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Showing posts with label business. Show all posts
Showing posts with label business. Show all posts

Oil-Fueled Kazakhstan Sees Fast Growth in Mid-Term

Written By Unknown on August 28, 2013 | 10:36:00 AM

ASTANA — Kazakhstan's oil-driven economy is forecast to grow by between 6 and 7.1 percent in 2014-18 when the Kashagan oilfield is expected to come onstream, Kazakh Economy and Budget Planning Minister Yerbolat Dosayev said Wednesday.

The vast Central Asian nation of 17 million, which holds 3 percent of the world's recoverable oil reserves and is the second largest post-Soviet oil producer after Russia, forecasts its gross domestic product to expand by 6 percent this year.

Gross domestic product (GDP) growth slowed to 5 percent last year from 7.5 percent in 2011.
"Mid-term economic growth will be supported by rising investment in industrial innovation projects and infrastructure, as well as the start of oil production at the Kashagan deposit and rising internal consumption," Dosayev told a government meeting. He did not elaborate on the innovation projects.
Kashagan, which lies in the Caspian Sea off western Kazakhstan, is the world's largest oil find in more than four decades. It is expected to produce its first oil by October.

Kazakhstan, the world's ninth largest country by area, is also a major producer and exporter of grain, industrial metals and uranium.

Dosayev said higher oil output was expected to offset sluggish demand for other Kazakh commodities in the mid-term.

Kazakhstan's oil output is forecast to increase to 83 million tons in 2014 from 82 million tonnes this year and is set to reach 110 million tonnes in 2018, he said.

"This year's tempo of GDP and industrial output growth have so far been in line with all our plans," Dosayev said. He said industrial output growth was forecast to edge down to 3.4 percent in 2014 from this year's 3.8 percent.

Kazakhstan's National Fund, replenished by windfall oil revenues, is forecast to increase from $93.9 billion in 2014 to $122.1 billion by 2016, Dosayev said.

Kazakhstan, Central Asia's largest economy, sees its nominal GDP rising from 38.6 trillion tenge ($253 billion) next year to 65.9 trillion tenge in 2018. GDP stood at $200 billion in 2012 and will reach $226 billion this year, official data showed.

Per capita GDP is forecast to rise from $14,600 in 2014 to $24,000 by 2018.

Saudi to turn to India and Sri Lanka for maids

Saudi Arabia is considering turning to India and Sri Lanka to meet soaring local demand for domestic workers following labour disputes with the Philippines and Indonesia and a decision to suspend hiring maids from Ethiopia.

Indonesia and the Philippines, among the largest maid supplier to the Middle East, have temporarily halted the travel of their domestic workers to Saudi Arabia following disputes over payment, mistreatment of maids by employers and other issues.

Several rounds of negotiations have so far failed to break the deadlock despite concessions by the Gulf Kingdom, including higher salaries for maids.

Saudi Arabia, the largest Arab economy and the world’s top oil exporter, banned the recruitment of Ethiopian housemaids last month following a series of deadly attacks by those maids on their employers.

One maid who killed a little Syrian girl told police she had committed the crime because she “was told so by an occult power.”

“There is a shortage of around 30 per cent in the supply of foreign domestic workers to Saudi Arabia because of the suspension of the recruitment of housemaids from Ethiopia and other countries,” said Mutlaq Al Hazmi, a member of the expatriate labour hiring committee at the Jeddah chamber of commerce and industry.

“There are plans to open the door for hiring domestic workers from India and Sri Lanka. I believe that this will make hiring maids from Indonesia unnecessary,” he was quoted as saying by Saudi newspapers on Wednesday.

Nearly two million housemaids from Asia and Africa work in Saudi Arabia, the largest base for expatriate domestic workers in the Middle East. (Source: Emirates 24/7)

SA hotels on 'world's best service' list

Written By Unknown on August 27, 2013 | 2:43:00 AM

Three Cape Town hotels have made it onto the "World's Best Service" list in the Africa and Middle East category in an international survey by the US edition of Travel and Leisure released in the magazine's June 2013 issue.

The Twelve Apostles Hotel & Spa took top spot, while the Cape Grace and the One & Only took second and fourth respectively.

The best service category of the magazine's annual "World Best Awards" survey aims to recognise the best hotels, resorts, airlines and cruise liners around the world as rated by its readers.

"Excellent service is a definitive factor in repeat visits by overseas travellers," Western Cape Finance, Economic Development and Tourism Minister Alan Winde said in a statement last week.

"I hope these awards serve as an inspiration to the Western Cape hospitality industry to consistently strive for the highest service levels. I am also confident these awards will encourage more international visitors to our world-class destination," Winde said.

Johannesburg's Saxon Boutique Hotel, Villas & Spa also featured on the best service list in the Africa and the Middle East category, scoring the same as the One & Only.

Singita Kruger National Park and Singita Sabi Sand also made their way onto the list, coming in at second and fifth respectively in the resorts and lodges category.

The overall results for best service were reached by surveying the general managers at the top 16 hotels in each region.

According to the results of this survey: 44% of general managers admit to using Google and Facebook to research guests prior to check-in; 31% ensure each guest is personally greeted by a manager upon arrival; 50% have a staff-to-guest ratio of at least 1.5 to 1; and 56% offer room service 24 hours a day.

via http://tinyurl.com/m7gav5d

Office Gossips - Do's and Dont's

Written By Unknown on August 26, 2013 | 8:42:00 AM

Chennai autos to have GPS, panic button

Soon, people in the city will get to travel in autos that have meters fitted with GPS and a panic button that passengers can press to alert officials about erring auto drivers. But this enforcement system may only be viable if there is tremendous logistical investment from the government, as recent experience in Delhi shows.

