Volvo: Truck Deliveries in May 2010

STOCKHOLM–(Business Wire)–
Total deliveries from the Volvo Group`s truck operations in May amounted to
13,577 vehicles. This was an increase of 44% compared with the year-earlier
period. Compared to April this year the deliveries increased by 4 %.

For more information follow this link:

http://www.volvogroup.com/group/global/en-gb/newsmedia/pressreleases/_layouts/CWP.Internet.VolvoCom/NewsItem.aspx?News.ItemId=84208&News.Language=en-gb

The Volvo Group is one of the world`s leading manufacturers of trucks, buses and
construction equipment, drive systems for marine and industrial applications,
aerospace components and services. The Group also provides complete solutions
for financing and service. The Volvo Group, which employs about 90,000 people,
has production facilities in 19 countries and sells their products in more than
180 markets. In 2009 annual sales of the Volvo Group amounted to about SEK 218
billion. The Volvo Group is a publicly-held company headquartered in Göteborg,
Sweden. Volvo shares are listed on OMX Nordic Exchange Stockholm. For more
information, please visit www.volvogroup.com or www.volvogroup.mobi if you are
using your mobile phone.

This information was brought to you by Cision http://www.cisionwire.com

Volvo
Mårten Wikforss
+46 (0)31-66 11 27
+46 (0)705-59 11 49

Copyright Business Wire 2010

Commodity prices skyrocket as Manipur blockade enters 55th day

Imphal, June 6 (PTI) The indefinite economic blockade of lifeline routes NH 39 (Imphal-Dimapur) and 53 (Imphal-Silchar) in Manipur by agitating Naga groups entered the 55th day today as prices of essential commodities have skyrocketed with hundreds of trucks remaining stranded. The All Naga Students” Association (ANSAM) launched the blockade on April 12 to protest against holding of elections to six autonomous district councils in the Hills which, it alleged, were given not enough power to carry out development works.

The charge was, however, denied by the state government. Due to the blockade, which was intensified after the state refused entry to NSCN (IM) general secretary Thuingaleng Muivah on May 3, regular supply of essential commodities have been stopped, causing the prices to shoot up.

A litre of petrol now costs between Rs 120 and Rs 150, onion Rs 28 and rice Rs 26 per KG. But despite the exorbitant prices, many essential commodities were not simply available, official sources said. Before the blockade, between 300 to 400 trucks carrying the essentials were plying daily on the two national highways, the sources said.

On May 12, the Manipur government had decided to bring hundreds of stranded trucks, loaded with essential items, from Silchar to Imphal via Jiribam, a distance of 212 Kms, by providing security

Police procuring radar to check overspeeding during night

Drivers overspeeding during night hours beware, as Delhi Police is procuring a sophisticated device that can detect vehicles violating the prescribed limit during night.

As a separate device is used to check speed during daytime, police is procuring a ‘compact modular speed measurement device’ to detect violations at night also.

“We make use of different equipment for checking speed during daytime. Speed violations and fatal accidents are on increase during night as well. So, we are procuring this device,” a senior police official said.

The city police is looking for equipment which should be able to perform during day and night and even under rainy and foggy conditions, the official said.

The device will be able to capture speed violations on multiple lanes simultaneously.

“In case there are two or more vehicles plying in the more than one lane, the system should be able to identify accurately as to which of the vehicles is violating the speed,” he said.

The system must be capable of capturing the image of the offending vehicle automatically and should have clarity so that number plate can be read unambiguously whether in day, night, smog at distances of 20 to 150 metre distance from detection unit, he said.

“These images should have the clarity that it should withstands the scrutiny of the court of law. It should be able to detect speed violating vehicles as small as scooters and as large as buses and trucks,” the official said.

According to Delhi Police statistics, there were 51,815 cases of overspeeding in the capital this year till April 15.

In 2009, there were 2,12,287 cases of overspeeding as against 1,83,544 such incidents the previous year.

India March local car sales up 20 pct y/y-industry

NEW DELHI, April 9 (Reuters) – Car sales in India rose an annual 20.1 percent in March, as customers advanced purchases ahead of price hikes due to new emission norms-related expenses and rising raw material costs, an industry body said on Friday.

Cyclical Consumer Goods

Domestic firms sold 155,600 cars in the month, compared with 129,585 units a year ago, data from the Society of Indian Automobile Manufacturers (SIAM) showed.

Sales of trucks and buses, a barometer of economic activity, rose 61.2 percent to 67,362 units in the month, SIAM said. (Reporting by Sanjeev Choudhary and Devidutta Tripathy; editing by Malini Menon)

Emergency services funding change impacts council budget

Shellharbour council says its annual emergency services bill has skyrocketed due to funding changes by the New South Wales Government.

