International Business

Pratibha Industries bags Rs 59 cr worth NTPC order

Infrastructure company Pratibha Industries today said it has bagged an order worth Rs 58.85 crore from state-run National Thermal Power Corporation (NTPC). - Shinde asks power cos to start work on coal blocks in two yrs - MP drops demand of land from BHEL - Pratibha Ind wins Rs 295 cr order from UP Jal Nigam - Govt formally issues EGoM decision taken last month on KG-D6 allocation - TN seeks 75% power from upcoming projects - NTPC working on coal mines allotted by govt The company has secured a contract related to water supply works for Mauda Super Thermal Power Project of NPTC, Pratibha Industries said in a filing to the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE). The scope of works includes intake well in River Kanhan, intake water pump house and laying of make water pipeline and effluent disposal pipeline. The project is to be executed in 21 months. Shares of Pratibha Industries were trading at Rs 261 on the BSE, down 0.44 per cent from its previous close.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):

News of the day
Mutual fund investors caught in NoC muddle
The Securities and Exchange Board of India’s (Sebi’s) move to ban entry load on mutual funds (MFs), in spite of being an investor-friendly step, has created a problem for smaller investors.
Popular Articles

China represents four opportunities for us: NASSCOM Chief
China presents four major opportunities to the IT industry in India, including servicing the north Asian market, Som Mittal, Chairperson of NASSCOM (National Association of Software and Services Companies), said here today.

Thinking out of the cage
Admittedly, Nehru was there at the start of things, the end of an age, the awakening of a nation, that tryst with destiny. So he and others of his generation were better placed than we are to think laterally, to explore all of history for models towards which to incline the path of our future. He also spent years in prison, an enforced separation from the bustle and fire of the freedom movement which enabled him to look beyond the constrained present to the past and future, all in the service of his country. In other words, he used his time in prison to think big for India.