At the beginning of this year, the transport department in New Delhi had mandated that autos be fitted with panic buttons and GPS, but many users there say the panic buttons never worked. “It becomes difficult to constantly monitor 50,000 autos. With so much mapping and location information sent every minute from all of them, the maintenance costs are huge. So most times, the GPS would be off,” said a transport official.

The panic button is to ensure the safety of commuters – a passenger just needs to press it when she senses danger from stalkers or the driver himself. The GPS installed in the vehicle will immediately send details about the location and vehicle to the control room, which will send alerts to the police and transport officials.

The experience of Namma Auto, a city-based initiative that runs autos on metered charges and has panic buttons and GPS facilities, may help. 

“Considering we need at least 10 people to monitor the movement of 100 autos, for 70,000 autos, we will need a full-fledged control room with at least 400 trained professionals and secured servers that have dynamic content,” says M. Pramod, an IIT-Madras professor. “What happens if the driver switches off the panic button? There should be a way for the passengers to complain,” he says.
The transport department and police will need to decide who will take the initiative to reach the spot when they get the panic signal. “This has to be done quickly, otherwise it will be a huge failure,” said Prof. Pramod.

The system should also address complaints of passengers regarding exorbitant charges, said Smitha Sadasivan, assistant coordinator of disability legislation unit, Vidya Sagar, who feels persons with disabilities are fleeced by auto drivers and often even denied services.

According to sources here, tenders will soon be announced for meters embedded with the GPS kit that will have the GPRS facility, panic buttons and automated billing. The approximate cost of each meter will be Rs. 10,000. Auto drivers have been asked to re-calibrate their meters with the new fares before October 15.

LG’s curved OLED TV hits European market

LG Electronics has launched the sales of its curved OLED TV in Germany, company officials said Sunday.

Slated to hold a launching event of the product at the HIFI Profis electronics trade show in Frankfurt on Wednesday, the home appliance maker said it would soon begin selling the product in other European countries.

“LG is fully committed to delivering the most advanced OLED TVs to European customers,” said Lee In-kyu, vice president and head of the TV division at LG’s home entertainment company. “With next-generation display technology and an ultrathin curved design, our curved OLED TV represents the beginning of a new era in home entertainment.”

The TV market will see 7 million curved TVs sold worldwide by 2016, with 30 percent of them sold in Europe by 2017, according to Display Search, a research firm,

The curved TV is designed to enable viewers to experience rich colors through LG’s proprietary WRGB (white, red, green and blue pixel) technology and thorough immersion with the concave display, LG said.

The premium TV with a 4.3-mm-wide body weighing 17 kilograms has been certified by international product testing institutes including TUV Rheinland, Intertek and VDE for its unsurpassed picture quality.

via http://tinyurl.com/kzlnv6h

Rupee Depreciation Impact: Samsung Hikes Smartphone Prices in India

Written By Unknown on August 25, 2013 | 3:58:00 AM

South Korean tech giant Samsung has increased the price range of its smartphones in India after the rupee went spiralling down the market against the US dollar.

The BGR website citing Pricebaba.com reported that prices of Samsung phones in India have shot up by 4-5 percent and other smartphone makers like Nokia and Sony are mulling over a price hike. The report pointed out that the cost of Samsung's Galaxy S4 has gone up by up to ₹1,820 and other handsets like Galaxy Note 2 and Galaxy Grand Duos is now costlier by ₹2,495 and ₹1,000, respectively.

Domestic companies are also said to be looking at the possibility of a price hike of their products in the coming days.The report quoted a spokesperson of an Indian brand as saying, "We have not yet decided on the final price of our phone, which we will launch in a fortnight. We are waiting and watching the Dollar situation and will take a call as close to the launch as possible."

Come September, a wide range of products in India is likely to see a hike in prices. The products ranging from daily used items to imported mobiles and electronic items will turn costlier in the next few days.

"The country's four leading consumer electronics makers - LG, Samsung, Panasonic and Videocon - said they may soon announce a 2-4% price hike that could come into effect as early as next month. Prices of refrigerators, washing machines, LED and LCD television sets, and microwave ovens had gone up 3-5% last month when the rupee had crossed the 59-60 range. In all, the likely September increases will be the third price hike this year due to rupee depreciation," reported the Economic Times.

Source: http://tinyurl.com/kpyshyc

The Story Of Jyothi Reddy - You are the creator of your own destiny

Written By Unknown on August 24, 2013 | 7:32:00 AM

Nothing can stop a human being from becoming what he/she wants to achieve in life.
This has been proved by Mrs. Jyothi Reddy with her spectacular travel from a field laborer to the CEO of an organization in the US. This is the true story of Ms. Jyothi Reddy who now owns a software company in the United States of America and who has a great vision to change many lives of women in rural India.

Early Struggle 

Jyothi was born in 1970 and she was the youngest among the five girl children in a poor family in India. Due to her family’s financial situation, she was admitted into a welfare orphanage. To get the admission, she had to become a motherless child. It was a heart breaking situation for Jyothi as she could not see her mother during the days when she was in the orphanage. There was nobody to share her happiness and sorrow. Instead of getting down with the situation, Jyothi developed a strong will to make her future bright. She promised herself to work towards creating a better life for her. She learned the way of dealing with life in a hard and practical manner. The hardship taught her the value of life and made her think beyond the situation.

She attended a government school while at the orphanage and she also took vocational course while residing in the superintendent's house. Jyothi used to help her superintendent with their household work. She realized that to lead a beautiful life, she should get a decent job first. She started thinking for the ways to get into a job.

"Man proposes and God disposes" - Same happened to Jyothi as she had to marry at 16 to her cousin, instead of working on to make her dreams come true. After having 2 children, the situation became even worse as she had to work in the fields for a daily wage of Rs. 5 to take care of her children. These situations made her even stronger to stand and fight for life. 