Last year, the State Emergency Service, the Rural Fire Service and the fire brigades were brought under one contributory funding system.

Under the formula set as a part of the 2008 state mini-budget, the contribution to all three services would not exceed the previous year.

But Shellharbour council’s operations director, Arthur Webster, says its bill has risen by $77,000, requiring budget adjustments.

“We’ve certainly suffered from those changes, we don’t see anything extra at all,” he said.

“The disappointing part was that we were advised that our 11.7 per cent contribution, which was slightly less than we paid previously, should reflect cost savings on council but that most certainly hasn’t in our case.”

The Wingecarribee Shire Council says its bill is higher, at $90,000, but Shoalhaven council has not seen an increase.

A spokesman for the Emergency Services Minister, Steve Whan, says increased resources in the area have led to a rise in costs.

He says the bill reflects new resources, like trucks, and the figure is less than councils would have paid under the previous model.

Emergency services funding change impacts council budget

Shellharbour council says its annual emergency services bill has skyrocketed due to funding changes by the New South Wales Government.

Last year, the State Emergency Service, the Rural Fire Service and the fire brigades were brought under one contributory funding system.

Under the formula set as a part of the 2008 state mini-budget, the contribution to all three services would not exceed the previous year.

But Shellharbour council’s operations director, Arthur Webster, says its bill has risen by $77,000, requiring budget adjustments.

“We’ve certainly suffered from those changes, we don’t see anything extra at all,” he said.

“The disappointing part was that we were advised that our 11.7 per cent contribution, which was slightly less than we paid previously, should reflect cost savings on council but that most certainly hasn’t in our case.”

The Wingecarribee Shire Council says its bill is higher, at $90,000, but Shoalhaven council has not seen an increase.

A spokesman for the Emergency Services Minister, Steve Whan, says increased resources in the area have led to a rise in costs.

He says the bill reflects new resources, like trucks, and the figure is less than councils would have paid under the previous model.

Work to begin soon on Bega by-pass

The New South Wales South East Federal MP, Mike Kelly, says he hopes construction of the long-awaited Bega by-pass will begin within months.

The by-pass will divert traffic around the town from the Bega River Bridge, and will allow trucks to avoid the main street, which residents say poses a dangerous risk to pedestrians and vehicles.

Mr Kelly says a final environmental assessment and design concept study is under way, and he expects the 18-month construction period to begin by the middle of the year.

Mr Kelly says he will honour his election commitment.

“I’m very much looking forward to it,” he said.

“It’s been, as we all know, quite a few decades in prospect and it was time to get on with the job.

“I’ve made an election commitment in 2007 that that work would be done, that the job would be done, and it will be done.”

For more, go to the South East News blog at http://bit.ly/dgL1SN

Trucks crash head-on near Norseman

Two trucks collided head-on about five kilometres east of Norseman this morning.

Police say the crash happened on the Eyre Highway about 3:30am (AWST).

One driver is believed to be in a critical condition.

The highway has partially reopened to traffic.

Driver survivor plans

A north coast road-safety campaigner will launch a 10-point Driver Survivor Plan this weekend.

Lyndal Denny will place 465 pairs of shoes by the roadside in Ballina on Sunday to draw attention to the road toll.

She says the plan includes recommendations for P-platers to undergo psychological testing and trucks to clearly display the owner’s name and number.

Ms Denny says dangerous speeders should have their vehicles modified.

“Some people just don’t learn the lesson,” Ms Denny said.

“Anybody caught driving 20 K’s over the limit we feel should have speed limiters fitted to their vehicles and the fines that they would normally pay would go to pay for the costs of those speed limiters , then with random checks to ensure those vehicles haven’t been tampered with,” she said.

NRMA urges truck safety crackdown

The peak motoring body the NRMA says governments should play a role in regulating safety features on trucks to help address the rising road toll.

More than 300 people a year are killed in crashes involving trucks across the nation.

The motoring body says with the number of trucks on the roads set to triple by 2050, the safety risks will worsen.

NRMA president Wendy Machin says more rest stops need to be provided and trucks also need better safety features.

“Barriers to stop your car running underneath a truck in the event of a crash,” she said.

“Technology in trucks that monitors how long they’ve driven … whether they’ve taken the number of rest stops and stability control – the sort of things we’re now seeing on cars that makes sure that if a truck is going round a corner, it maintains its stability and doesn’t spin out.”

