Industrial Training
Industrial Training
Industrial Training
(M.P)
SUBMITTED TO SUBMITTED BY
PROF. Ashish Patra Shashwat Tiwari
0901EE161099
INDEX
D
4 ADRM(G)/NCR/ALD ANURAG AGRAWAL 7497950003
STORE DEPARTMENT
1 SR. DMM/ ALD ASHOK KUMAR 9794837770
2 AMM/ALD UMESH CHANDRA 7525001625
PANDEY
INFORMATION & TECHONOLOGY CENTRE
1 SR. E.D.P.M./ALD 9794837051
PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT
1 SR. DPO/ALD ABHISHEK RANJAN 9794837600
2 DPO /ALD MUKESH KHARE 9794837602
3 DPO/LAW/ALD K L JAISWAR 9794837601
4 A.P.O./ALD LUV KUSH 9794837605
5 APO/NCR/ALD 9794837691
6 APO/ALD 9794837604
7 APO/ALD 9794837603
8 PRINCIPAL/NCRIC/TDL 9412875354
COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT
1 SR. DCM/ALD ANU MANI TRIPATHI 9794837950
2 DY CTM/CNB AKHLAQ AHMAD 9794837951
3 D.C.M./ALD ASHUTOSH SINGH 9794837952
4 D.T.M./ALD JITENDRA TIWARI 9794837953
5 A.C.M./ALD PRANJLYA PARTH 9794867817
LATHE
6 A.C.M./ALD SK SRIVASTAVA 9794837954
7 A.C.M./ALD SIMA TIWARI
8 A.C.M. /TDL AMAN VARMA 9794837954
OPERATING DEPARTMENT
1 SR.DOM/ALD MANNU PRAKASH 9794837900
DUBEY
2 SR.DOM/GENL/& HIMANSHU SHEKHAR 9794837901
CHG/ALD UPADHYAY
3 SR. DOM/GOODS/ALD
4 DTM/TDL BRIJESH MISHRA
5 AOM ALD LAL CHAND PAL
6 AOM/TDL
7 D.O.M./CNB ARUN PRAKASH
TRIPATHI
8 AOM/ALD VIDITTIWARI
9 AOM/PLANNING/ALD PARASHAR
10 STATION RAJPOOT
MANAGER/ALD
11 DTM/ALJN VACANT
SAFETY DEPARTMENT
1 SR.DSO/ALD V.K. GAUTAM
2 ADSO/ALD
SIGNAL & TELECOMMUNICATION
DEPARTMENT
1 SR.DSTE/C/ALD P.K. RAI
27 ADEE/TRS/CNB 9794845006
28 ADEE/TRS/CNB MISS PRATIBHA GUPTA 9794868938
29 SR. DEE/TMS/CNB 9794837304
30 ADEE/TMS/CNB UDAL SINGH 9794837303
31 PRINCIPAL/ETC/CNB SANJAI KUMAR 9794837315
BANSAL
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT
1 C.M.S./ALD
2 CMS/CNB
3 SR. DMO/ALD DR. C.C. SAXENA
4 SR. DMO/ALD DR. VINEET AGARWAL
5 SR. DMO/ALD DR. KUMKUM TANDON
6 SR. DMO/ALD DR. RUPA KAPIL
7 SR. DMO/ALD DR. SUMANT BHEL
8 SR. DMO/ALD DR. R.J. CHAUDHARY
9 SR. DMO/ALD DR. S.K. HANDOO
10 SR. DMO/ALD DR. YASHODA KUMARI
11 SR. DMO/ALD DR. MANJU LATA
12 SR. DMO/ALD DR. RAKESH NIGAM
13 SR. DMO/ALD DR. V.K.MAURYA
14 SR. DMO/CNB DR. SANJAY
SRIVASTAVA
15 SR. DMO/CNB DR. A.K. DUTTA
16 SR. DMO/CNB DR. DEVENDRA
KUMAR
17 SR. DMO/ALD DR. S. DUTTA
18 SR. DMO/CNB DR. RAVINDRA
PRASAD
Heavy rains helped dampen fires the following day, and rescue workers began
trying to separate the twelve mangled carriages of the train and identify the bodies
contained inside. Many were unrecognizable and never identified.
To promote the safety and the right usage of equipment, there are certain rules and
regulations formulated by the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS). BIS follows the
following five principles −
Safety
Ease of use and adaptability
Simple technology
Value for money products
Energy efficiency and environment
BIS has published the following code of practice for public safety standards in order to
promote the right to information, transparency and accountability in a proper manner
to the public.
