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Reliance Big TV targets DTH VAS revenue of Rs 100 cr in 5 yrs
Reliance Big TV (RBTV), the direct-to-home (DTH) arm of Reliance Communications targets DTH value-added services (VAS) revenues of Rs 100-crore in the next 5 years period, a top company official said. generic levitra

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Nalco Q3 profit drops 29% to Rs 155 cr
State-run aluminium major National Aluminiun Company (Nalco) today posted a decline of 29.29 per cent in its net profit at Rs 155.18 crore for the third quarter ended December 31, 2009, over the same period a year ago.

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A K Bhattacharya: No escape from a 'fiscal holiday'
A K Bhattacharya / New Delhi June 17, 2009, 0:28 IST
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Green activists hope climate summit focuses on emission cuts

As delegates at the Copenhagen summit discuss a new climate treaty, green activists here are hoping that it would focus on emission cuts and safeguarding of biodiversity. - India not acting under pressure on climate change issue: Saran - Obama expects agreement at Copenhagen - Oppn, govt spar over Liberhan, climate change - 35-member Indian delegation for Copenhagen climate talks - Surjit S Bhalla: There is no chindia in copenhagen">Surjit S Bhalla: There is no chindia in copenhagen - Pachauri attacks "climategate" The Bombay Natural History Society (BNHS) and over 100 other NGOs across the world, which are partners of the UK-based BirdLife International, have stressed on replacing the "wasteful and energy-intensive lifestyles with holistic, balanced and energy-saving lifestyles." "As a consequence of climate change about 15-37 per cent of species could be extinct by 2050, according to one global study. If the rise in temperature is more than 2 degree Celsius, it would be catastrophic for birds, nature, people and the global economy," BNHS Director Asad Rahmani said. Sea-level rise will result in large-scale human population shift and further pressures on remaining natural habitats, he warned while calling for appropriate emission cuts to save the biodiversity from devastation. The BirdLife International and its partners have prepared an action plan asking the developed countries to take the lead in cutting emissions so that global temperature increase is capped to less than 2 degree Celsius above pre-industrial levels. At the same time, it said, developing countries should also ensure that their emissions do not reach levels as experienced by developed countries in the past decades. Global emissions should peak and decline by 2020 and go to 80 per cent below 1990 levels by 2050.


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