Monday, March 30, 2015

Expanding Scope of PILs To Counter Corrupted Legislations
March30, 2015 (C) Ravinder Singh ravinderinvent@gmail.com

Justice T S Thakur in delivering a public lecture ‘Widening Horizons of PIL’ observed ‘PIL are indicative of weak and failing Legislature’ and PILs help democracy. The legislation exercise is most corrupted in India. Companies hoard on to Bank Credits on never to return basis – creating no jobs and no IPR. There is practically no money for millions graduating from colleges every year and for 10m jobs creation for 20m population growth. In fact we produce Six Singapore Population in a year.

Singapore a very small country of 3m people without natural resources has over US$518b Exports, US$463b Imports – FDI US$848b outperform 1250m people of India with huge resources. Current nominal GDP is US$56,112 which is 100 times more per capita than 1965 at the time of Singapore Independence.

Budget of Singapore talks of Creating More Jobs, Invest in R&D, Increasing Wages for its People, Investing in Creating More Wealth for People – India Budget is DICTATED by Adani & Ambani – 1250m Indians are FED on FAKE PROMISES. Farmers can’t Store, Process and Market their produce directly to consumers – 75% people depend on Moneylenders for Credit.

Shell Oils Biggest – 600 Acres > RIL 7500 Acres

Shell Oils biggest 30 mtpa Refinery & Petrochemical complex is built on 600 acres of land whereas 27 mtpa RIL $6billion Jamnagar Refinery & Petrochemical complex is built on 7500 acres.

Jurong Island of 8000 acres is home to scores of Multinationals investing $24billion processing over 72 mtpa of crude and High Value Petro Chemicals. Turnover of JURONG Island companies exceed Rs.400,000 crore or more than entire RIL.

GoI is not protecting the interests of 99% people of India. 

Today, Jurong Island is home to many companies such as LANXESS, Afton Chemical, BASF, BP, Celanese, Evonik, ExxonMobil, DuPont, Mitsui Chemicals, Chevron Oronite, Shell, Singapore Petroleum Company and Sumitomo Chemical.
Clusters of gigantic cylindrical tanks amid a maze of pipelines now dot the island; investment totalled S$31 billion in 2010. Resident companies produce a vast range of items, from petroleum products to polycarbonate resins used in CDs, DVDs and LCD TV panels, and super-absorbent polymers that go into diapers and sanitary napkins.
ExxonMobil, which has invested S$4 billion in a refinery and cracker plant, makes industrial and automotive lubricants including a product used in Formula One racing cars. DuPont has invested S$1 billion, and manufactures Zytel nylon resin, a versatile engineering plastic used in automobile components, appliances, wire insulation, sporting gear and home furnishings. Afton Chemical is constructing a new manufacturing facility, expected to become operational in January 2016, to produce petroleum additives for the Asia-Pacific and Middle East markets.
Output for the chemicals cluster—which cover oil and gas, petrochemicals and speciality chemicals—totalled S$66.5 billion in 2005, an increase of 31 per cent from 2004. This accounted for almost 32 per cent of production in Singapore's manufacturing sector. Powered by the cluster, Singapore is currently one of the world's top three oil refining centres despite not having a single drop of crude deposits.
Jurong Island's refineries process 1,300,000 barrels (210,000 m3) of crude oil per day, turning it into petrol, kerosene and jet fuel sold locally and abroad. Cracker plants break down the molecules of other oil-and gas-related substances such as naphtha into additives that give unique characteristics to certain products, from printer inks to plastic mouldings, semiconductors and aircraft materials.


Ravinder Singh, Inventor & Consultant, INNOVATIVE TECHNOLOGIES AND PROJECTS
Y-77, Hauz Khas, New Delhi-110016, India. Ph; 091- 9718280435, 9650421857

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