Let us now consider other important codes of practice established by BIS for the
purpose of electrification. The codes are listed in the table below −
General Requirements
Sr. No. Standards & Application
1
IS:900
2
IS:1271
3
IS:1646
5
IS:1886
6
IS:1913
7
IS:2032
8
IS:2274
Electrical wiring installations where system voltage is more than 658 volts
9
IS:3034
10
IS:3072 (part-1)
Installation and maintenance of switchgear where system voltage is less than 1000
volts
11
IS:3106
Selection, installation and maintenance of fuse where system voltage is less than 650
volts
12
IS:3638
13
IS:3646
14
IS:3716
15
IS:3842
16
IS:4004
17
IS:4146
18
IS:4201
19
IS:5571
Selection of electrical equipment in hazardous area
20
IS:5572
21
IS:5780
22
IS:5908
Switchgear
The following table lists down the codes of practice for the maintenance of switchgear
−
General Requirements
Sr. No. Standards & Application
1
IS:375
Making and arrangement for switchgear bus-bars, main connections and auxiliary
winding
2
IS:694(part-1)
3
IS:1248
Degrees of protections for enclosures for switchgear and control gear (low voltage)
5
IS:2208
6
IS:3202
7
IS:3231
8
IS:4047
Guide for heavy duty air break switches and fuses for voltage less than 1000v
9
IS:4237
10
IS:5987
11
IS:335
13
IS:3427
Metal enclosed switch gear and control gear for voltage within 1000v to 11000v
14
IS:722
15
IS:1951
16
IS:2516(part-1sec-1 & part-2sec2)
The incident left 12 dead and over 350 hospitalised. Over 2,000 people were
evacuated from the villages within a radius of 1.5 to 3 km from the plant.
People ran for their lives, leaving their belongings and houses unlocked.
"We are habituated to the pungent smell, as we have been inhaling it since our
birth. But we never expected that vapour would leak out in such huge quantity
and prove so dangerous," says Appalaraju, a resident of SC-BC Colony.
The boiling point of styrene is 145° Celsius and as per District Collector V.
Vinay Chand, the temperature rose to 154° Celsius. About 1800 MT of
styrene was present in the 2400 MT capacity tank.
Many questions are being raised on the incident and are under probe. How did
the temperature rise and was it not noticed? Were the low and high
temperature inhibitors at the plant present in sufficient quantity? (Inhibitors
such as PTBC – para-tertiary butyl catechol – are used to solidify the liquid to
lower the temperature.) Was there some mechanical error in the gauges or
was there a human error?
The NDRF had flown in 500 kg of PTBC to bring down the temperature.
"Fortunately, styrene monomer vapour is heavy and does not spread to a large
area as in the case of other gases. It settles down within a radius of 1.5 km,
says Mr. Anantaram Ganapathi, who worked as the styrene plant manager in
the company.
In an affidavit in May 2019, the factory had accepted that it was operating
without obtaining the environment clearances. The company had admitted
that the unit did not have environment clearance substantiating the produced
quantity, issued by the competent authority for continuing operations, and
was operating based on a consent given by the Andhra Pradesh Pollution
Control Board.
"How did APPCB grant Consent for Establishment (CFE) and Consent for
Operation (CFO) around the beginning of 2019 for the unit s expansion?
APPCB did not apparently take clearance either from the State government or
from the Union Ministry of Environment and Forests," alleges former
bureaucrat E.A.S. Sarma.
"Our eyes and skin still burn. We are scared of the long-term health effects
and depression that has set in many," laments Lakshmi, a housewife.
At least 5 people are feared dead and more than 100 labourers are suspected to be trapped under
the debris of the 220 metre under-construction chimney of the 2x250 mw Parichha Extension
thermal power station collapsed in Jhansi district in Bundelkhand region on Monday. The
chimney, which was being built by the National Building Construction Company (NBCC) at the
cost of Rs 30 crore, was almost near completion.
Although the mishap took place during lunch break when most labourers were having food under
the chimney to avoid the blazing sun, rescue operations started late in the evening.
At present, four units of Parichha are generating 640 mw of electricity. With this, the state
governments dreams of easing the severe power crunch being faced in the state through this
project lies shattered as does the hope that the state will turn power surplus with a few years. It
may be mentioned that the state government had decided to get the Parichha extension work
done by the Uttar Pradesh Rajya Vidyut Utpadan Nigam Ltd (UPRVUNL), which had handed
over the BTG contract to BHEL. BHEL, in turn, had sub-contracted the chimney contract to
NBCC. Speaking to the media before rushing off to the mishap site, states power corporation
chairman Navneet Sehgal said, the construction of the chimney had been almost completed and
one of the two 250 mw units was to be commissioned by the first week of June.
FEROZ GANDHI NTPC UNCHAHAR RAEBARELI
EXPLOSION
India's largest power producer NTPC Ltd today said it has shut a 500 MW
unit at its Unchahar coal-fired power station in Rae Bareli after an explosion
killed 29 people and injured several others.The 1,550-megawatt (MW) plant,
which supplies electricity to nine states, had reported an explosion in the
furnace beneath the boiler yesterday.
"This is to inform that Unit-6 (500 MW) of Feroze Gandhi Unchahar Thermal
Power Station, Rae Bareli, UP, is under shutdown after an accident in the
evening of November 1. The other five units of the station are operating
normally," NTPC said in a statement.
NTPC had yesterday said it has initiated a probe to ascertain the reasons
behind the blast.
At around 1530 hours yesterday, "there was sudden abnormal sound at 20-
meter elevation," it had said in a statement yesterday. "There was opening
in corner No.2 from which hot flue gases and steam escaped affecting the
people working around the area." Around 80 people were rushed to NTPC
hospital, most of them were discharged after giving first-aid, it added.
The plant employs around 870 people.
"All possible measures are being taken to provide immediate relief to the
families of affected people in close coordination with the district
administration