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IOC to supply cleaner petrol, diesel to 13 cities from Apr 1
Indian Oil Corp, the nation"s largest refiner, and other state-run refiners will supply Euro -IV grade petrol and diesel in 13 big cities from April 1, but supply of the cleaner fuel to rest of the country may be delayed by three to six months.

RIL's Jamnagar refineries to buy Cairn crude
Cairn India, which started pumping crude oil from its Mangala field in Barmer (Rajasthan) this August, has entered into an agreement with Reliance Industries Ltd (RIL) for supplying it to the latter’s Jamnagar refineries. Cairn is likely to supply seven consignments of 200,000 barrels each to RIL during the current financial year, said an informed source. The first consignment will reach Jamnagar by end-November. The company had sold its first cargo of 208,000 barrels to Mangalore Refinery and Petrochemicals last month and it will deliver two more cargoes this month.

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Aditi Phadnis: The politics of caste
Aditi Phadnis / New Delhi August 8, 2009, 0:48 IST
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JSPL may raise offer for Australia's Rocklands

Chinese firm Meijin leads the bidding war with $176-mn offer. - Jindal Power files DRHP with Sebi - JSPL to set up 1,600 Mw plant in Arunachal - JSPL in race for Mongolia's coal mine - Essar considers selling unit stakes - Jindal Steel Q1 net up 2-fold; announces 5:1 bonus issue - Jindal Steel & Power: Power boost Billionaire politician Naveen Jindal-promoted Jindal Steel & Power Ltd (JSPL) plans to match the offer of a Chinese energy company for Australian coal firm Rocklands Richfield. China’s Meijin Energy Group stepped up the bidding war on Tuesday, when it raised its offer to $176 million (over Rs 820 crore) against JSPL’s offer of $138 million (Rs 645 crore). JSPL has been invited to revise its offer price and match the Meijin offer by 7.30 pm Perth time today, Rocklands said, adding that offers from both companies are preliminary. If JSPL raises its bid, it would be the second such revision to match the Chinese company in its bid for Rocklands. The New Delhi-based steel major, which already owns a stake of about 16.4 per cent in Rocklands, had revised its takeover proposal to 52 Australian cents a share from 50 cents in November. “As raw material security is crucial for JSPL’s growth plans, it is highly likely to raise the offer to the level of Meijin"s offer of 56 Australian cents a share,” investment banking sources said. When contacted, an executive said the company would evaluate the counter proposal of the Chinese firm and take a decision, considering the asset value. “It is premature to say anything about increasing our offer price,” he added. Rocklands noted that neither of the proposals was a formal offer at this stage and both were subject to due diligence and formal terms and conditions. In October, Indian conglomerate Essar had also submitted a bid for the Australian coal miner. But the Ruias-controlled group withdrew its offer nine days after submitting the bid. The Chinese firm entered the fray after the exit of Essar. The battle for control of Rocklands indicates India and China"s need to secure raw materials for feeding their growing steel and power industries. Indian coal industry officials visited Australia in September to assess potential acquisitions as demand for fuel outstrips supply in the world"s second fastest-growing major economy. Shares in the Perth-based company rallied sharply on the revised offer, rising 36 per cent on Tuesday. Rocklands has three metallurgical coal projects in the Australian state of Queensland with total resources estimated by it at more than 900 million tonnes. The company also operates a coking coal plant in eastern China.


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