Gradual Growth with Perseverance

Then came an opportunity in the form of NYK (Nehru Yuva Kendra), a Central Government scheme which sought to create awareness among the youth. She took the opportunity and became a NYK Volunteer and later started teaching. But the money she was making was not sufficient to run the family. She used to stitch petticoats at night to make more money. She also learned typewriting. Apart from her bad financial situation, she also had to fight with family and society to do what she wanted to do. She studied and obtained a BA from Dr. B.R. Ambedkar Open University in 1994 and studied for a postgraduate degree from the Kakatiya University on weekends and obtained it in 1997. This made her get a special teacher job for a salary of Rs. 398 per month. She used to travel for two hours to reach her school. She utilized this time to sell sarees to her co-passengers which gave her some extra income. Her struggle for life made her become conscious about the time and it showed her the ways to utilize the time available creatively.

Her job was regularized and she started making decent money. But she did not want to settle for anything, as her passion to reach a higher level always was haunting her to find the next best. A relative's visit from the US made her think about going to the land of dreams, United States. She studied computer courses to get the eligibility to work in the US. She went to US by leaving her two daughters in a missionary hostel. 

Struggle to get Foothold

It was not an easy journey for her to settle in the US. She had to work in a gas station, work as a baby sitter, load/unload goods and work at a video shop for her survival. She then joined a company called CS America as a recruiter with an aid of a close relative. Later she got another offer from a different company, but it did not stay and she had to go back to babysitting and gas station for survival. That was the beginning of her entrepreneurial dreams. She wanted to start her own business and was looking for the suitable line of business to start.

Entry into Entrepreneurial World

When she visited Mexico for stamping, she realized that she could start a consulting company as she was familiar with the paperwork involved with the Visa Processing. With her savings of $40000, she opened an office in Phoenix in 2011. She has been successfully running her company KEYSS since then.
Her two daughters moved to US and completed their education in the American schools.

Social Responsibility

Her practical experiences with a struggling life made her think about doing her part in helping the people in need. Whenever she visits India, she goes to old age homes, orphanages and provides a helping hand to them. She also visits educational institutes to inspire and empower the future generations.

Self Motives and Tireless Effort

Today, her next dream to see that every Orphan in India to get his/her own Identity, recognition and enjoy equal opportunity. Towards reaching that goal, she has been interacting and sensitizing various Government agencies, policy makers, politicians as well as Non-Government Organizations.
In this direction, she had joined hands with other likeminded NGOs Prajadharana Welfare Society, MV Foundation and Child Rights Advocacy Forum (CRAF) and formed a Pressure Group Force for Orphan Rights and Community Empowerment (FORCE). She has already organized a National Seminar at Hyderabad during December 19 - 21, 2011 and submitted a memorandum to the Central Government. She is also organizing National Consultations for Orphans Rights with Parliament Members (MPs) and other Law Makers from 16 – 21, May 2012 at New Delhi.

Need-based Support to Orphans

Through such mission, she wants to help and make all young orphans between the age group of 18 - 35 to get financial independence. Using Vocational Training, she intends to train them and enable them become self confident and self-reliant and improve their employability.
She is also working on her vision which empowers the rural women with skills and makes them self-sufficient.

This is how a girl from a village created her own destiny and went to the top of the world and started helping many.

Source: http://www.jyothireddy.com/story.php

The Voice of the Ummah against Miss World 2013 Ignored By the Deaf, Dumb and Blind Capitalist Elites

The Miss World 2013 which will be held in the largest Muslim country - Indonesia got a strong reaction from Muslims in Indonesia and Malaysia, with a significant wave of rejection. This was realized by Budi Rustanto, Director of MNC Group who stated that is not easy to hold Miss World in Indonesia (Okezone.com 21/08/2013). However, the MNC group as the holder of exclusive broadcast rights of the Miss World competition has closed its eyes and ears, and continues to disseminate the socialization to the media for the success of Miss World 2013, which will take place on 4 - 28 September in Indonesia and will involve 170 countries, including Muslim countries. At least 45 institutions and Islamic organizations in Indonesia stated firmly that they rejected the Miss World event, including Indonesia Islamic Scholar Council (MUI). Similarly, in Malaysia, the National Fatwa Council of Malaysia (JAWI) had forbidden 4 Muslim women to take part as contestants of the Miss Malaysia World pageant in August where the winner would be the official emissary for Malaysia in Miss Word 2013.

Capitalist media like MNC group as well as the Muslim rulers in Indonesia and Malaysia are not only blind and deaf to the sound waves of rejection of Muslims to this competition but also blind and deaf to the impact of this kind of pageant which capitalizes women's bodies. They are dazzled with the Western culture and want to import it into the Islamic world, and earn tons of money from the exploitation of women's beauty and body, which has blinded them of its impact on the community. It is this systematic dehumanization and degradation of women by the advertising, entertainment, beauty, fashion, and pornography industries within Western capitalist states such as the UK, US, and Australia that has proven to be a recipe for disrespect, exploitation and abuse of women, contributing to the epidemic levels of violence, sexual harassment, and rape within Western societies.

These hypocritical Western imitator Capitalist rulers in the Muslim world are clearly separated from their own people - in thinking and feeling and do not represent them in the least. They adore democracy but at the same time ignore the voice of the majority of people. They boast about the progress of the nation but at the same time let foreign culture ruin their future generations. And by agreeing to host this degrading pageant on its territory, or approving to send delegation contestants, the Muslim world regimes have demonstrated that they are willing to accept the same impact as the damage in Western societies that undermined their youth and family units.

