Promoting India Latin America Collaboration

Indian Infrastructure sector to attract over US$ 345.28 billion investment in 5 yrs

Infrastructure-Economy-News-The Economic Times

Eight infrastructure sectors, including power and road, are set to attract more than Rs 16 lakh crore (US$ 345.28 billion) investment in India between 2007-08 and 2011-12, but the global slowdown could impact potential of Special Economic Zones, according to Crisil research estimates.

The infrastructure areas – oil and gas, power, roads, ports, airports, railways, urban infrastructure and telecom — got 2.2 times less investment in the previous five-year plan.

Though rising cost of finance will be a challenge in the present situation of high interest rates and global slowdown, it won’t impact investments much as the infrastructural projects have large gestation period, the Crisil report said.

The report forecasts that between 2007-08 and 2011-12, power will grow at 60 per cent, roads at 100 per cent, airports at 400 per cent, ports by 160 per cent and railways to witness 250 per cent growth.

“There are three key reasons for being confident about investment in Indian infrastructure – improved institutional framework for enabling infrastructure investments, especially by the private sector; experience gained by governments, regulators and players regarding the process of participation through concessions in infrastructure projects,” Crisil Research Head Sachin Mathur said. Thirdly, improved project
execution and financial capabilities of players
, who can now handle multiple,
larger and more complex projects, he added.

Popularity: 2% [?]

Focus on Potential trade pact – Canada and Mercosur

Ottawa Citizen

A trade agreement between Canada and MERCOSUR is not just possible, it’s necessary, said Pedro Vaz Ramela, Uruguay’s deputy minister of foreign affairs.

Mr. Ramela was in Ottawa this week for the third round of Canada-Uruguay bilateral foreign policy consultations. He met with Len Edwards, deputy minister of foreign affairs. The deputy minister said he’d consider the visit successful if he left with a clearer roadmap for future conversations under the same bilateral framework.

Uruguayan officials have, in the past, come to Ottawa to lobby for a trade deal between Canada and MERCOSUR, a regional trade agreement that involves Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay principally but also Venezuela, which is waiting to become a full member. Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru are associate members while Mexico is an observer.

“We (MERCOSUR) proposed to have four or five conversations in the near future, one is with Canada. We think Canada-MERCOSUR should have priority. In the present situation, it’s time to move, to try to reach some new levels with some countries, or international actors, and one of them is Canada,” Mr. Vaz Ramela said.

Mr. Vaz Ramela said the economic cooperation between the two countries is already strong, but “it could be better.” Uruguay, he pointed out, has recovered from an economic crisis in 2002 and has seen growth of seven per cent per year recently.

“This is, for us, key because Uruguay has probably one of the best environments for investment in the region. For Canada, it’s a chance to use Uruguay as a platform for the sub-region. We are, in a way, a gateway for the sub-region of MERCOSUR. It could be interesting for Canadian businessmen to take a look at Uruguay, because of the legal framework for investment, the political decisions of the government, the geopolitical situation and our expertise in terms of services and logistics, as well as our growing ports and transport system.
Uruguay is an attractive and safe place. Canada could take profit of our vision for a better relationship in various areas.”

Popularity: 2% [?]

Six firms vie for huge India telecoms order

Reuters

Telecoms equipment makers Ericsson and Nokia Siemens Networks [NSN.UL] are competing with four other firms in a tender potentially worth $9 billion to provide wireless infrastructure to India’s Bharat Sanchar Nigam Ltd (BSNL).

Bidders in the tender for a total of 93 million GSM lines, the world’s largest such order, include Huawei Technologies, Alcatel-Lucent and Nortel Networks (NT.TO: Quote, Profile, Research) (NT.N: Quote, Profile, Research), BSNL Chairman Kuldeep Goyal said.

State-run BSNL’s lack of infrastructure has hampered its capacity to add wireless subscribers, and it has fewer mobile users than private-sector rivals Bharti Airtel Ltd, Reliance Communications and Vodafone Plc-controlled Vodafone Essar.

India is the world’s second-largest mobile market, with nearly 300 million wireless users in July and more than 8 million users signing up each month.

Popularity: 3% [?]

India’s Larsen and Toubro gets $160 mln order from Petrobras

Reuters

Larsen & Toubro Ltd,  India’s top engineering and construction company, said on Wednesday it had received an order worth $160 million from Brazil’s Petrobras.

The order, for 10 reactors and 12 coke drums, is expected to be delivered in 2010/11, it said.

Popularity: 4% [?]

