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Tata Steel team visits GPH Ispat plant in Sitakunda

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Tata Steel team visits GPH Ispat plant​

OUR CORRESPONDENT, CHATTOGRAM | Published: November 02, 2022 11:48:21

A delegation of Tata Steel Limited, India's leading steel manufacturing company, visited GPH Ispat Factory at Kumira, Sitakunda, on Tuesday
A delegation of Tata Steel Limited, India's leading steel manufacturing company, visited GPH Ispat Factory at Kumira, Sitakunda, on Tuesday

A delegation of Tata Steel Limited, India's leading steel manufacturing company, visited GPH Ispat Factory at Kumira, Sitakunda, on Tuesday.

"Quantum Electric Arc Furnace technology-based steel manufacturing company, GPH Ispat, is a reference plant. We have come here to experience how they are making world-class steel products with the state-of-the-art technology," Tata Steel head of Engineering (steel making) Santosh Kumar Maurya said after visiting the GPH Ispat's plant.

The visit took place under the supervision of Primetals Technologies, world-class engineering and plant construction company.

Additional Managing Director of GPH Ispat Mohammad Almas Shimul said "GPH has been playing an exemplary role in the steel sector at home and abroad. We feel fortunate that the delegation of Tata Steel, which is famous in the world, visited our plant."

The Tata delegation was briefed on overall aspects of this integrated plant, including scrap procurement, oxygen plant and environment.
Tata Steel Limited Senior Manager (Mills) Engineer Shaimpu Kumar, Senior Manager (D&E) Structural Tridip Mandal, Senior Manager (SMLP) Krishna Murari Choubey, Primetals Technologies Austria Vice President (Global Business Unit) Josef Gahleitner, Vice President (Plant Solutions) Stefan Fellner, Primatals India Vice President (Projects) Bhartendu Sharma, Primetals USA (BID Project) Manager Pieter Keyzer, GPH Ispat Executive Director (Sales & Marketing) Shovhon Mahbub Shahabuddin, Executive Director (Plant) Madani M Imtiaz Hossain, Media Adviser Ovik Osman and Head of Plant Dr. SM Sumon were present during the visit.

nazim07@yahoo.com
 

Tata Steel team visits GPH Ispat plant​

OUR CORRESPONDENT, CHATTOGRAM | Published: November 02, 2022 11:48:21

A delegation of Tata Steel Limited, India's leading steel manufacturing company, visited GPH Ispat Factory at Kumira, Sitakunda, on Tuesday's leading steel manufacturing company, visited GPH Ispat Factory at Kumira, Sitakunda, on Tuesday
A delegation of Tata Steel Limited, India's leading steel manufacturing company, visited GPH Ispat Factory at Kumira, Sitakunda, on Tuesday

A delegation of Tata Steel Limited, India's leading steel manufacturing company, visited GPH Ispat Factory at Kumira, Sitakunda, on Tuesday.

"Quantum Electric Arc Furnace technology-based steel manufacturing company, GPH Ispat, is a reference plant. We have come here to experience how they are making world-class steel products with the state-of-the-art technology," Tata Steel head of Engineering (steel making) Santosh Kumar Maurya said after visiting the GPH Ispat's plant.

The visit took place under the supervision of Primetals Technologies, world-class engineering and plant construction company.

Additional Managing Director of GPH Ispat Mohammad Almas Shimul said "GPH has been playing an exemplary role in the steel sector at home and abroad. We feel fortunate that the delegation of Tata Steel, which is famous in the world, visited our plant."

The Tata delegation was briefed on overall aspects of this integrated plant, including scrap procurement, oxygen plant and environment.
Tata Steel Limited Senior Manager (Mills) Engineer Shaimpu Kumar, Senior Manager (D&E) Structural Tridip Mandal, Senior Manager (SMLP) Krishna Murari Choubey, Primetals Technologies Austria Vice President (Global Business Unit) Josef Gahleitner, Vice President (Plant Solutions) Stefan Fellner, Primatals India Vice President (Projects) Bhartendu Sharma, Primetals USA (BID Project) Manager Pieter Keyzer, GPH Ispat Executive Director (Sales & Marketing) Shovhon Mahbub Shahabuddin, Executive Director (Plant) Madani M Imtiaz Hossain, Media Adviser Ovik Osman and Head of Plant Dr. SM Sumon were present during the visit.

nazim07@yahoo.com

This is just one example of newer companies in Bangladesh which are blazing ahead in cutting edge technology.

