RMG manufacturers oppose the government’s
plan to hike tax upon them and urged for its withdrawal for the “sake of
the industry”. Star file photo.
Star Online Report
Readymade garment manufacturers today opposed the government’s plan
to hike tax upon them and urged for its withdrawal for the “sake of the
industry”.
RMG exporters’ association BGMEA made the call today in a post budget
addressing a day after the finance minister unveiled the jumbo-size
financial plan for 2015-16 fiscal.
In the budget, Finance Minister AMA Muhith told of increasing the tax
at source for apparel exporters by more than double – to one percent
from the prevailing 0.03 percent.
He had said that the textile and garment industry and other exported
items were enjoying various incentives. “The aforementioned tax benefits
were allowed just for one year.”
“This type of tax hike will take our industry to the path of
destruction,” Atiqul Islam, president of Bangladesh Garment
Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA), said in a press release
at his office.
The BGMEA chief feared that such moves will cause the loss of
competitiveness of Bangladeshi apparels in global marketplace. “Recently
costs have risen much. We urge the government to withdraw the hike.”
The garment sector contributes more than 80 percent to the national export every year.
আজ
বিশাল তারকা বনে গেছেন তারা। বলিউডের বিনোদন জগতের বড় পরিবারের সন্তান
এরা। জনপ্রিয়তার শীর্ষ ছুঁয়েছেন। কিন্তু বনেদি পরিবারের এই সন্তানরা
শিক্ষাজীবনে বেশি দূর এগোতে পারেননি। জানলে অবাক হবেন বলিউডের এই
শীর্ষস্থানীয় নায়িকারা শিক্ষাজীবনে একেবারেই বিফল।
১. কারিনা কাপুর : ছোট বয়স থেকেই গ্ল্যামার আর ঝলমলে জগতে প্রবেশ
করেছেন।
বিগত যুগের সবচেয়ে পারিশ্রমিক পাওয়া অভিনেত্রী তিনি। মিথিবাই কলেজ
থেকে পাস করার পর আইন শিক্ষায় আগ্রহ জন্মে তার। গভর্মেন্ট ল কলেজে ভর্তি
হন। কিন্তু প্রথম বছরেই সেখান থেকে চম্পট দেন। আর গ্র্যাজুয়েশন করা হয়নি।
২. ঐশ্বরিয়া রায় বচ্চন : পৃথিবী গ্রহের অন্যতম সুন্দর মুখ তিনি। সাবেক
মিস ইউনিভার্স ঐশ্বরিয়া মোটামুটি ছাত্রী ছিলেন। জয় হিন্দ কলেজে
এক বছরের
মতো গিয়েছিলেন। পরে আর্কিটেকচারে কিছু পড়াশোনা করতে চেয়েছিলেন। কিন্তু তার
আগেই বিনোদন জগতে জড়িয়ে পড়লেন। আর পড়া হলো না তার।
৩. দীপিকা পাড়ুকোন : অনেকেই জানেন না যে হাল আমলের শীর্ষ নায়িকা দীপিকা
পাড়ুকোন গ্র্যাজুয়েশন করতে পারেননি। ব্যাঙ্গলোরের মাউন্ট কারমেল-এ ভর্তি
হলেও তার মন পড়ে থাকতো বি-টাউনে। পরে কিছু কোর্স করার চেষ্টা চালিয়েছিলেন।
কিন্তু আর পেরে ওঠেননি।
৪. প্রিয়াঙ্কা চোপড়া : বলিউডের সবচেয়ে প্রতিভাবান সেলিব্রিটিদের একজন এই
লাস্যময়ী। এই বিউটি কুইন আমেরিকা এবং ইন্ডিয়ায় স্কুলের গণ্ডি পেরিয়েছেন।
মুম্বাইয়ে জয় হিন্দ কলেজে ভর্তি হয়েছিলেন ক্রিমিনাল সাইকোলজিস্ট হওয়ার আশা
নিয়ে। কিন্তু মডেলিং আর সৌন্দর্য প্রতিযোগিতায় জড়িয়ে ওদিকটা আর সামলানো
যায়নি
Concrete
is the world’s most common building material and the second-most
consumed
substance after water. In particular, steel-reinforced concrete
dominates the
AEC sector, where its combined resistance of tensile and compressive
forces
enables the construction of tall and long-span structures. Despite its
near-ubiquitous use, however, steel-reinforced concrete has a
fundamental
drawback: Given the corrosive tendencies of ferrous metals, it is
at best a temporary material, requiring constant upkeep. In Concrete Planet:
The Strange and Fascinating Story of the World’s Most Common Man-Made Material (Prometheus
Books, 2011), author Robert Courland writes: “If the Romans had used
steel-reinforced concrete—which they did not have—to build their beautiful
bridge in Alcántara, Spain, the bridge would
have to have been rebuilt at least 16 times by now.”