Trade in Latin America: More Countries Are Turning to Their Neighbors for Business

Most major Latin American cities (Lima, Caracas, Sao Paulo, Rio, Buenos Aires) , were founded on or near ports by the colonial Spaniards/Portuguese to facilitate the export of gold, silver, and other commodities to Europe and later North America. So, there has been an export-oriented infrastructure in place for 450 years. Infrastructure like roads, rail, to faciliate internal trade within and among Latin America was almost completely neglected. This condition has persisted into the present day

When I lived in Venezuela in late 2004/early 2005 – making a phone call to the US was 10c/minute but calling neighbouring Colombia was more than a $1/minute. Round-trip airfare from Caracas to Bogota/Panama City/Quito were double or more the price compare to Caracas/Miami – though flying distance was comparable or less.

Thankfully, with more infrastructure projects like the TransAndean and Transoceanic highway and more startup airlines like Azul costs to intra-LatinAmerican trade will keep falling. What is needed is more long-distance rail networks for both freight and passengers.
Universia Knowledge@Wharton

According to a new report by ALADI, the Latin American Integration Association — an organization that comprises 12 Latin American countries, including Mexico and Cuba — there has been a significant increase in the volume of intraregional trade. “Exports have increased by 31.5% and imports have grown by 28.1%” during the first quarter of 2008 alone, when intraregional trade grew to about $6 billion.

Several factors are responsible for this new trade dynamic, says the report, which uses data supplied by the trade and investment agencies in each country. On the one hand, the devaluation of the dollar has pushed up most Latin American currencies, inspiring companies to look for new alternatives when it comes to pricing and logistics. Add to this the increase in the global price of petroleum and many basic commodities produced in the region. This trend has provided an opportunity for producers of those commodities to boost their revenues, and it has raised the region’s Gross Domestic Product. During the first quarter of 2008, the average GDP growth rate in Latin America was 5.2%, according to ALADI.

Jorge Alberto Velásquez, professor of international trade at the Bolivarian Pontifical University of Medellín (Colombia) believes that the slow pace at which countries like Colombia have forged links with their neighbors can be described as an “enormous waste” of an opportunity. Velásquez notes that Colombia’s failure to participate in Latin American markets “demonstrates, to some extent, insufficient action and energy when it comes to [doing business with] the rest of the neighborhood before jumping into other markets further away.”

When it comes to the seven leading countries of the region, Colombia’s share of intraregional trade varies from 12.4% of Venezuela’s bilateral trade, to a mere 0.2% in the case of Mexico. In 2007, trade with Colombia represented 10.3% of Ecuador’s entire imports. In Peru, that figure was 4%; in Chile, 0.9%; in Brazil, 0.4%, and in Argentina, only 0.2%. Velásquez believes these figures are very low if you take into account the fact that these countries have trade agreements that lower tariff duties and reduce non-tariff barriers to market access.

“Chile provides a striking case; we [Colombians] have a treaty [with Chile] that permits 97% of all Colombian products to enter duty free. And yet, our share of that country’s total imports isn’t even one percent,” explains Velásquez. He believes that the best opportunities for Latin American companies are in other markets in the region, where cultural and linguistic affinities as well as geographical proximity can make it easier to sell.

Velásquez says that this opportunity has been wasted, however, because “there is a shortage of trade intelligence, confidence and knowledge of neighboring markets.” In addition, the mass media in Latin America have focused on the region’s trade agreements with the United States and Europe, drawing the attention of local business people away from neighboring markets.

However, there are a wide range of political viewpoints in Latin America today. That is the main barrier that needs to be overcome in order to achieve a higher level of regional integration, says Francisco Giraldo, a professor of international finance at Colombia’s Externado University.

Giraldo believes that when it comes to strengthening these markets, the main problem is “the political variations and changes in these countries, which lead to too many changes in trade flows.” For example, Giraldo notes, two countries may have a good political relationship with each other, under which trade prospers, but when that relationship deteriorates, the first thing that suffers is trade. This has been in the case recently when tensions grew between Colombia and Venezuela, between Bolivia and Peru, and between Chile and Bolivia — all because of verbal confrontations between those countries’ presidents. “Politics has a great deal of influence on trade in Latin America, unlike the situation in Europe. There, given the high level of integration, no matter who governs those countries the economic dynamics remain the same.”

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Popularity: 2% [?]

Copsa eyes US$3bn low altitude Trasandino tunnel, suggests modifications

BNAmericas , Chile news

Members of Chilean concessionaires association Copsa have met with Argentine firm CASA and Brazilian group Camargo Corrêa to express their interest in taking part in the project to build a low altitude Trasandino rail tunnel connecting Chile and Argentina, Copsa president Herman Chadwick told BNamericas.