Gas fuels intense factory fire

Firefighters are working to put out an intense blaze at a gas refilling works in Sydney’s west.

Sixteen trucks and at least 100 firefighters are at the scene of the blaze in St Marys.

Emergency workers were called to the gas refilling factory at about 3:30am (AEDT) to find the blaze well alight.

The fire brigade’s Paul Bailey says a number of gas cylinders are on the site.

“On arrival the flames were some 50 or 60 metres high,” he said.

“At the moment we’ve knocked down those flames. The fire is now contained.”

A gas and electricity company has also been called to the scene in an attempt to turn off the gas.

Police have set up an exclusion zone around Links Road and Dunheved Circuit.

Firefighters say it may be at least tomorrow until the gas refilling factory is declared safe.

Firefighters say there are more than 2,000 mopping up.

Truckies concerned about Brisbane’s left-hand lane rule

The trucking industry has raised a number of concerns about keeping trucks in the left-hand lane of one of Brisbane’s busiest road corridors.

A six-month trial of the regulation started yesterday on an eight-kilometre stretch of the Brisbane Urban Corridor on the southside, linking the Ipswich Motorway at Rocklea with the Gateway Motorway at Wishart.

Queensland Trucking Association (QTA) spokesman Peter Garske says there could be safety issues if cars need to turn left into a lane full of heavy vehicles.

He says he also has other concerns.

“The number of trucks that fail to adhere to the signage, the effect on traffic turning left – I’ve mentioned that – queuing length at intersections – there are a whole range of issues that will need to be monitored closely to evaluate whether this trial is likely to succeed,” he said.

GM to Reinstate 600 Dealerships Slated to Be Cut

GM executives said Friday that the dealerships — more than half of those seeking to stay with the automaker — will receive letters giving them the option to remain open.

NEW YORK – General Motors Co. will reinstate 661 dealerships it sought to drop from its sales network.

GM executives said Friday that the dealerships — more than half of those seeking to stay with the automaker — will receive letters giving them the option to remain open. GM said it would not have enough time to negotiate with all 1,100 dealerships that appealed the automaker’s decision to close them within a four-month window imposed by the federal government.

“By doing this we save a lot of time, energy and dollars,” said Jim Bunnell, GM general manager of network support, saying the company wished to avoid a “very large arbitration process.”

As part of its restructuring, GM last year told about 2,000 dealerships it would not renew their franchise agreements once they run out in October 2010. But the dealerships have said GM treated them unfairly, and last month Congress passed a law requiring an appeals process for the dealers.

GM’s decision to keep the additional showrooms open effectively shrinks the number of appeals it has to contend with. Arbitration hearings for the dealers who didn’t get offers but still want to stay with GM will begin later this month.

The cuts to GM’s 6,000-dealer network were designed to compensate for much lower demand for cars and trucks, but some dealers have argued that lots that are still profitable are at risk, and that the automaker hasn’t offered enough details about how it’s choosing which businesses to shutter.

GM would not offer any details on Friday about which dealerships it was reinstating and where they are located. It said it chose the 661 based on a variety of criteria, including sales and other business factors.

The company said it hoped to have every letter of intent with dealerships by Monday. At that point, dealers have 10 days to respond and 60 days to meet a set of criteria that would allow them to stay with GM.

A spokeswoman with Chrysler Group LLC, which has cut 789 dealers, said the company was preparing a statement in response to questions about whether they also intended to reinstate dropped dealerships. Chrysler showrooms slated for closure are also appealing to stay open, though it remained unclear how many.

Michael Boudreau, an auto industry turnaround expert with O’Keefe & Associates, said GM likely saw the reinstatement of the dealers as the “lesser of the two evils” versus the costs of litigating their termination.

“It’s not exactly what they wanted to do, and it’s always I think a little embarrassing when you have to make changes based on an arbitration process, but they’ve had to adjust and move forward,” he said.

Boudreau added that the decision could have ripple effects.

“The Chrysler dealers are taking a close look at this,” he said.

Tammy Darvish of the Washington-area Darcars chain, which has three dealerships slated for closure, said she was encouraged by GM’s decision.

“If they are genuinely, truly sincere, it’s overwhelmingly heartwarming,” Darvish said of the company’s offer to allow dealers to demonstrate their eligibility to remain open.

But as of Friday, Darvish said she didn’t know if her franchises are among those being reinstated. She said she plans to go into arbitration if they are not.

Congress-brokered talks between dealer groups and the automakers began in September. But those talks stalled over disputes about the review process for targeted dealerships and other issues. Looming over the fight has been the threat of federal legislation to deal with the closures. Lawmakers warned that if a deal wasn’t reached, that legislation would move forward.