O Muslims! We call you to fiercely oppose the staging of this pageant in Indonesia and the importing of all liberal culture into our lands, including the objectification of women and lewd entertainment culture that spreads immorality and are a source of corruption for our youth and societies. We urge you to distance yourselves from the West imitator secular-capitalist rulers who are a tumor in this Ummah because they are exactly as Allah described in His Word:

صُمٌّ بُكْمٌ عُمْيٌ فَهُمْ لَا يَرْجِعُونَ
"Deaf, dumb, blind. They will not return."
(Al-Baqara, 2:18)

O Muslim women who love this Deen! Join the noble struggle to re-establish the Khilafah which will replace man-made systems in Muslim countries. It is the only state that will nurture the pure, noble morals and values of Islam, prevent the influx of corrupt culture, and hence create youth of distinguished, exemplary personalities who embody modesty and chastity. It will also oblige men and society to safeguard the women's dignity, status and wellbeing and promote that women be valued upon their piety, character and conduct rather than their beauty.

Fika Komara

Member of Central Media Office Hizb ut Tahrir

North Korea’s luxury hotel industry

Despite being well known for food shortages, poverty and isolation, there are a growing number of luxury class hotels in North Korea – and not only in ‘affluent’ Pyongyang.

Built with facilities that even the most discerning of travelers would find appealing, these luxury hotels stand in sharp contrast to the grey and dilapidated buildings that most North Koreans call home.

Containing spa facilities, fitness centers, and banquet rooms, it’s hard to understand what role these luxury hotels play in North Korea’s supposedly egalitarian and socialist system.

For example, a $1,500 one night stay in the VIP room of the Hyangsan hotel would cost nearly 85% of the average annual income of a North Korean.

Who then stays at these hotels, and why were they built?

As with many issues in North Korea, things are not always that clear.

Despite the high prices quoted in the receptions of some of these hotels, North Korea employs a two-tier pricing system that actually makes staying cost effective – or even free – for certain well-placed locals.

Domestic sports teams and musical groups performing at local venues form a large proportion of the heavily subsidized overnight stays in North Korea’s luxury hotels, and it’s almost certain that high ranking government and military officials also enjoy perks there from time to time.

But that doesn’t mean the hotels are used that often: the few tourists who do stay in North Korea’s luxury hotels routinely report that despite being fully staffed, the buildings are often completely unoccupied.

What then are the business imperatives driving the expansion of luxury hotels in North Korea? A difficult question to answer. But in spite of the challenges in finding customers, the industry continues to grow:

Read more at: http://tinyurl.com/k4t9u93

Beer served colder than ice-cold

Written By Unknown on August 23, 2013 | 11:40:00 PM

A mere two weeks into business and word must have spread like wildfire because right when the clock hits 5 p.m. and Asahi Super Dry Extra Cold Bar’s first overseas outlet opens, customers start filing in.

Within 30 minutes five out of a total of 10 tables are already taken. The drinks start flowing and so does the conversation.

What’s the main attraction?


The beer ― which is served between 0 to -2.2 degrees Celsius, lower than the average serving temperature of around 3 ― appears to be the primary draw.

“If you serve draft beer below zero, the foam gets softer and therefore dissolves more slowly,” LOTTE Asahi Liquor Co., Ltd marketing assistant Lee Jae-chan explained of the logistics of an under zero draft brew. “The foam helps insulate the beer’s carbonation and thereby helps maintain it.”

In layman’s terms, if the theory holds, that means a gulp of under zero beer should go down extra fizzy.

Beer aficionados know that under zero draft beer is not new. It has been available as early as 2005, but according to LOTTE Asahi marketing team senior manager Shin Woo-bok, it has yet to go mainstream.

However, there are signs that the uber-cold beer may catch on.

There are currently at least five places in Korea that serve draft beer at temperatures under zero degrees Celsius. The opening of Asahi Extra Cold Bar might signal the spread of the under zero draft beer trend.

According to Asahi Group Holdings, the Japanese beer brand launched its first Extra Cold Bar in Tokyo’s posh Ginza district in 2010. Within three years, the number of Cold Bar outlets has jumped to eight.

While the Extra Cold Bars are only open for a limited period of time on an annual basis, around 5,000 spots in Japan are dispensing Asahi’s super cold beer year-round.

Should response be equally good in Korea then a similar expansion might occur here.

Shin, however, said there are no plans at the moment to rent out special draft towers to establishments in Korea and Lee says no decision has been made on whether or not to hold the event again next year,

The Extra Cold Bar in Seoul, says Shin, is also meant to help maintain Asahi’s number one position in Korea’s increasingly competitive imported beer market. According to LOTTE Asahi, Asahi Super Dry has been Korea’s top-selling imported beer for two years running.

“We wanted to provide our customers with a special experience,” said Shin, 41, explaining how the bar was organized by Japan’s Asahi Breweries and the brand’s official Korean distributor, LOTTE Asahi.

The bar, which is located near Seoul’s Gangnam Subway Station, will be open until Sept. 30. Set up like a tapas-style bar, the small space sports ten, standing-only tables.

The menu is pared-down with a variety of 12 bites and two brews, Asahi Super Dry and Super Dry-Dry Black, on tap.

The simple, no-frills approach works.

Nibbles like the succulent spicy fried chicken pair wonderfully with the creamy beer, while the casual vibe makes for a relaxed pre- or post-dinner hour or two.

“Careful attention was paid to the menu and it was kept reasonably-priced,” said Shin, adding that the food also played an important role because of the Korean custom of pairing alcohol with anju (tapas-like dishes), meaning customers would likely want to have something to eat with their beer.

“The spicy chicken is quite popular as well as the croquettes,” Shin said.

Lee revealed there are no current plans to extend the duration of the event, which means that those who want a taste of Asahi’s uber-cold draft beer will need to make it to the bar by the end of September.

All in all, it wasn’t bad but I don’t think I’ll bother heading back. There are already plenty of bars closer to my office and my home that serve beer cold enough to meet my needs, all without having to stand in line. If you’re in the neighborhood you might want to check it out, but last order is at 10:30 so don’t expect to get in if it’s the third stop on your pub crawl.