The project, promoted by CASA and Camargo Correa, was declared of public interest by Argentine President Cristina Fernández on September 3, three weeks after the Chilean government announced the same endorsement.

The firms can now begin to carry out technical, financial and environmental feasibility studies to draw up a preliminary design, and authorities could launch a tender as early as late 2008, an official from Chile’s public works ministry told BNamericas.

Copsa is interested in including a highway tunnel in the project, said Chadwick, adding that the additional cost would be minor, considering the project’s US$3bn price tag.

In terms of construction time, Chadwick said great advances have been made over the last few years. While tunnels previously took 7-8 years to build, today works can last 7-8 months.

The project consists of building a rail tunnel near the Los Libertadores international pass that would guarantee year-round multimodal transport across the Andes, benefitting trade between Asia and countries such as Argentina, Uruguay, Brazil and Paraguay.

Popularity: 2% [?]

Helix Wind, Inc. Receives $10.6MM Firm Order From South America

MarketWatch

Helix Wind, Inc., a San Diego, CA based manufacturer of small wind turbines, today entered into a firm sales agreement with EDAL RE, Inc., (Energy Development Argentina Limited), a leading cell phone tower construction and services provider and renewable energy distributor in Argentina.

EDAL is a leading developer of distributed power generation solutions for wireless communications towers in remote areas and in regions with unreliable power supplies, as well as for irrigation and liquids pumping applications. The company plans on targeting markets in Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay, Chile, Brazil, Aruba and the Antilles. The Agreement, which provides for the purchase of at least 1,500 units over the next three years, reflects the growing demand for renewable energy solutions in South America, and the increasing cost of petroleum based mobile power generation.

Popularity: 1% [?]

Brasil se transforma en la nueva frontera para las mineras y siderúrgicas del mundo

– lanacion.com

La lucha global para conseguir materias primas está creando una nueva dinámica en la siderurgia: los productores se están convirtiendo en proveedores y los proveedores en productores.

En un esfuerzo por depender menos de los gigantes mineros que controlan el mineral de hierro del mundo y que han subido sus precios más de un 80% este año, un creciente número de siderúrgicas ha salido a excavar sus propios minerales. A su vez, en una apuesta para crear un mercado cautivo y aprovechar la creciente demanda por acero, varios productores de mineral de hierro se están transformando en fabricantes de acero.

Los economistas dicen que el escaso suministro de mineral de hierro y otras materias primas está detrás de esta tendencia. “La principal diferencia entre hoy y, digamos, diez años atrás, es que no hay exceso de capacidad en el mercado,” afirma John Anton, economista del sector siderúrgico para Global Insight, una compañía de análisis y predicciones económicas. “Para que una compañía consiga lo que necesita, tiene que ofrecer un precio más alto que otra compañía.”

Este movimiento dirigido a controlar desde la producción de las materias primas hasta el producto final, proceso conocido como integración vertical, supone un regreso al modo en que la industria del acero operaba hace tres décadas, cuando era común que las siderúrgicas tuvieran sus propias minas. Después, las siderúrgicas concluyeron que el mejor camino para eludir la competencia extranjera era enfocarse en la producción de acero, así que empezaron a deshacerse de sus minas. Asimismo, la producción de acero ha sido tradicionalmente más rentable que la extracción de mineral de hierro.

El movimiento hacia una mayor integración vertical se ve con nitidez en Brasil, que tiene vastas reservas de mineral de hierro sin explotar o sin dueño. “Brasil es el lugar estratégico para la industria del acero,” dice Lakshmi Mittal, gerente general de ArcelorMittal, el mayor fabricante de acero del mundo por producción. “Tiene las materias primas. Tiene el mercado. Tiene el crecimiento.”

En la última semana, las siderúrgicas y las mineras han anunciado cuantiosas inversiones en Brasil, una economía de rápido crecimiento. ArcelorMittal informó que pagará US$ 810 millones por los activos de mineral de hierro brasileños de una minera londinense y aceptó desarrollar un puerto para embarcar el mineral.

Popularity: 2% [?]

Brazilian Minister Acknowledges Asymmetries in Mercosur

– Business – redOrbit

interview with Minister Marco Aurelio Garcia, special adviser to the Brazilian President’s Office on international affairs,

[Agencia Brasil] Thanks to the strengthening of the Brazilian economy and currency, our firms are expanding their business into the South American countries and expanding their industries into new markets. How do you view that process?