Bangladesh will probably never match Indian production output levels, but it will certainly use better and more efficient technology if available.
 
Why entertain these back stabbing and thieving bindians, the next min they'll call us terminates. Alot of tatami execs and top dogs in company support bjp and rss.
Private companies need to collaborate with each other. This TATA visit to the GPH Ispat plant is one like that.
 
Why entertain these back stabbing and thieving bindians, the next min they'll call us terminates. Alot of tatami execs and top dogs in company support bjp and rss.

We should really ban Tata and Ashok Leyland products in Bangladesh as they supply missile and other products to their armed forces. Which could easily be used against us in case there is a conflict.

Private companies need to collaborate with each other. This TATA visit to the GPH Ispat plant is one like that.

Tata came at the invitation of the Quantum Furnace supplier. I think they are from Austria?
 
We should really ban Tata and Ashok Leyland products in Bangladesh as they supply missile and other products to their armed forces. Which could easily be used against us in case there is a conflict.



Tata came at the invitation of the Quantum Furnace supplier. I think they are from Austria?
Now, someone can ask our GPH Ispat to produce missiles in the country and supply them to our armed forces.
 
This is just one example of newer companies in Bangladesh which are blazing ahead in cutting edge technology.

Bangladesh will probably never match Indian production output levels, but it will certainly use better and more efficient technology if available.

Bangladesh already produces 1/5th of india's total value-added manufacturing output, despite being ~8.5x smaller in size. Matching production output shouldn't be the goal anyways....since societies with large populations/size will naturally produce more in aggregate production....which hardly translate into much. For example, Malaysia alone humiliates india in high-tech exports despite being 4300% smaller in size :lol:

1667533645020.png


Bangladeshis should focus on moving up the value-chain when it comes to manufacturing capabilities and develop specialized competitive advantages in high-value sectors of the world economy.
 
@Turingsage

Making chadis for the world....

Anything which brings in forex and provides employment for millions of poor people, particularly women, is not something to be sneered at. Lets hope millions of Indians from the BIMARU and Eastern states get into chaddi stitching too.

Regards
 
Making chadis for the world and being given preferential tariffs because you are classed as a LDC (least developed country) is not something you should be bragging about.

Nobody is bragging about anything. Not all people are inferiority-complex stricken indians who mental masturbate on the smallest things and harrrp on "saaarrr supa powa sarrrrr!!!" bc of some GDP numbers (2/3rd of which is composed of just household expenditure numbers anyways :lol: ).

Its not even random pajeets....its literally your leadership and intelligensia making a laughing stock of india worldwide with their pity-worthy delusions

Indian super power mental masturbations.png


Indian dreams of super power 1 lmao.jpg


Normal folks know S. Asia has a lottttttt to cover before giving its citizens a dignified life. My post was just my thoughts on the best next steps for Bangladeshis. Calm down

@Turingsage

Making chadis for the world....

Anything which brings in forex and provides employment for millions of poor people, particularly women, is not something to be sneered at. Lets hope millions of Indians from the BIMARU and Eastern states get into chaddi stitching too.

Regards

Not to mention, "stitching chadis" allowed Bangladesh to catch up and then surpass india in HDI (the same HDI figures that indians will literally worship on this forum when india used to be ahead of both S. Asian Muslim states. Now HDI does not matter that much according to same folks :lol:)
 
@AUz

Now HDI does not matter that much according to same folks

It goes both way though. My dear friend Brofessor sb (@RiazHaq) used to regularly update the annual Multidimensional Poverty Index when Pak was ahead of IND and BD. Now, when Pak trails he seldom does; and when he does he quotes selectively.

Regards
 
@AUz

Now HDI does not matter that much according to same folks

It goes both way though. My dear friend Brofessor sb (@RiazHaq) used to regularly update the annual Multidimensional Poverty Index when Pak was ahead of IND and BD. Now, when Pak trails he seldom does; and when he does he quotes selectively.

Regards

Pakistan's economy fell behind india's in many aspects primarily due to the fall-out of two major wars in Afghanistan and our involvement in them post-1980s and 2000s. Nobody in their right mind would deny that. Indian economy today is noticeably stronger than ours. The only problem I take sometimes is when some indians act as if Pakistan is now congo and india is Norway :cry: The gap between how average Pakistan and average indian lives is not that great at all. But yes, nobody would deny the structural strength of indian economy vis-a-vis Pakistan's in the past decade or more.
 
@AUz

Sad but true observations above. Meant about the delusional behaviour of some of my compatriots here.

Regards
 

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