Science and politics make for a poisonous mix

Steven Pinker, professor of psychology at Harvard University and author of such popular science books as “The Blank Slate,” recently wrote an essay for the New Republic in defense of science. From left and right, he notes, from intellectuals as well as from anti-intellectuals, science is under attack for its arrogance, vulgarity and narrowness of vision.

Why is this happening? Pinker asks. Because, he says, science is intruding on the humanities, disciplines lacking in vitality or any real purpose of their own, and the intrusion is resented. Far from deriding science as a campaign to diminish and oversimplify — to reduce beauty to brain chemistry, say, or ethics to natural selection — the humanities should welcome science as a source of new inspiration: “Surely our conceptions of politics, culture, and morality have much to learn from our
best understanding of the physical universe and of our makeup as a species.”

No doubt that’s true. And while we’re praising science, let’s agree that Pinker is right to call it a force for enormous social good in all the indisputable ways he mentions. Fine. Intelligent critics of “scientism” — the term they’ve adopted for science gone wrong — wouldn’t deny any of this.
Their most valid complaints are different — and Pinker ignores them, perhaps because he hasn’t understood them. Put simply, science is a force for good so long as it’s done well and its limits are recognized. But science isn’t always done well, and its limits aren’t always recognized. When it’s done badly or pushes past its proper bounds yet still expects to command respect, that’s scientism.

The most important limit to science arises from the distinction between facts and values. This isn’t to deny that science can shed light on values — lately an active area of research. Science can make moral values intelligible in physical terms. It can reveal what’s happening in the brain when a person wrestles with a moral dilemma; it can explain how certain moral instincts might confer an evolutionary advantage, or why they might persist. It can show that the supposed empirical basis for some moral values is simply false — for instance, as Pinker puts it, that “there is no such thing as fate, providence, karma, spells, curses, augury, divine retribution or answered prayers.”

“Though the scientific facts do not by themselves dictate values,” Pinker goes on, “they certainly hem in the possibilities.” He’s right about this — but the second point, though interesting, is much less important than the first. Science can’t dictate values. That’s what matters. And because it can’t dictate values, it can’t dictate courses of action.

Pinker forgets this almost as soon as he’s said it: In combination “with a few unexceptionable convictions — that all of us value our own welfare and that we are social beings who impinge on each other and can negotiate codes of conduct — the scientific facts militate toward a defensible morality, namely adhering to principles that maximize the flourishing of humans and other sentient beings.”

This emerging “de facto morality of modern democracies” provides “the moral imperatives we face today.”

Really? Perhaps Pinker needs to widen his circle of acquaintances. Ideas of what constitutes human flourishing vary a lot even within relatively homogeneous societies. Variation from society to society, or culture to culture, is far bigger. How to combine the principles that maximize the flourishing of humans is disputable — and always will be. The conflicting demands of individual liberty, family loyalty and social solidarity (to name just three of many such principles) can’t be resolved by means of facts. There’s no one right formula.

Claiming otherwise isn’t a harmless error. It’s politically toxic. If Pinker believes that the facts are militating toward a scientific morality, what does that say about the people who take a different view of human flourishing? You no longer have a good-faith disagreement between people with different values — you have a clash between scientific enlightenment and intellectual backwardness. That’s not the basis for friendly interaction. It’s no accident that the more aggressive kinds of scientism — the so-called New Atheism springs to mind — are bullying and intolerant. Intolerance isn’t conducive to human flourishing.

If science expects to command respect, it should not only be aware of its own limits, but it also should be practiced to a high standard. Pinker seems to take for granted that it will be. He applauds the scientific temperament. The defining practices of science “are explicitly designed to circumvent the errors and sins to which scientists, being human, are vulnerable.”

Science is modest, you see — intent on testing itself. Any movement that “fails to nurture opportunities for the falsification of its own beliefs” does not qualify as scientific, he says.
Quite right. But you’d be hard-pressed to argue that all parts of the climate-science community, for instance, had nurtured opportunities for the falsification of their own beliefs. The e-mails published during the Climategate scandal suggest that was not a priority. Groupthink, getting with the program and extreme impatience with dissent seem more to the fore in some climate-science quarters than zealous self- criticism.

Climate science, a far-flung family of loosely related disciplines, is unusual because it has become closely aligned with a set of costly and controversial policy proposals. This political orientation raises a question: Which comes first — the science of climate or the art of persuasion?

Many climate scientists believe global warming requires urgent measures to cut greenhouse-gas emissions. They look despairingly at governments unable or unwilling to respond and campaign all the more aggressively. They have a case (I’m for a gradually increasing carbon tax, if you’re wondering), but their standing as advocates and activists has undermined their authority as disinterested scientists.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which will release its fifth assessment report on global warming next year, is likewise seen by many as an advocacy organization rather than a neutral compiler of scientific evidence.

This has done great harm: The scientist-advocates overreached and diminished their own effectiveness.

What to do about climate change is indeed a political question. Good science, along with good economics, is needed to inform the political judgment, but to claim that the science is settled and that the right policy is dictated by undisputed facts is false. The science isn’t settled, and even if it were, it wouldn’t dictate the policy.

Voters know this, which is why the tactic didn’t work. Science, for its own sake and everybody else’s, should keep a cautious distance from politics.

Source: http://tinyurl.com/n5xfasn

Parking network

Networked to a central server, feeding real-time data accessed by mobile devices, thousands of car and two-wheeler parking slots could just turn ultra tech-savvy. But only if the parking policy - currently on the drawing boards -- adopts the technology, a version of which is to be launched soon in the City by a leading parking management system.

Faced with inadequate off-street, multi-level parking lots, the policy on the Bruhat Bangalore Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) agenda would have to rely heavily on finite on-street parking spaces. But this can work only with a technology-driven, dynamic system far advanced than the rudimentary ones now in operation on Brigade Road and Commercial Street.

“The mode of parking fee payment should be flexible, through card or cash; the machines should be networked to a central command system to make the collection systems transparent and monitor usage patterns,” explained N Sathyanarayanan from the Central Parking Services (CBS).

