costs have grown faster in Latin America than in China and the rest of the world. Freight costs in the Caribbean in 2006, for example, were 36% higher than in 1995. In the same period, China kept the cost below the 1995 figure, despite higher oil prices.

Moreira adds that, in Brazil, airfreight is almost three times more expensive than in the United States. Another problem is that consumers and producers are not informed of these costs.

Popularity: 12% [?]

The infrastructure boom – Building BRICs of growth

The Economist

Compounding this year’s figure, Morgan Stanley predicts that emerging economies will spend $22 trillion (in today’s prices) on infrastructure over the next ten years, of which China will account for 43% (see left-hand chart). China is already spending around 12% of its GDP on infrastructure. Indeed, China has spent more (in real terms) in the past five years than in the whole of the 20th century. Last year Brazil launched a four-year plan to spend $300 billion to modernise its road network, power plants and ports. The Indian government’s latest five-year plan has ambitiously pencilled in nearly $500 billion in infrastructure projects. Russia, the Gulf states and other oil exporters are all pouring part of their higher oil revenues into fixed investment.

Good infrastructure has always played a leading role in economic development, from the roads and aqueducts of ancient Rome to Britain’s railway boom in the mid-19th century. But never before has infrastructure spending been so large as a share of world GDP. This is partly because more countries are now industrialising than ever before, but also because China and others are investing at a much brisker pace than rich economies ever did. Even at the peak of Britain’s railway mania in the 1840s, total infrastructure investment was only around 5% of GDP.

Infrastructure investment can yield big economic gains. Building roads or railways immediately boosts output and jobs, but it also helps to spur future growth—provided the money is spent wisely. Better transport helps farmers to get their produce to cities, and manufacturers to export their goods overseas. Countries with the lowest transport costs tend to be more open to foreign trade and so enjoy faster growth. Clean water and sanitation also raise the quality of human capital, thereby lifting labour productivity. The World Bank estimates that a 1% increase in a country’s infrastructure stock is associated with a 1% increase in the level of GDP. Other studies have concluded that East Asia’s much higher investment in infrastructure explains a large part of its faster growth than Latin America.

A recent report by Goldman Sachs argues that infrastructure spending is not just a cause of economic growth, but a consequence of it. As people get richer and more of them live in towns, the demand for electricity, transport, sanitation and housing increases. This mutually reinforcing relationship leads to higher investment and growth.

Related articles:
BRIC growth prospects
Inflation won’t derail BRIC growth

Technorati Tags: ,

Popularity: 8% [?]

Sitio Temporalmente Suspendido

Este sitio está temporalmente suspendido.

Por favor contacte a Creixems Web Studio para la reactivación