Mumbai: The Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) has awarded A+ level to Reliance Industries (RIL'd) sustainability report 2011-12, said the company in a statement on Monday. "This is the seventh year in a row that RIL has received the highest application level on sustainability reporting. RIL is also the first Indian company to adhere to the GRI 3.1 Oil & Gas Sector Supplement, released in February 2012," said the statement.
The statement also said, "RIL has received the coveted rating this year for its report titled 'Partnering India's New Future Sustainably. The company adheres to all sustainability reporting guidelines and allocates sufficient resources towards its environmental stewardship, product responsibility and social institution building efforts."
The report was presented to GRI, Amsterdam, the Netherlands for application level check, as per the New GRI 3.1 Guidelines. RIL's report also takes into account guidelines laid down by the American Petroleum Institute and the International Petroleum Industry Environmental Conservation Association.
The report is also aligned with the National Voluntary Guidelines for Social, Environmental and Economic Responsibilities of Business, released by the Ministry of Corporate Affairs, Government of India, in November 2011.
The Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) is a non-profit organization that promotes economic, environmental and social sustainability. GRI provides all companies and organizations with a comprehensive sustainability reporting framework that is widely used around the world.
"Believer - Humanitarian - Habit of Success" Sukumar Balakrishnan is the Founder of JB GROUP, a 500 Crore National Organization with over 150 Direct & 1200 indirect professionals operating from 5 major cities in India. Jayalakshmi Balakrishnan Group, a multi-faceted group venturing into, E- Commerce and Import-Export (INNOKAIZ), Retail and Wholesale (JB MART), Food and Beverages (KRISHNA FOODS ), Real Estate (Constructions on sites, Interior scaping, Facility Management)
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Showing posts with label RIL. Show all posts
Showing posts with label RIL. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 7, 2012
Thursday, December 29, 2011
RIL, Raytheon may form homeland security JV
NEW DELHI: Reliance Industries, India's most valued company, is in "advanced talks" with American defence giant Raytheon to create a joint venture that will pursue opportunities in homeland security in India and abroad.
"RIL and Raytheon are in talks (to set up a joint venture in homeland security business) that are in the late stage," said a person involved in the talks, asking not to be named.
A joint venture with Raytheon - maker of the famous Patriot missiles used in the first Iraq War and a strategic partner of the US government on key homeland security programmes - will give Reliance access to high-end security products and engineering solutions.
"This joint venture will give RIL the ability to innovate and develop key technologies for India," said a Delhi-based analyst who didn't wish to be identified because he is not authorised to speak to the media.
For Raytheon, which is present in the country through partnerships with several companies including the Tata Group, Larsen & Toubro and Bharat Electronics, the proposed venture will mean easier access to one of the fastest-growing markets for homeland security solutions.
The $8-billion Indian homeland security industry is expected to grow to $14 billion in the next three years and to $16 billion by 2016. Defence analysts say that such a joint venture could help end the so-called "India fatigue" that has set in among American companies after failing to make it to the shortlist of the country's biggest military contract, worth 42,000 crore, to acquire 126 medium multi-role combat aircraft for the Indian Air Force.
Responding to an email query from ET, a Raytheon spokesperson said, "We do not comment on rumour or speculation."
As of now, it has a joint venture with only one firm - France's Thales.
Reliance Industries' homeland security and aerospace division head Vivek Lall too did not respond to repeated e-mails about talks with Raytheon.
The Mukesh Ambani-owned company is also in talks with German firm Siemens AG to form a joint venture in homeland security, the person involved in the talks said. A few months ago, RIL had tied up with Siemens to jointly bid for security projects.
The two companies jointly bid for a 600-crore Mumbai CCTV project, which was conceived after the 26/11 attack and envisages setting up computerised video surveillance at 100 critical traffic junctions in the metropolis. The Maharashtra government has shortlisted the combine for the project.
Indian companies such as Tata Group, Larsen & Toubro and Mahindra Group have already tied up with foreign players in the homeland security space.
Mahindra Defence Systems has a joint-venture partnership with US-based Telephonics Corporation to make radars and surveillance and communication systems for the Indian military, while Tata Advanced Systems has a venture with Zurich-based AGT International to tap opportunities in the homeland security market. RIL set up its homeland security and aerospace division early this year after roping in Lall, 42, a former NASA scientist who steered Boeing's military and commercial division in India for years.
Lall worked with Raytheon in the 1990s and was part of the engineering team that developed its aircraft for the Joint Primary Aircraft Training System (JPATS), an ambitious aircraft procurement programme in the US in 1995.
Ever since the Indian Parliament was attacked in 2001, security experts have called for enlisting the private sector to step up security across the country, especially in cities.
Currently, one of the best "safe-city" communications systems in the country is in Parliament. Installed by Cassidian, the security division of the Netherlands-based EADS, the Tetra radio network doesn't get jammed even in disaster situations.
"RIL and Raytheon are in talks (to set up a joint venture in homeland security business) that are in the late stage," said a person involved in the talks, asking not to be named.
A joint venture with Raytheon - maker of the famous Patriot missiles used in the first Iraq War and a strategic partner of the US government on key homeland security programmes - will give Reliance access to high-end security products and engineering solutions.
"This joint venture will give RIL the ability to innovate and develop key technologies for India," said a Delhi-based analyst who didn't wish to be identified because he is not authorised to speak to the media.
For Raytheon, which is present in the country through partnerships with several companies including the Tata Group, Larsen & Toubro and Bharat Electronics, the proposed venture will mean easier access to one of the fastest-growing markets for homeland security solutions.