CBS currently manages parking slots for 10,000 cars and 8,000 two-wheelers at the Bengaluru International Airport (BIA), Baiyyappanahalli and SV Road Metro Stations besides several malls, IT firms and corporate hospitals. The BIA parking lot handles 2,800 cars, the capacity of which is expected to increase by 10 per cent after the ongoing Terminal-1 expansion. On completion of Namma Metro phase-1, 12 more stations will have parking lots.

The Palike could look at the CBS network and its soon-to-be-launched Mobile App as a pilot, for city-wide applications. “The App will have GPS connectivity and will link to parking lots from different zones.

We already have a connection with the City traffic police B-Trac server, where they send a query to our server and pull out information from the database. The information then flashes on the B-Trac website. Right now, this link has only limited functionality without an App,” said Sathyanarayanan. The CBS App will be part of a comprehensive upgrade of its server, to be ready in 15 days.

Monitoring usage patterns

By adopting a networked parking system with a central command, BBMP could remotely monitor usage patterns. Tracking parking slot use based on zones, roads and days of the week, the Palike could fix differential rates. The technology allows this, although a move to fix such a differential system for peak hours and weekends in the parking policy was turned down by the State government.

Recently, the government had approved a parking policy for Bangalore along with other city corporations in the State. The Palike had earlier given its nod for the policy with a few modifications, after the Directorate of Urban Land Transport submitted a draft. The Transport Training Institute and Consultancy is now expected to come out with a parking action plan by this year-end. 

Source: http://tinyurl.com/lo3nkgt

Volkswagen Launches Cross Polo in India for Rs.7.75 Lakh

German car maker Volkswagen on Thursday pulled the wraps off a new varinat of Polo hatchback in India with a price-tag of Rs.7.75 lakh.

The Volkswagen Cross Polo comes with a 1.2-litre TDI engine which churns out a power of 75 PS (55 kW) at 4200rpm and max torque of 180 Nm at 2000 rpm. The car which comes with a five-speed manual gearbox packs safety features like ABS, dual airbags and engine immobilizer.

"The Polo is an important car line in the Indian portfolio and with ongoing updates we keep it relevant and exciting for our customers. The Cross Polo has been created for those looking at a premium hatchback in a sporty crossover style," said Arvind Saxena, Managing Director, (Volkswagen Passenger Cars) Volkswagen Group Sales India.

The company will start rolling out the car from Friday. With the launch of a new variant, Volkswagen hopes to increase its market share.

The domestic market which has witnessed a plunge in sales in the past year is now bracing for festival seasons. With new launches and offers, auto makers are trying to tap into market which is facing a rapid slowdown. The market is expected to see many launches in the coming months. Taking note of the current trend, reports suggest that the current market shows greater nepotism towards sports utility vehicle (SUVs) which is likely to continue for some time.

Source: http://tinyurl.com/kap6gxr

Muslims advised to be careful when buying leather goods online

KUALA LUMPUR: Muslim consumers are advised to be careful when buying leather goods and tableware online fearing they contain haram (prohibited) elements.

Chief activist of the Malaysian Muslim Consumers Association (PPIM) Datuk Nadzim Johan said online shopping could be deceptive because the graphics were unclear.

“For example, we know that leather goods made of pig skin have three dots but with new technologies, this is not necessarily the case,” he told Bernama here today.
Nadzim said tableware such as plates from overseas could also contain haram elements in the form of animal bones.

“The bones in question need not mean pig bones as cattle bones will be rendered haram if the cattle are not slaughtered in accordance with Islamic rituals.”

He urged Muslim consumers to buy products from valid sources because it is their right to buy goods that are clean and halal as it will affect their prayers.

“Muslims consumers should not buy goods online based on the unique design and cheap price offered.”

Nadzim said they should ask for the sellers to show certificates as proof that their goods were halal.
“It is better for Muslim consumers to buy from shops because they can interact directly with the sellers and can also examine the quality of the goods.”

Source: nst.com.my

Tirunelveli to get power from recycled garbage

The Corporation has enlisted the services of a Madurai-based firm to generate electricity from recycled waste collected from the Ramaiyanpatti garbage dump.

The company proposes to generate 2 MW of electricity every hour, which will be sold to the Tamil Nadu Generation and Distribution Corporation.

AAPL Infra Private Limited, Madurai, in partnership with Rochem Separations Systems India Private Limited, Mumbai, won the open tender for the project. The Corporation will supply garbage to the company with the revenue generated to be shared on a 50:50 basis.

As per the proposal submitted by the Madurai firm, the project, to be executed under DFBOT (Design, Finance, Build, Operate and Transfer) mode by establishing the plant on 15 acres of land, will have an outlay of Rs.72 crore and generate 2 MW power (for every 60 minutes) from 160 tonnes of garbage using Concord Blue Technology, the only commercially proven non-polluting solution that transforms nearly any form of local waste into a variety of renewable fuels and electricity.

The garbage arriving at the Ramaiyanpatti dumping yard will be stored at a particular spot and covered to eliminate the stench. The inert waste, which will be 15 per cent of the total quantum of garbage used for power generation, will be utilised for land-filling. The waste water from the power generation unit will be recycled through the reverse osmosis process.

Kerela's Thiruvalla district farmers fetching good money with Emu

Emu is the fastest bird in the world after ostrich. Strong, agile legs help the flightless bird from Australia traverse great distances in quick time.

The taluk of Thiruvalla boasts, perhaps, the largest emu farm in Kerala. It is not the bird’s running skills that make many keep it in their farms. Promoters of emu farming say the bird has tremendous commercial value, its organs fetching good money.“We started it as a fancy, keeping 10 pairs of emus a few years ago. But the commercial value of the bird and the enthusiasm shown by the local people and bird lovers elsewhere made us think bigger. We started two fairly big emu farms at Neerettupuram and Kavumbhagom in Thiruvalla four years ago,” say Viji Vengal, Dubai-based businessman, and his manager, Thomas Manalel.

