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'I hope to reach 150,000 villages by 2010'
Seema Sindhu / New Delhi January 7, 2010, 0:24 IST

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Merc may lose top spot to BMW in India
India’s identity as a ‘Mercedes country’ will be under threat this year, as arch rival Bayerische Motoren Werke (better known as BMW) is on course to dethrone the Stuttgart-headquartered luxury car maker from the top slot for the first time ever in India.

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Toxic waste disposal at cement plan
Even as legal experts refuse to buy government’s claim that 350 tonnes of waste is no source of pollution and factory premises pose no health risk to humans, a study is going on to incinerate the waste in some cement kiln. According to sources, a final report would come by end of this month or in January. If a well placed government source is to be believed, the Central Pollution Control Board and National Council for Cement and Building Material are in dialogues over the issue.
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Copenhagen: Intense negotiations as emerging nations resist scrutiny

The US-brokered deal with India and three other emerging economies went down to the wire with a personal push by President Barack Obama, even as developing nations appeared to have staved off attempts to subject their voluntary mitigation actions to international review. - Dramatic turn of events at Copenhagen in the last few hours - US, BASIC struck deal; developing nations oppose it - Australian PM says climate talks nearly collapsed - Obama lauds India for setting forth mitigation efforts - PM sticks to Kyoto Protocol - Singh, Wen hold talks ahead of plenary at the climate summit The 12-day climate talks spilled overnight with consensus eluding on a substantive agreement and world leaders delayed their departures to meet again to find common ground amid serious attempts by rich nations to break the ranks of the developing countries. The leaders of the group of four -- India, China, South Africa, and Brazil (BASIC) -- met again as the deadlock continued. "The concerns of the developing countries was the verification of their nationally accountable mitigation actions," an official privy to the talks said. The developing countries felt that any international review of their voluntary mitigation actions would mean an intrusion on their sovereignty. Several drafts went back and forth as Obama waited for the BASIC leaders to conclude their discussions. The rich nations were also pressing for a 50 per cent emission cut across the board, which the developing nations were not ready to accept.


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