India will greatly ramp up the solar power generation in 2017, more than 12 GW
India plans to greatly expand the solar power generation in India by 2022
Solar energy can be a great resource of renewable energy for a power-hungry economy like India.
Solar energy is set to revolutionise the power sector in India
The following article is an initiative of Thyrocare & CNBC TV-18 and is intended to create awareness among the users.
The following article is an initiative of Thyrocare & CNBC TV-18 and is intended to create awareness among the users.
For years investors have tried to time the market with little or no success. Here's our analysis on why timing the market is flawed model.
Here's a quick lowdown of the movers and shakers on Day 1 at the first ever Global Natural Resources Conclave in New Delhi.
Pernod Ricard is a world leader in wines and spirits. Skill Tree Workplace Excellence is exploring the culture at its India offices.
Mutual funds with its varied offering can help investors achieve their varied goals.
Speaking at the 1st ever Global Natural Resources Conclave, Anil Agarwal, Group Chairman- Vedanta speaks about the journey of Vedanta and how entrepreneurship, talent, technology and best practices can drive India’s growth story.
From near bankruptcy to becoming Australia’s richest citizen, Gina Rinehart, Executive Chairman of Hancock Prospecting is no stranger to building a multi-billion dollar business. At the Global Natural Resources Conclave, she discusses the elimination of red tape and what both countries can hope to learn from each other.
Sajjan Jindal, Chairman of the JSW Group highlights the need to exploit natural resources now as they would be irrelevant in the future and how using local natural resources can help reduce India’s import bill.
Piyush Goyal, Minister of State with Independent Charge for Power, Coal, New and Renewable Energy and Mines on why the 7th largest nation only spends 0.4% on exploration of the total global exploration budget and how policy changes can go a long way in improving India’s mineral resources landscape.
Melody Meyer- President at Melody Meyer Energy LLC explains why stable legal framework, predictable tax regime and sanctity of contracts must be present for India to reap rich dividends in the mineral resources sector.
The following article is an initiative of KNAV India and is intended to create awareness among the readers.
Satish Pai, MD, Hindalco is optimistic that mining along with metal production with the focus of on the downstream sector will be able a huge employment generator for the country.
Despite being well endowed with natural resources, a huge amount of minerals is imported into the country, which Satish Pai, MD, Hindalco feels is the biggest challenge facing the mining industry.
Satish Pai, MD, Hindalco says that due to initiatives like Make in India and Smart Cities providing impetus to macroeconomic growth, consumption of metals and minerals will go up, and will allow the Indian mining sector to register strong growth.
Sandeep Lakhwara, MD, Deccan Gold believes that facilitating more investment into exploration will lead to an uptick in production and thereby greater domestic consumption reducing India’s dependence on imports.
Since exploration requires state of art technology and high-risk capital security, Sandeep Lakhwara, MD, Deccan Gold suggests that investors will require security of tenure and the ability to keep the discovery without auction, especially for deep-sea exploration.
To fully explore India’s natural resources, Sandeep Lakhwara, MD, Deccan Gold Mines suggests removing red tape, facilitate foreign investments and have investor-friendly policies in place for the mining industry at large.
S Vijay Iyer, MD, Rio Tinto India believes that technology plays a huge role in the mining sector from optimising existing resources, using data-driven exploration and increasing operational safety.
Import dependency, currency fluctuation, and competition from crude suppliers turning into petroleum producers have prodded domestic oil producers to innovate and be cost efficient.