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Why Brahma was our first Project Manager

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Project management means developing and executing a project plan, which involves defining and confirming the project goals and objectives, how they will be achieved, identifying tasks and quantifying the resources needed, and determining budgets and timelines for completion.

Over a period of time, I will bring forth a holistic treatment of the art and science of project management.

On one side there are Projects, and on the other, everything else. Indeed, of all the things that we do in our life, "Projects" make up one category, and rest can be clubbed together as "all others"! If the activities of creation, maintenance and destruction together form the great Hindu religious trinity, then creation is synonymous with Projects, and obviously, there are no prizes for guessing as to which of these three is most exciting. Thus, the so-called creator, Brahma, may be pompously designated as the first ever Project Manager, although little may be known about the tools and processes he deployed for managing his Projects! Whenever I have stood on a piece of land before commencement of construction, I have tried to envision the landscape after a few years, and it is interesting to compare the actual developments later. Helping to create anything meaningful in an empty space can be very fulfilling, and this is the essence of "Projects" as I see it, – this transformation from "before" to "after".

When we say "Projects", many weather-beaten project managers would mean construction projects only, and the graphic imagery of Cranes, Bulldozers, Concrete Mixers, etc., come to mind immediately. It is important to get this point clarified at the beginning itself. For me, the job of creating anything new and complex, for a stated purpose, is a Project. Theorists will jump in with detailed categorisation of various types of Projects, which can be very boring, but we need to appreciate that technically speaking, whenever a large number of activities are planned to be conducted by several differentiated entities to achieve a common end, it can be called a Project. Diverse things such as development of software, implementation of a new business process, making an IPO, development of a new product, furnishing a new house, etc., do all qualify as projects, just as conventional projects like building a new road/bridge, or constructing a steel plant or setting up a textile mill. You see, Projects do come in many sizes and shapes! Therefore, as we go forward, we shall try to deal with matters relating to this all encompassing understanding of projects and their management, rather than be limited by the narrow, conventional definition.

However, today I wish to start from a somewhat higher level of thinking and approach, and talk about"Nation Building" as a great Project, the absence of which is currently so disappointing in our country. Some of the greatest Nation Builders of our times, like Kemal Ataturk, Nelson Mandela, or Lee Kuan Yew, who succeeded in achieving their goals of uplifting their respective nations, did adapt (one would suspect) basic methods and approaches like planning, goal setting, establishing or owning accountability, delegation of authority, communications, tracking of progress and making corrective changes, all of which are fundamental project management tools.

We can only hope that our future leaders also look upon their job of governing and improving our country as a massive Project (which it surely is!) and approach the task with appropriate management systems and tools, with the assistance of specialists, and with some modicum of Accountability. But, isn’t the process of Nation Building, a collective of many sub-projects in multi-disciplinary areas of education, health, infrastructure, businesses and industry, strewn all over the geography of our country? Isn’t this something in which all of us have to participate and contribute! If that be so, for our country to progress and succeed, we all have to embrace a culture of Project Management, which starts with the discipline of following a given process. It is here, that magazines like ours can make a difference, by de-mystifying the topic, and by making it rewarding and popular, such that, one day Project Management becomes a way of life for us, not just for the cement sector.

While signing off for now, let me throw at you an anonymous saying about projects in a lighter vein:

No major project is ever completed on time, within budget, with the same team that started it, nor does the project do what it was supposed to do. It is highly unlikely that yours will be the first, unless, of course, you are a re- incarnation of Brahma!

– SUMIT BANERJEE

From this issue onwards, this will be a regular column, focussing on project management.

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Projects

Adani Group to invest Rs 55,000 cr in Gujarat projects, including cement plant

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Billionaire Gautam Adani announced over Rs 55,000 crore investment in next five years in a clutch of projects in Gujarat including the world’s largest solar park, a copper plant, a cement unit, and a lithium battery manufacturing complex, envisaging direct employment to 50,000 people.

Adani Group, which operates Mundra port in the state, announced plans to foray into petrochemical business with a Rs 16,000 crore project with German chemical major BASF.

Speaking at the 9th Vibrant Gujarat Summit here, Adani said his group’s investments in Gujarat in the past five years exceed Rs 50,000 crores and “we are further accelerating our investments.”

“Over the next 5 years, our investments will include the world’s largest solar hybrid park in Khavda. The anticipated investment in this park is Rs 30,000 crore. We also plan to establish a 1 GW Data Center Park in Mundra, a one million ton copper smelting and refining project, a cement and clinker manufacturing unit in Lakhpat, an integrated Lithium battery manufacturing complex and expand our Photovoltaic manufacturing capabilities. Overall, we anticipate a total of Rs 55,000 crore of investment in all these projects,” he said.

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Projects

Bangladesh’s Chhatak Cement announces modernisation project

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Bangladesh’s Chhatak Cement Co Ltd has announced plans to modernise its facility and convert it from wet process to dry process. The company has begun to prepare a development project proposal, with a schedule to implement the upgrades by 2021.

According to company officials, Chhatak Cement has incurred an accumulated loss of over BDT3.63bn (US$43.25m) between FY13-14 and FY17-18, mainly due to its outdated machinery resulting in loss of production capacity. The plant is currently operating at 70,000 tonnes per annum (tpa).

However, the new project is anticipated to boost production capacity and increase annual company profit to around BDT1bn. The modernisation is expected to be financed by a BDT8.9bn investment from the government, with BDT5.34bn as a loan with a payback period of seven years and the rest as equity, according to The Financial Express.

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Forced shutdown of Viet-Dung Quat cement plant in Vietnam

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The Dai Viet-Dung Quat cement plant has been forced to temporarily shut down in the central province of Quang Ngai due to environmental pollution. Since 26 May, the locals had gathered in front of the plant to call for a shutdown.

Director of Central Region Cement JSC Trinh Van Dien, investor in the Dai Viet-Dung Quat cement plant, said, “We invited an environmental monitoring team to check the dust concentration and the results are safe. The local Department of Natural Resources and Environment hasn?t reached a conclusion on the noise level yet.”

He added, “We?ve had to temporarily close the plant, meaning we”re losing VND300m (US$13,437) and the 100 workers are kicking their heels at home. I don”t know what to do.”

The ground clearance work should have been done this year but the coal-powered plant project was delayed until 2020. As a result, the ground clearance work has also been delayed.

According to the locals, they want to be compensated for the relocation if the plant stays. “We don?t want to stay. We have to move,” local Nguyen Ne said.

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