The White House has opposed the legislation over concerns that it could hurt GM’s and Chrysler’s efforts to rebound from their government-led bankruptcies.

Fuel price hike: Truckers to go on indefinite strike from April 5

New Delhi, Mar 5 (ANI): The All India Motor Transport Congress (AITMC) on Friday gave a call for an indefinite strike from April 5 demanding a rollback of the fuel price hike.

With this call over 75 lakhs trucks will go off the road from April first week.

Briefing the media about the decision, AIMTC president G R Shanmugappa said: “We have submitted four major demands to the government and will wait till the midnight of April 5, 2010. And if the demands are not met by this time, we will pull-out all our trucks from the road.”

The AIMTC meeting demanded the Centre to immediately roll-back hike in fuel prices, especially that of diesel, which rose by over Rs 2.5 a litre consequent to a duty hike on fuels.

“The hike is abnormal, unbearable and intolerable, which will further deteriorate the already dwindling condition of truckers,” he said.

The AMITC is also demanding the implementation of the agreement on national permit that would require truckers to pay only a one-time fee of Rs 15,000 for a year, against the current norm of paying each states a fee of Rs 5,000.

The Centre promised to reduce the fees when the truckers went on strike in 2009.

The Centre had signed an agreement with AIMTC on February 23, 2009 for implementing the new national permit scheme before January this year, but despite of the minister”s assurance, the government has not notified it.

The AIMTC claimed the strike would also have the support from other segments such as tempos and other small goods carrying vehicle owners and asked the government to notify and implement the same before March 31. (ANI)

Seven terrorists killed by Pak security forces in Malakand

Rawalpindi, Sep 9 (ANI): The Pakistani security forces continued on Wednesday the search and clearance operations in Swat and Malakand during in which seven terrorists were killed.

According to a press release issued by Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR), the security forces conducted search operation in Charai near Malam Jabba and during exchange of fire with terrorists a soldier died and two others were injured. Also, seven terrorists were killed.

At least 11 terrorists voluntarily surrendered to security forces in Sarsanai, shadhand Banda and Bar Shaur, The News reported.

Local Jirga handed over a terrorist to security forces in Bar Kabulgram near Martung.

In Bajaur Agency, the security forces conducted search operation in Nawaga Bazaar and apprehended local terrorists commander along with five accomplices.

A wanted terrorist Kalam Khan voluntarily surrendered in Khar.

The security forces continued the relief activities, as at least 10 trucks of mix rations have been distributed amongst the IDPs of Bajaur. Also, as many as 294,841 cash cards have been distributed amongst the IDPs of Malakand. (ANI)

Maoists attack private plant in Bihar, kidnap security guards

Patna, Sep 2 (ANI): About 400 armed Maoists attacked a plant owned by a private road construction firm and kidnapped six security guards on Wednesday in the Jamui district of Bihar.

The Jamui district comes under the Maoist affected areas of the state.

According to Additional Director General of Police Neelamani, the red ultras raided the SMPL’s plant at Hariondhi village and damaged pay loaders and three trucks.

Neelamani confirmed the kidnapping of six private security guards of the company by the Naxals.

The non-payment of ransom demanded by the Maoists from the private firm owner was said to be the reason behind the attack, Neelmani said

The Special Task Force (STF) And the District armed policemen had an encounter with the Maoists for some time after the incident, but they managed to escape into the thick forest area on Jamui-Chakai road, sources said. (ANI)

Two feared dead as 60-year-old bridge collapses in Bihar

Nawada (Bihar), Aug 25(ANI): At least two people were feared dead and 24 others injured when a bridge collapsed at Kadirganj Bazaar in Bihar’s Nawada district on Tuesday.

Two jeeps, two trucks, a food grain-laden bullock cart and several other vehicles fell down, when the 60-year-old bridge along the Nawada-Jamui state highway suddenly collapsed.

“At least 30 to 35 people were injured in this accident and I also saw locals carrying bodies of two to three persons,” said Ram Kishore, an eyewitness.

While the injured were rushed to a government hospital in the area, five critically injured persons were rushed to Patna Medical College Hospital.

Rescue operations were on at the site and cranes have been engaged to clear the bridge debris.

Meanwhile, vehicular traffic on the route leading to Jharkhand from Jamui and Nawada came to a halt after the collapse of the bridge. (ANI)

King of Pop Michael Jackson gets royal send off

Los Angeles, July 8 (DPA) From the fleet of Bentley limousines that transported his family, to the endlessly fawning comments of television anchors throughout the blanket coverage, Michael Jackson, the late King of Pop, got a send-off Tuesday that was fit for royalty.

