A civilisation as old as Indus valley?
Published: Friday, May 27, 2011, 1:28 IST
By DNA Correspondent | Place: Mumbai | Agency: DNA | |
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Wednesday, September 21, 2011
Kelshi : Possible to be place of one of the oldest civilisation!!
Monday, February 7, 2011
THE KING of the kings of fruits!
The first four boxes of this rare and delicate variety of the king of fruits were sold for Rs 7,000 each in Mumbai’s popular fruit and vegetable bazaar, the Crawford Market, in January.
That is Rs. 583 per mango! The predicted rates for March are Rs. 2000-3000 per dozen (Rs. 200 per piece)!
Any orders????
7 Feb, 2011, 11.44AM IST, Jayashree Bhosale & Ram Sahgal,ET Bureau
12 Alphonso mangoes sell for Rs 7,000 in 'Mahurat' trading
PUNE | MUMBAI: You can call it mango ‘mahurat’ trading. This year’s first Alphonso mango has fetched a record Rs 600, almost 50% more than the last year’s opening price.
The first four boxes of this rare and delicate variety of the king of fruits were sold for Rs 7,000 each in Mumbai’s popular fruit and vegetable bazaar, the Crawford Market, in January. Each box contained a dozen Alphonsos.
In Pune, the first box of 40 Alphonsos was sold at an auction conducted by the Agricultural Produce Market Committee (APMC) for Rs 11,111. This would translate into a retail price of Rs 450 per mango. The winning bidder was Ravsaheb Kunjir, an NRI. “Parents planning to visit their children in other countries usually take a few pieces of mangoes with them, even if they are expensive,” Kunjir told ET. These prized first few boxes come two to three months ahead of the main season, which usually starts in April. The fruit grows from early flowering in the rainy season.
“The high mahurat price is paid in order to get publicity,” said Nathsaheb Khaire, owner of PL Khaire and Sons, a grapes and mangoes trader in Pune. “The trader himself may not make much profit from the transaction. He may even have to sell those mangoes for a loss.”
Low supply has given a boost to the opening price this year. “Last year, we sold the first mangoes at Rs 4,500 a dozen. But this year, we have not got any early fruit from our orchards,” said Amar Desai, chief executive of the Pune-based Desai Bandhu Ambewale. Desai’s family owns orchards in Pawas in Ratnagiri district of Maharashtra and has been trading mangoes for the past 75 years. The exorbitant price proves that the first boxes are more about lifestyle than taste. “The first mangoes usually go to politicians, film stars and the rich families in Mumbai,” said Prakash Bang, a marketing professional who packs and door delivers mangoes under the brand name Bangoes.
Yogesh Dhole, a fruits wholesaler and retailer in Crawford market, agreed. “Initial tranche of mangoes are purchased by large corporate houses, diamond merchants and film personalities,” he said. But it is only a matter of time before Alphonsos become affordable for the middle classes. The crop is expected to be good, though the season may be delayed by up to two months due to unseasonal rainfall, experts said. “As there was less than average mango production for two consecutive years, trees have abundant food storage, which will result in high fruit bearing this year,” said a scientist at the Balasaheb Savant Konkan Krishi Vidyapeeth, the state-run agricultural university in Konkan, Maharashtra.
“Alphonso arrivals will begin in March but the price will be Rs 2,000-3,000 per dozen,” Desai said. “The arrivals will be in full swing only in April, when the fruit becomes affordable for all.” Wholesale fruit markets are also waiting for the king. “While last year there was crop damage due to a heat wave in the first week of April, this year we expect the crop output to be much better in the period after mid-April because of better weather conditions currently,” said Sanjay Narayan Pansare, director of APMC in Navi Mumbai.
Sunday, January 23, 2011
Nuclear project in konkan
The mining and industrialization in our area is really causing disaster. The politicians and industrialists are using the region only for their own benefits. Not a single native is employed by these organizations in their industries which are reaping the region of its resources and destroying the ecosystems.
In our village Kelshi, the mining for bauxite has destroyed the ecosystem. Some of my relatives in Raigad district have lost fertility of their rice fields due to chemicals released in Savitri River by Reliance Petrochemical project at Nagothane – which had ruined thousands of hectors of cultivable land.
I encourage all Konkani brothers to read this article on line and post their comments.
http://www.outlookindia.com/
ECOLOGY: KONKAN
The Rape Of Eden
Konkan’s entry on India’s infrastructure map foretells doom
Endangered Landscape
District-wise breakdown of the major projects
Thane
- Ancillary development of Navi Mumbai airport, green areas released for housing and commercial exploitation
Raigad
- Navi Mumbai airport MahaMumbai SEZ. Area: Thrice that of Mumbai Five thermal power plants 10 km from one another Chemical industries hub
Ratnagiri
- Madban: Location of the Jaitapur nuclear power plant (6 reactors)
- Gholap: Port to come up
- Across the region: 9 coal-fired plants and mining on 950 ha
Sindhudurg
- Dongerpal: Iron ore mine on anvil
- Asniye, Galel, Kalne villages: Mining permits
- Devgad, Dhakore-Vengurla: NTPC’s 2 thermal power projects
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Konkan, the idyllic stretch nestled between the Arabian Sea on its west and the Sahyadris on its east, is often touted as Maharashtra’s answer to Goa. In fact, the Konkanis believe the sands and water, rice and fish, mangoes and cashews, peace and tranquility here are a notch above Goa’s as Konkan is not on the international tourist map yet. The 720-km stretch from the northeastern corner of Mumbai down to Goa is, however, finding itself on India’s infrastructure map: with a vengeance.