[Garcia] I view it as a positive factor, especially since we have two problems here. We currently have very unbalanced trade relations in Brazil’s favour. We have a trade balance surplus with every country in the region except Bolivia (because of the gas imports). This shows that trade relations often do not resolve the asymmetries existing between the South American economies; on the contrary, they even make them worse. One way in which we can compensate for that – aside from the multilateral mechanisms such as funds, infrastructure programmes, and financing that Brazil has been providing for the construction of public works in those countries – is precisely in the area of investments. And to a large extent, Brazil is being sought out to stimulate the countries that need investments.

[Agencia Brasil] Are there specific areas preferred by Brazil and its partners?

[Garcia] That depends greatly on the country. There are investments in the areas of petroleum, gas, and mining. Petrobras is present today in Argentina, Colombia, and Peru. We have mining companies such as the Rio Doce Vale Company, and we have a strong presence in the industrial area, and that is in our interest because one way to establish a more balanced relationship with the countries in the region is to help them move forward with an industrialization process – whether complementary to our industries or those of Argentina or on their own. Brazil has been greatly stimulating the industrial and agricultural development of Venezuela.

[Agencia Brasil] Does the model being designed by the Brazilian Government involve greater economic integration?

[Garcia] That is at least the movement that we have been trying to encourage. Our economy is a market economy; it is possible for us to stimulate investments – to guide them – but not to say where a particular factory is going to go. But government policies are fundamental on that point.

[Garcia] We are financing a tripartite public works project by Brazil, Bolivia, and Chile that would make it possible to open a road from Porto Alegre through Argentina to Chile. That will completely alter Pacific-Atlantic integration. Brazil has also opened an extremely important line of credit for the Bolivia Northward project and is prepared to finance the power transmission line from Itaipu to Asuncion in Paraguay.

[Garcia] Paraguay is a country with sizable agriculture, and we can provide agricultural cooperation. I have the impression that in Paraguay, the essential thing is to know whether the Paraguayans want to develop an industrial programme for their country. They have a very important asset, which is electricity: they have the highest amount of electricity per capita in the world. A big share of that electricity is exported, but it could be shifted to Paraguayan industry. I am sure there would be interest on the part of Brazilian businessmen, and a number of Brazilian firms are getting ready to announce investments there in the area of capital goods. I feel there is a possibility of that being extended to other sectors such as consumer goods for the domestic market and also for export. Another subject we have been discussing there even longer is the biofuel industry. It would be perfectly easy for them to begin producing ethanol and biodiesel.


[Garcia] Brazil has
signed a new automotive agreement with Argentina.
For the first time in
a long time, it is a six-year agreement, meaning that it creates
stability. The previous agreements were annual, so they had little
impact. Under this six-year agreement, one of the first effects we are
noting is that Argentina has now resumed its automobile production,
although it has lost many auto parts companies in recent years.
It is
possible, however, that the auto parts industry will come back because
that agreement, being of six years duration, has a number of potential
effects on the automotive industry. We accept that. The agreement will
be extended to Paraguay and Uruguay.
This means we would have the
possibility of seeing to it that Paraguay and Uruguay also share in
that division of labour.

Garcia] It establishes very favourable conditions for the process of
reindustrializing Argentina. The Brazilian automobile industry has
accepted it. To give you an idea, many companies that were in Cordoba
(Argentina) moved to Brazil, but they may very well return. Moreover,
we have the possibility of making Paraguay and Uruguay part of it. We
were talking to the Argentine minister about the possibility of
beginning a process of integration with the Argentine aeronautical
industry based on very sizable purchases that Argentina will make from
Embraer (Brazilian Aeronautics Company). Argentina’s aeronautical
industry was very important in the past.

Popularity: 4% [?]

High input costs could cause recession: Ratan Tata

Business Standard

Iron ore prices have increased by 85 per cent in the last year, while coking coal prices rose 200 per cent.

The global steel industry also faced pressure on their margins from the rise in costs, but these increases were absorbed by the market through steel price hikes, said Tata at the annual general meeting (AGM) of Tata Steel today.

“In the immediate future, steel prices will be dictated by the level of iron ore and coking coal prices, which continue to rise unabatedly. Unfortunately, most of the iron ore resources are controlled by three powerful international mining companies. They control about 70 per cent of the global iron ore and mineral resources whereas the 10 largest steel producers would account for only about 28 per cent of the total global steel output,” said Tata, who also heads the Investment Commission set up by the central government.

However, Tata stressed that steel would continue to be the foundation of economic activity as no construction could happen without steel.

“Demand for steel in the developing world will continue to be an important engine of growth. Internal demand for infrastructure and construction needs will continue to grow substantially in the years ahead in China, India and Brazil,” said Tata. The Indian economy, which is among the fastest growing in the world, would need an investment of $500 billion in the next five years to develop infrastructure.

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