As the 30-vehicle convoy left the Forest Lawns Memorial Park in the Hollywood Hills, it drove past dozens of broadcast trucks, with several news helicopters buzzing overhead. Police closed the 101 Freeway to allow the procession easy passage to the public memorial in downtown Los Angeles. Traffic in the opposite direction also slowed to a virtual standstill as commuters halted their journey to catch a glimpse of the hearse.

As the procession drew up to the Staples Centre a high-flying plane drew a huge heart in the blue Los Angeles sky, while fans screamed, “We love Michael!” TV crews were set up on dozens of large podiums close to the entrance, as the country’s most distinguished news anchors, from Katie Couric to Brian Williams, led the coverage.

“We made so many sacrifices to see him one last time. We sold everything we had in our house,” said one fan, who journeyed for three days on buses from South Carolina to southern California to attend the memorial, even though she had no ticket.

Inside the arena, a large royal blue stage was erected at a basketball court that usually plays host to the Los Angeles Lakers. The backdrop featured a photo of a smiling Jackson looking up towards the sky and the words: “In loving memory of Michael Jackson King of Pop. 1958-2009.”

A lavish gold-coloured programme featured pictures of Jackson with presidents, political leaders and showbiz stars, and tributes from his family and friends.

The elaborate service began with Smokey Robinson reading tribute letters from the likes of Diana Ross and Nelson Mandela. The backdrop then changed to an image of stained glass windows as Jackson’s casket, laden high with flowers, was wheeled in. His pallbearers were each wearing a single, sequined glove in a tribute to one of Jackson’s signature styles, as a gospel choir sang.

The elite of pop music performed tributes for Jackson, from Mariah Carey and Stevie Wonder to John Mayer and Usher.

“The title King of Pop is not big enough for him,” said Berry Gordy, the founder of Motown who discovered Jackson and guided his early career. “I think he is simply the greatest entertainer that ever lived.”

But for some in the entertainment world, the endless fawning and hagiography was a little much. Media columnist Brian Lowry could barely wait for the event to end as he blogged it live for entertainment trade paper Variety. He juxtaposed the reverential tones with the bizarre behaviour that Jackson often displayed and which “makes the worshipful tone characterizing much of this coverage even more questionable.”

African American activist Al Sharpton, in his eulogy for Jackson, tried to explain the pop star’s mass appeal. “You would have to understand the journey of Michael to understand what he means to us,” said Sharpton.

“When Michael started it was a different world but because he kept going, because he refused to let other people decide his boundaries, he opened up the whole world. It was Michael Jackson who brought blacks and whites and Asians and Latinos together. It was MJ who made us say ‘We Are The World’ and ‘Feed the Hungry’.”

Only one reader of Variety, commonly regarded as the Bible of the US entertainment industry, bothered to post a comment – and he obviously did not agree with Sharpton. “A grotesque and vulgar display,” noted reader Jack Henry of the ceremony. “The US is not only financially bankrupt, but morally and culturally bankrupt as well. God help us.”

Janet may be named executor of Jacko’s estate

London, June 29 (ANI): Late King of Pop Michael Jackson’s sister, Janet, may be named executor of his estate, if reports are to be believed.

“She’s in charge, she has the documents, she has control of his stuff,” the Daily Star quoted a relative as saying.

The ‘Thriller’ hitmaker reportedly passed away with debts estimated at 300million pounds.

A New York Post report says that a spokeswoman for Janet has refused to comment on her possibility of being named executor of Jackson’s estate.

Janet was seen arriving on Saturday at her late brother’s rented home in Los Angeles.

She drove up in a Bentley as movers loaded her brother’s belongings into trucks. (ANI)

11 CRPF personnel killed in a Naxal attack in Chhattisgarh

Dantewada (Chattishgarh) June 21 (ANI): At least 11 Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) personnel were killed and eight were injured when the truck in which they were travelling hit a landmine planted by Maoist guerrillas in Chhattisgarh’s Dantewada district.

The blast took place on Saturday evening at Kokanara village, nearly 375 kilometres from Raipur, when an over 40-member search squad of CRPF men and District Force (DF) was on its way back to its base camp.

According to sources, a 53-member joint police-CRPF team had gone on patrol after getting information that the militants had burnt down a truck near Kokanara village.

They were coming back from patrol and had boarded two trucks and a jeep when the naxals ambushed them. (ANI)