From Panvel in Raigad district, across Madban in Ratnagiri, to Sawantwadi in Sindhudurg, a slew of big-ticket projects are planned. They threaten not only Konkan’s idyllic setting but also its economy and culture. Leading the charge is the 9,900-MW Jaitapur nuclear power project, the largest of its kind in the world, the deal for which was inked earlier this week between the Nuclear Power Corporation of India and French giant Areva. Also on the board are 15 coal-based power projects equalling nearly 25,000 MW, 40-odd medium- and small-size ports, nearly 40 medium and mega SEZs, major mining projects and chemical hubs. “This is the death-knell for Konkan; our lives will be nightmarish,” declared social activist Vaishali Patil, before she was arrested this week.
Madban, the village chosen for the Jaitapur nuclear power plant, mirrors the deep resentment and unrest in the entire Konkan stretch. Some parts have seen agitations for over three years, but events in Madban signify the worst side of India’s infrastructure crusade. Land was acquired in Madban, Niveli and Mithgavane without informing villagers of the nature of the project; protesters saw the ruthlessness of state power. Prohibitory orders were enforced strictly, women walking to their fields were picked up and thrown behind bars, farm equipment was confiscated or thoroughly searched before labourers were allowed to proceed to their farms, key activists in the area were detained so many times that most went underground as the Jaitapur deal was signed. Even so, nearly 800 locals were detained as a few broke window-panes of police vans and gathered to listen to Justice (retd) B.G. Kolse-Patil, who too was arrested and kept in Lanja jail with convicts and undertrials.
“Whenever news is being telecast about the Jaitapur plant, power goes off in the entire area. Whenever an agitation is planned, the mobile network gets jammed. Isn’t it surprising?” asks Vilas Keru Katkar, 39, a Niveli resident. Another resident, Ranjana Manjrekar, laments that “it’s our own police that lathicharges us, while the handful of traitors who’ve given their vehicles to the power plant get police protection”. A third resident, Anant Narayan Katkar, 67, who has been arrested three times so far, remarks: “The government thinks we agitate because our land is being taken. But they don’t realise that, for us, nature is not separate. We are part of the nature which the Jaitapur project will destroy.”
Stretched Idyll Beach houses in Ratnagiri
Economists like Dr Sulabha Brahme in Pune question the need for Konkan to produce close to 33,000-MW power when the region itself requires less than 200 MW. Local physician Dr Vivek Bhide says the economic and cultural change cannot even be mapped fully. “These projects will hit the nearly seven lakh people in Ratnagiri and Sindhudurg who depend on horticulture, mainly mangoes, cashew and coconuts. These two districts were declared a horticulture zone by the state in 1997; farmers were subsidised to invest in mango crops. All that will now come to naught.”
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Equally, a large stretch of the Western Ghats, billed by the international environmental community as one of the top 10 biodiversity spots in the world, is at stake. The Western Ghats or the Sahyadris are home to over 5,000 species of flowering plants, 139 mammal, 508 bird and 179 amphibian species, including 325 globally threatened ones. The ministry of environment and forests is aware of this. Even on the day minister Jairam Ramesh sat next to Maharashtra chief minister Prithivraj Chavan to announce that the Jaitapur project had been given environmental clearance, Jairam expressed his “serious concerns” about the large number of coal-based and mining projects planned in the fragile Konkan stretch.
Jairam is in good company. Dr Madhav Gadgil, well-known ecologist, author and currently a member of the National Advisory Council chaired by Sonia Gandhi, has drawn attention to the reckless sanctioning of mega projects across the Konkan. As chairperson of the MoEF’s ecology expert panel on the Western Ghats, he visited Konkan two months back. Retired schoolteacher Suresh Gavas told him that the area was famous for its cashewnuts, but the environment impact assessment (EIA) report said it was barren. Vaishali Patil, on behalf of the Konkan Vinashkari Prakalp Virodhi Samiti, informed him that two of the four gram panchayats affected by the project got the 1,200-page EIA report in Marathi just eight days before the public hearing.
Joining Gadgil is E.A.S. Sarma, former Union power secretary and currently principal advisor in the Planning Commission. “The Jaitapur project is not the only one, there are many more, and the collective impact on the region has not been studied. The local areas won’t be able to sustain the impact of such large-scale environmental changes,” he said in Pune last month. A Bombay Natural History Society report too says the same.
Konkanis find Jairam’s attitude on this “casual” compared to his stand on Niyamgiri. “If he’s clued in, why is he giving clearances to an N-plant that’s 10 times Chernobyl in a Grade IV seismic zone?” asks lawyer Girish Raut. “The government’s own agencies say a faultline exists and nearly 20 earthquakes have been recorded in the last two years ranging from 2.3 to 5-plus Richter.”
Also incensed and threatened now is Uddhav Thackeray. Konkan has been the bastion of the Shiv Sena. But with activists taking up cudgels against several projects, a chastened Thackeray sent his delegation to Konkan this week. However, one villager in Nate told Uddhav’s representative: “We don’t want another Enron, we want (to be liberated) like Singur.” It shows the resolve across the region. People remind “visitors” that Konkan is more picturesque but also far more volatile than Singur.
By Smruti Koppikar in Raigad and Ratnagiri, Maharashtra with Snigdha Hasan