The $8-billion Indian homeland security industry is expected to grow to $14 billion in the next three years and to $16 billion by 2016. Defence analysts say that such a joint venture could help end the so-called "India fatigue" that has set in among American companies after failing to make it to the shortlist of the country's biggest military contract, worth 42,000 crore, to acquire 126 medium multi-role combat aircraft for the Indian Air Force.
Responding to an email query from ET, a Raytheon spokesperson said, "We do not comment on rumour or speculation."
As of now, it has a joint venture with only one firm - France's Thales.
Reliance Industries' homeland security and aerospace division head Vivek Lall too did not respond to repeated e-mails about talks with Raytheon.
The Mukesh Ambani-owned company is also in talks with German firm Siemens AG to form a joint venture in homeland security, the person involved in the talks said. A few months ago, RIL had tied up with Siemens to jointly bid for security projects.
The two companies jointly bid for a 600-crore Mumbai CCTV project, which was conceived after the 26/11 attack and envisages setting up computerised video surveillance at 100 critical traffic junctions in the metropolis. The Maharashtra government has shortlisted the combine for the project.
Indian companies such as Tata Group, Larsen & Toubro and Mahindra Group have already tied up with foreign players in the homeland security space.
Mahindra Defence Systems has a joint-venture partnership with US-based Telephonics Corporation to make radars and surveillance and communication systems for the Indian military, while Tata Advanced Systems has a venture with Zurich-based AGT International to tap opportunities in the homeland security market. RIL set up its homeland security and aerospace division early this year after roping in Lall, 42, a former NASA scientist who steered Boeing's military and commercial division in India for years.
Lall worked with Raytheon in the 1990s and was part of the engineering team that developed its aircraft for the Joint Primary Aircraft Training System (JPATS), an ambitious aircraft procurement programme in the US in 1995.
Ever since the Indian Parliament was attacked in 2001, security experts have called for enlisting the private sector to step up security across the country, especially in cities.
Currently, one of the best "safe-city" communications systems in the country is in Parliament. Installed by Cassidian, the security division of the Netherlands-based EADS, the Tetra radio network doesn't get jammed even in disaster situations.
Sunday, December 4, 2011
Government wants fresh estimate of RIL's KG-D 6 reserves
NEW DELHI: The oil ministry has asked Reliance Industries ( RIL) to prepare a fresh estimate of gas reserves in satellite fields of the KG-D 6 block and submit a cost assessment for developing the new discoveries, further delaying the $1.5-billion plan to raise gas output by 10 million cubic metres a day.
The proposal, which is awaiting government approval for two years, was discussed on Friday by the block's managing committee comprising oil ministry officials and executives of global oil major BP and Reliance Industries, government and industry officials said.
The relationship between Reliance and the oil ministry has deteriorated after the company slapped an arbitration notice on the government after Petroleum Secretary GC Chaturvedi publicly stated that the ministry may revise the production-sharing contract to penalize Reliance for falling output from the block.
The director general of hydrocarbons SK Srivastava and the oil ministry's joint-secretary for exploration D Narsimha Raju did not attend the three-hour meeting of the management committee. They were represented by their juniors, officials said, adding that the minutes of previous meetings had not been signed.
Sources close to the development said the government sought a fresh estimate because Reliance's proposal was based on prices prevailing in 2008 and officials wanted to prevent a cost review after approval. The development cost in the existing gas field in the block was reviewed, triggering strong comments from the Comptroller and Auditor General.
"After the current controversy over cost escalation and CAG's comments, we want to make sure that estimates of cost and gas reserves are accurate," an official at the directorate general of hydrocarbons (DGH) said. The management committee has asked Reliance to conduct fresh seabed surveys, which the company estimates would cost $30 million, an executive said.
This was expected be on the agenda of the next meeting of the committee, he said. Gas output from the D6 block has fallen to about 42 mmscmd against the target of 80 mmscmd, creating a severe shortage of gas for power, fertilizer and other units, which are being forced to import costly LNG.
The proposal, which is awaiting government approval for two years, was discussed on Friday by the block's managing committee comprising oil ministry officials and executives of global oil major BP and Reliance Industries, government and industry officials said.
The relationship between Reliance and the oil ministry has deteriorated after the company slapped an arbitration notice on the government after Petroleum Secretary GC Chaturvedi publicly stated that the ministry may revise the production-sharing contract to penalize Reliance for falling output from the block.
The director general of hydrocarbons SK Srivastava and the oil ministry's joint-secretary for exploration D Narsimha Raju did not attend the three-hour meeting of the management committee. They were represented by their juniors, officials said, adding that the minutes of previous meetings had not been signed.
Sources close to the development said the government sought a fresh estimate because Reliance's proposal was based on prices prevailing in 2008 and officials wanted to prevent a cost review after approval. The development cost in the existing gas field in the block was reviewed, triggering strong comments from the Comptroller and Auditor General.
"After the current controversy over cost escalation and CAG's comments, we want to make sure that estimates of cost and gas reserves are accurate," an official at the directorate general of hydrocarbons (DGH) said. The management committee has asked Reliance to conduct fresh seabed surveys, which the company estimates would cost $30 million, an executive said.
This was expected be on the agenda of the next meeting of the committee, he said. Gas output from the D6 block has fallen to about 42 mmscmd against the target of 80 mmscmd, creating a severe shortage of gas for power, fertilizer and other units, which are being forced to import costly LNG.
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