Oil prices slip Friday, September 8, 2006 (Singapore): Crude oil prices fell in Asian trading Friday after a US inventory report showed that higher refinery production was helping boost gasoline and distillate inventories. Light, sweet crude for October delivery dropped 17 cents to $67.15 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract on Thursday fell 18 cents to settle at $67.32 a barrel. Heating oil inched down marginally to $1.8870 a gallon (3.8 liters), while gasoline prices gained 0.18 cent to $1.6435 a gallon. Natural gas futures rose slightly to $5.720 per 1,000 cubic feet. Alaskan production Also easing supply worries was the possibility that BP PLC could restore lost Alaskan production at Prudhoe Bay back on line by the end of October as well as the resumption of some oil production in Nigeria. US crude inventories fell 2.2 million barrels last week to 330.6 million barrels, the US Department of Energy's Energy Information Administration said Thursday. Gasoline inventories rose by 700,000 barrels to 206.9 million barrels, which is 6.6 percent above year-ago levels. Distillate fuel inventories rose by 3.1 million barrels to 139.9 million barrels, a bigger build than most analysts expected. They are now slightly above were they were a year ago. (AP)
Trading the markets Technically
Friday, September 08, 2006
OIL PRICES SLIP
ACC plans Rs 1,000-cr capacity expansion
Speaking to newspersons, Mr Ramit Budhiraja, Regional Head (East), said that capacity is being expanded in two plants at Bargah in Orissa and Sindri in Jharkhand at a cost of Rs 535 crore and Rs 70 crore respectively. In the Orissa plant, the capacity is being increased to 2.2 million tonnes a year from the current level of 1.2 million tonnes.
The Sindri unit would become a one-million-tonne per annum plant from the existing level of 0.7 million tonnes.
Last year, ACC invested Rs 300 crore in its second Jharkhand plant, which is located at Chaibasa. It is also considering clinker capacity expansion for its West Bengal plant.
Apart from this, the company has planned 50 RMC units by the end of 2010; these would be based around eastern cities and in the North-East.
Work on the first of these units has commenced at Rajarhat in West Bengal.
With the completion of these projects, ACC's capacity in eastern India would increase to seven million tonnes per annum from five million tonnes now.
Meanwhile, the company is planning to launch different varieties of cement, the first of which would be launched in November.
'We would start with a pilot marketing project in eastern India and then it would be introduced in the rest of India,' Mr Budhraja said.
Apart from these developments, ACC is trying to become a customer-centric organisation.
In the last one month, its technical manpower has increased tenfold; it is currently holding 1,000-1,500 customer contact meetings every day.
'We are also planning mobile home centres. Our experts will visit the customer and give free advice on construction and cement requirements.'
Taken from Business Line