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Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited (BHEL) is an Indian central public sector undertaking and the largest government-owned electrical/ industrial technology company. It is owned by the Government of India , with administrative control by the Ministry of Heavy Industries .
A High Pressure Boiler manufacturing plant was set up by the Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited (BHEL), India's largest public sector engineering company, in May 1965. [14] [15] This was followed by a Seamless Steel Plant set up at a cost of ₹ 580 million (US$6.7 million) and a Boiler Auxiliaries Plant. The three manufacturing units constitute ...
BHEL Jhansi started production of transformers in 1976. BHEL Jhansi has two product groups: transformers and locomotives . Marketing of products and services is done at the corporate level by Power sector, Industry sector, International operation division and regional office divisions spread all over India.
Small-caps and large-caps are wildly popular among investors, however, mid-cap stocks, such as Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited (NSEI:BHEL), with a market capitalization of ₹322.17B, rarely draw ...
The first disinvestment (20%) and listing of the company's shares in the Bangalore and Mumbai Stock Exchanges took place in same year-1992. In 1996, BEL achieved ₹10 billion (US$215 million) turnover. In 1997, GE BEL, the second joint venture company with M/s GE, USA, was formed as also the third JVC with M/s Multitone, UK, BEL Multitone.
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Development on the WAG-8 class in 1990 while BHEL was also manufacturing WAG-5HS. Technologically the BHEL WAG-8 was meant to be superior to the WAG-7 which was effectively using tap-changer technology from the 1960s. They most likely had the Hitachi HS15250A seen in present-day WCAM-3 and WCAG-1.
The IPHWR-700 (Indian Pressurized Heavy Water Reactor-700) is an Indian pressurized heavy-water reactor designed by the NPCIL. [1] It is a Generation III reactor developed from earlier CANDU based 220 MW and 540 MW designs.