The emu farms attract bird lovers, especially children, and tourists. The farm has 360 emus, besides an ostrich, vigova ducks, turkeys, geese, flying ducks and so on.

George John, better known as Amil Shaji, who runs a drug house in Thiruvalla town, says emu farming is fast picking up here because of the high market potential of its meat, oil, feather and eggs.
Mr. John, who keeps a few pairs of emus in the courtyard of his house, says, “Each part of the bird, from its nails and legs to skin and feather, has got high commercial value in the national and international market. An emu egg costs Rs. 1,000 to Rs. 1,500 depending on its demand from time to time.” The oil extracted from its fat is priced at Rs.5,000 a litre and a fully grown emu will give four to five litres of oil, Mr. Thomas says. The oil is used for cosmetics and dietary and therapeutic products.

“Similar to beef, emu meat is red. But it is low in fat and cholesterol. The meat is delicious and in high demand across the world. Here, in Kerala, it is priced in the range of Rs. 400 to Rs. 500 a kg. A fully grown emu weighs 40 kg to 50 kg,” Mr. Thomas says.

Mr. Thomas says some multinational companies used to buy emu eggs, oil and legs at a handsome price from their farm. The legs of this herbivore are strong and are used to make telephone stands and legs of chairs after chemical processing, he says.

The emu skin is ideal for making bags, belts, clothes, footwear and so on. There is a belief that keeping emu shell in a house will bring good fortunes, Mr. John says. The farmhouse at Neerettupuram has got its own hatchery with a capacity to incubate 700 eggs at a time.

A pair of emus even as young as one to three months is priced between Rs. 8,000 and Rs. 10,000. A pair cost used to cost Rs. 16,000 to Rs. 22,000 two years ago in Kerala.

Mr. Johnson, caretaker at the farm at Kavumbhagom, says it has got caterers as clients who buy emu meat for making speciality dishes. Bird and animal lovers in this part of the State have started adding a few pairs of emus to their collection.

An emu lays 35 to 45 eggs a year and the egg-laying season extends from October to March, Mr. Thomas says.

Ostriches

The farmhouse at Neerettupuram had four ostriches, bought at Rs. 1.25 lakh each, till a year ago. However, the farmhouse, at present, houses only one giant bird in the cage.
Mr. John says the State government should launch schemes to promote emu farming identifying it as a better commercial option suitable for the climatic conditions as well as the environment. 

Give us an overview of Chennai's real estate scenario?

N Hariharan, Office Director, C&W, Chennai
In the last four to five years Chennai has witnessed more than 10 million sq. ft of quality IT SEZ supply. Occupier sentiments are improving as the global economy recovers and corporates have shown a clear preference for quality office spaces with reasonable rents. In the last quarter, approx 2.4 million sq. ft of office space came into supply and almost 94 per cent of the leasing activity was registered for Grade A stock.

The residential sector continues to see some robust investment by local and national developers where few developers cumulatively have invested more than Rs.1,000 crore in land in the last one year primarily for residential development. Interestingly, this Rs. 1,000 crore investment made by few developers and fund houses have been in city locations where the overall supply compared to peripheral location is low. Developers sense a demand for luxury segment as enquiries for up market addresses like Poes Garden, Boat Club and Nungambakkam have historically remained high.
Moreover, overall supply in this up market or luxury segment would be much less compared to that of peripheral locations. In the peripheral areas of Chennai, unsold units are on the rise. While the manufacturing and automobile sector had played a significant role in the city’s economy growth over the years, the last two years have seen a dip in demand. Dearth of land in existing SIPCOT industrial parks – Sriperambadur and Oragadam have added to this. 

Will there be a price correction or will the prices go up?
 
In the residential sector, sales are expected to improve as overall housing demand has increased in the city. This is mainly due to improvements in infrastructure, rise in income levels and increasing employment opportunities in all sectors. Most of the micro markets are expected to maintain stable capital value trends. In the mid-end segment, Adyar, Mylapore and Velachery may witness an increase in capital values in the long term due to inherent demand from business class and HNI individuals. Velachery, in particular has seen a 40 per cent rise in capital values on a year-on-year basis as improvements in infrastructure and the ongoing metro work will provide better connectivity and prices are witnessing an upward trend in this micro market. 

In the high-end category, R.A.Puram and neighbouring areas of Alwarpet and Abhiramapuram saw a 5 per cent increase in capital values this year and may continue to increase, as demand remains strong in these pockets. At present, four or five major high-end projects are under construction around CBD (Central Business District) areas, with apartment sizes ranging between 3,000 – 4, 000 sq. ft. These are priced in the range of Rs. 7.5 – 10 crore and will provide capital appreciation in the future. In summary, the trend of unsold units in the some parts of OMR and GST continues, price correction in these locations is natural and in the city since the launches of these high projects will come in phased manner, the demand for high end segment will hold up the price. 

When is a good time to invest? 
 
Investments in residential properties are dependent on the time horizon and an investor’s risk appetite. For short to medium term, investing in Anna Nagar, Adyar, Velachery and Nungambakkam are good choices as projects in these micro markets find takers quickly and most known developers have been able to sell their units while still under construction. For medium to long term, peripheral stretch of OMR and GST are good options, however the current situation of unsold units is on the rise in some of projects in these locations. Therefore developers are largely dependent on end user and investors who invest for rental yields. 

Which areas in Chennai have the most potential for growth over the next ten years?
From a residential perspective, OMR and GST in a long term will continue to be an attractive proportion for middle income group. High-end supply which caters to upper income group is in locations like Nungambakkam, Boat club, Poes Garden and ECR. 

