Small Business

NTPC Q3 net up 5% to Rs 2,365 cr

National Thermal Power Corporation (NTPC) today reported a growth of 5 per cent in net profit at Rs 2,364.9 crore for the third quarter ended December 31, 2009, over the same period last year. - NTPC undertakes 17 projects to have 75,000 Mw - NTPC"s power exchange likely to be operational next fiscal - TRF bags Rs 611 crore order - Britannia Q3 PAT declines 37% to Rs 29 cr - Simbhaoli Sugars back in black with Rs 44 cr Q3 net - Apollo Hospitals Q3 net up 48% at Rs 44 cr However, total income declined to Rs 11,962.8 crore for the quarter ended December 31, from Rs 12,128 crore in the same period previous fiscal, NTPC said in a filing to the Bombay Stock Exchange. Further the company said that one of its coal based unit located in Uttar Pradesh, which is planned to provide power to Commonwealth Games, has reached full load to produce 490 Mw of power. "One of the company"s coal based unit of 490 Mw of national capital thermal power project located in Uttar Pradesh has been successfully commissioned. It has reached full load on January 29, 2010," the company said. With the commissioning of this unit, the total installed capacity of the company has crossed 31,000 Mw and has become 31,134 Mw. Shares of NTPC were trading at Rs 214.70 on the BSE, down 0.46 per cent from previous close.


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

News of the day
Satyam appoints Deloitte as auditor, Damodaran on board
IT firm Mahindra Satyam (formerly Satyam Computer) today appointed Deloitte as auditors, within days of CBI charging Price Waterhouse of complicity in the Rs 14,000-crore accounting scam.
Popular Articles
payday loans no faxing

Affordable houses to provide Rs 500,000cr biz opportunity
The affordable housing segment will offer business opportunities worth over Rs 500,000 crore as India requires more than 10 million houses to be built by 2013-14.

Come into my parlour
Space, says Raavi Sabharwal, is “opportunity”, “challenge” and, most importantly, “fun”. Sabharwal, 63, is the publisher of Timeless Books and owner of Timeless — The Art Book Studio, tucked away in one of the many bylanes of Kotla Mubarakpur, one of the many “asides” of the Capital, cheek by jowl with the upmarket South Extension shopping centre. The 1,600 sq ft space, which you stumble into after you’ve taken a few wrong turns, is quiet and peaceful, a refuge from the chaos that surrounds it.