department issue circular for Export of cotton & expoprt news

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Most Immediate

F.No.524/19/2010-STO (TU)

Government of India

Ministry of Finance

Department of Revenue

Central Board of Excise & Customs

 

129-A, North Block,

New Delhi, dated 15th December, 2010.

To

 

All Chief Commissioners of Customs.

All Chief Commissioners of Customs & Central Excise.

All Commissioners of Customs.

All Commissioners of Customs (Export).

All Commissioners of Customs / Central Excise (Prev.).

 

 

Subject:  Export of cotton–regarding.

 

Sir / Madam, 

           

            Please find enclosed herewith a copy of Ministry of Textiles D.O. letter No.12015/3/2010-IT/Cotton dated 10th December, 2010 on the above mentioned subject.

 

2.         In this regard, Ministry of Textiles has stated that the validity of the export authorization registration contracts (EARCs) is upto 15.12.2010 and requested the Board to ensure that cotton export shipments should not be permitted following the expiry of EARCs till Government decides future policy on the subject.

 

 3.        In view of the above, you are requested to take further necessary action in the matter at the earliest. 

 

 

Yours faithfully,

Enclosure:                                                                                     

D.O. Letter from Ministry of Textiles

(G.S. Sinha)

OSD (Tariff Unit)

 

Replies (2)

Notice to Mundra port for flouting coastal laws

Mundra Port and SEZ Limited has become the latest target of the Environment Ministry, which issued showcause notice to the company on Thursday for violation of coastal and environmental laws.

The company is developing India’s largest private port and special economic zone on the Gujarat coast.

The Ministry has asked the company, promoted by the Adani group, to reply within 15 days as to why the clearances given to it for developing the port and a township should not be cancelled.

The notice has been issued on the recommendations of a ministry team that visited the site visit following complaints.

The team headed by A Senthil Vel, Additional Director in the Environment Ministry, found large-scale destruction of mangroves. It also found that an aerodrome, a township and a hospital had been developed without getting requisite clearances.


Source : indianexpress.com

Exporters learn to smile again in 2010

NEW DELHI: Smiles returned to the faces of Indian exporters in 2010 after nearly 12 months of suffering the pain of recession in advanced economies.

October 2009 saw the tide turn in favour of Indian exporters and the situation kept getting better and better with each passing month of 2010.

"If you look at all the big ticket items on our exports - whichever you want to pick up - cumulatively, all of them had good growth rate for the April-November period," Commerce Secretary Rahul Khullar said, summing up what he called the "real interesting story" of fiscal 2010-11.

So much so the value of the country's outbound goods consignment this fiscal is expected to far exceed the target of $200 billion. It was $179 billion in the previous year.

"Indian exports may reach a new milestone of $220 billion this fiscal, increasing the country's share in the world trade," Federation of Indian Export Organsiations President A Sakthivel said.

Since things had gone so bad between October 2008 and May 2009 under the impact of demand-recession in all the major markets for Indian merchandise, the initial phase of recovery was seen as no great-shakes because it came on the back of a low base of annual comparison.

But right from the first quarter of the fiscal 2010-11, the actual recovery was visible, helped by a turnaround in the
US and European markets as also increased global prices in commodities.

Thanks to demand pick-up in the western stores and production facilities,
India's merchandise shipments went up by 26.7 per cent to $140.3 billion between April-November, according to the official data.

In fact, as Khullar put it, it was for the first time over a long period that the pace of growth in exports was faster than imports, which expanded by 24 per cent in the eight months of the FY'11.

Consequent to exports doing well, worries on the balance of trade front have receded. The trade gap (difference between export and import) for the April-November period was $81.7 billion. At this rate, it could go anywhere between $120 -135 billion depending on the global prices of crude, which account for about 30 per cent of the country's import bill.

From the point of view of realisations, engineering, gems and jewellery and petroleum products were the biggest contributors to the Indian export basket. The good news is that all the three have clocked huge growth in the first eight months of the fiscal.

Between April and November, engineering exports were up 50 per cent, gems and jewellery 16 per cent and petroleum products 41 per cent.

Then there are sectors which do not bring in much in terms of value but are crucial for employment. These include sectors like carpet and leather, which have also shown smart growth.


Source : economictimes.indiatimes.com


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