What advice would you give home buyers? What should they look out for before buying a home?
With the approval of the Real Estate Regulatory Bill, the developer community is expected to be more transparent and accountable; however, home buyers must only invest in housing projects where all the necessary approvals are in place. Before investing in a house one should also check the title deeds and ensure there are no disputes on land titles. Investing in projects with developers with a good track record and no delays in construction completions helps ensure the developer’s credibility and makes the investment less risky and relatively “safe”. 

Hariharan has been in the commercial leasing business in Chennai for over 11 years. He also has experience in the financial and telecom space and has worked across realty markets in cities like Chennai, Coimbatore, Kochi, Trivandrum and Colombo. 

Converting waste into money

Sitting in the dry waste collection centre (DWCC) near the Lingarajpuram flyover, Lakshmi P. (48), a waste picker, is busying segregating plastic bottles, cartons and milk sachets. Wiping the sweat from her forehead, she continues with compressing plastic bottles and stuffing them into a gunny bag.
Today, Lakshmi runs the DWCC at Sagayapuram ward. In doing so, she draws from 27 long years of experience as a rag picker. So, even as civic authorities and citizens grapple to understand and work with the nitty-gritty of garbage segregation, she points out that thousands like her have been working in this informal sector for years. “We learnt to execute this long before the palike did,” she says.
The DWCC here is staffed by Hasiru Dala, an NGO that has been entrusted the job by another NGO Grace, which has signed an MoU with the Bruhat Bangalore Mahanagara Palike (BBMP).
Before we begin the interview, she insists that we see the records she has maintained in multiple books. These records pertain to the garbage segregated in 27 apartments in her ward. Up until a month ago, Lakshmi recalls how her work day involved roaming the streets near Banaswadi desperately looking for some “treasure” in the mounds of garbage piled up in street corners. Her job now is more streamlined as she only has to come to the DWCC and segregate the dry waste brought here before selling it to scrap dealers. “Earlier I would walk around the neighbourhood hoping to find some scrap in piles of garbage. But, now people come to me and give me their waste. Everything has changed. But most importantly, my job now gives me respect and dignity.”

No vehicles

Lakshmi and other waste pickers at the DWCCs across the city earn Rs. 200 a day, which is supplemented by selling the segregated waste. Although the working conditions have changed for Lakshmi, she says that they continue to face several hurdles at work. “Every Thursday, along with my friend, I collect around 150 kg of dry waste and we have to physically carry it back to the DWCC. This is tiring. It would help if the BBMP gives us a loan or a subsidy to buy a vehicle.”
About her ambitious business venture, she says she dreams to make ward 60 (Sagayapuram) a zero-garbage ward. “And if my business works well, I am even willing to pay income tax,” she signs off with optimism and hope in her eyes. 

Basmati exports from India seen at record on Iran demand

Shipments of basmati rice from India, the world's largest producer of the aromatic grain, may surge to a record as Iran pays a premium to secure supplies amid international trade sanctions, an industry group said, Bloomberg reported.

Sales may rise 10 percent to 3.8 million metric tons in the year that began on April 1 from a year earlier, said R.S. Seshadri, general secretary of the All India Rice Exporters Association.
Sales jumped 25 percent to 1.5 million tons in the four months through July from a year earlier, data from the association showed.

Export prices of the variety used in dishes including biryani and pilaf rallied 44 percent in the past year, potentially boosting earnings at shippers such as KRBL Ltd. (KRB), LT Foods Ltd. and Kohinoor Foods Ltd. (KFL) Farmers in the foothills of the Himalayas have increased planting as the crop fetches more than double the rate of traditional varieties, Seshadri said.

India also ships tea, sugar, steel and chemicals to Iran and bilateral trade between the two countries was $15.97 billion in 2011-2012, according to the Commerce Ministry.

"Prices rose because of demand from Iran, which has got India as a reliable supplier after the sanctions," Seshadri said in a phone interview yesterday. "Farmers have raised the area under basmati crop as they know that the returns will be higher than other cereal crops."

Traders contracted to export basmati rice to Iran at an average $1,659 a ton in July, data from the association showed. The average export price was $1,300 a ton for 2012-2013 crop compared with $900 a ton a year earlier, he said. Iran is India's biggest buyer of basmati rice.

Exporters registered to ship 602,000 tons to Iran between April and July this year, according to the data from the state-run Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority, or Apeda. Contracts need to be registered with the authority before shipment.

Iran has been hit by financial and trade sanctions over its nuclear program that have curbed oil exports, restricted access to foreign currencies and weakened the rial.

The government provides U.S. dollars at a preferential rate to importers of some staple goods, including meat, cooking oil and sugar.

Exporters faced no difficulties in getting paid for shipments to Iran because of a government-to-government payment mechanism, Seshadri said.

India controls 65 percent of the overseas basmati rice market, while the only other producer Pakistan accounts for the rest, according to Apeda. Saudi Arabia and Iran are two major buyers of Indian basmati, while the U.S., Europe and Africa also purchase the grain.

"The companies in the rice export business will see higher profits if the situation continues the way it is," said Faiyaz Hudani, an associate vice president at Kotak Commodity Services Ltd. in Mumbai.
Shares of KRBL rose as much as 0.6 percent to 23.65 rupees, while Kohinoor Foods climbed 2.4 percent to 31.45 rupees and LT Foods (LTFO) increased as much as 4.5 percent to 73.85 rupees in Mumbai today.

A plunge in India's rupee to a record also boosted shipments, Vijay Setia, a former president of the exporters' group said in a phone interview. Sales may climb to as much as 4 million tons this year because of weak rupee, he said.

"Exporters have been benefiting since June because of the weak rupee and Indian exports have been growing at a faster rate," he said. "In future deals buyers may get a chance to renegotiate on prices depending the rupee."

The rupee tumbled about 16 percent in the past six months to on concern that capital outflow from emerging markets will increase as the U.S. prepares to pare stimulus.

 
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