Steel
reinforcing bar, or rebar, has an intrinsic tendency to
deteriorate, which led the National Bureau of Standards (now the
National
Institute of Standards and Technology) to conduct the first
comprehensive
corrosion research in the early 1970s. The agency concluded that
epoxy-coated reinforcing would perform better than unprotected steel. Today,
this form of reinforcing is the most prominent corrosion-resistant steel used
in North America; other protected reinforcements included galvanized
steel, stainless steel, and glass fiber–reinforced polymer. However, new research offers
two compelling non-corrosive alternatives.
The
first is a variant of continuous basalt fiber (CBF). Developed in 1923, CBF is made from the dense and
abrasion-resistant igneous rock. By the 1960s, it
had found use in a variety of applications in the U.S. and the former Soviet Union,
according to the trade publication CompositesWorld. CBF
exhibits 2.5 times the
strength-to-weight ratio of alloyed steel and 1.5 times that of glass fiber.
Most importantly, it does not corrode like metal and, unlike glass fiber, it is
not subject to deterioration from acids. CBF is also inherently fire-resistant
and can be used with various composites, CompositesWorld
reports.
ReforceTech, in Norway, has developed a
novel version of CBF. Reinforced with basalt fibers, the company’s 0.5- to 10-millimeter-diameter
BFRP
MiniBars are composed of fibers wrapped with polymer resin in a
helical shape and can span from 20 millimeters to 200 millimeters in
length. The bars are
mixed directly into the concrete without impairing its workability, the
company
says, reducing or altogether eliminating the need for steel reinforcing.
Moreover, contractors do not need to consider the exact positioning of
the
rebar and the miniature bars do not protrude from the finished concrete
surface.
When
used in precast architectural cladding, ReforceTech’s basalt fibers not only eliminates
the need for rebar but also significantly reduces panel thickness.
“We already have precasters in Europe making insulated wall
panels where the exterior wythe is down to 1.5 inches from the older
3-inch thickness,” said Alvin Ericson, a technical consultant at
ReforceTech, in an email. “This reduces the amount of concrete,
the weight of the panel … and allows for increased insulation and/or floor
area.” Unlike steel, CBF is not thermally conductive, allowing it to
connect inner and outer layers of insulated wall panels without thermal
transfer concerns.
Engineered
bamboo is also being explored as a rebar alternative. Early tests of thin bamboo specimens in
concrete began at MIT in 1914. In the following decades, researchers at the Technische Hochschule Stuttgart and
the Clemson Agricultural College of South Carolina (now Clemson
University) have devised more elaborate tests. Despite bamboo’s high
tensile strength, Clemson
professor H. E. Glenn determined, in 1950, that its susceptibility to
decay
from moisture, insects, and fungus, and dramatic shrinking and
swelling were fundamental material drawbacks. After recording dramatic
structural failures that year due to de-bonding between the bamboo and
concrete,
research on bamboo reinforcement waned.
Dirk HebelBamboo is being tested by researchers at the Future Cities Laboratory in Singapore to reinforce concrete.
Testing
has resumed in recent years at the Future
Cities Laboratory (FCL) in Singapore, based this time on the use of
woven-strand bamboo
(WSB)—a composite material developed in southern China that resists
moisture
absorption, swelling, and decay from bacteria and fungi. Also used in
flooring, WSB is made by slicing skinned bamboo stalks
lengthwise
into thin strands, which are carbonized and dipped into a
vat of water-based adhesive before being either hot- or cold-pressed in
molds.
The resulting composite products exhibit three times the density of the
natural
bamboo.
Such
tests show promise. The FCL team, led by architecture and construction chair
Dirk Hebel, found the WSB manufacturing process to eliminate many of the previous limitations
of bamboo reinforcing in concrete. His team is now developing specifications for
an alternative WSB manufacturing process that reduces potential damage to
bamboo fibers. “This is in contrast to the furniture and flooring industry in
China,” Hebel wrote in a recent article,
“where the individual fiber or cell is not of interest at all and is usually
destroyed through [the] carbonization processes to eliminate all natural sugars
in the bamboo material and therefore be unattractive for fungi and bacteria.”
Hebel’s team is also analyzing the structure of individual bamboo fibers and
their interaction with various adhesives through a process called confocal fluorescence microscopy.
Dirk HebelBamboo-reinforced concrete from the Future Cities Laboratory in Singapore.
Dirk HebelBamboo strips are tested for strength and resistance to tensile forces.
Using WSB to reinforce concrete has many advantages. Bamboo is
rapidly renewable and sequesters carbon, as opposed to the energy-
and carbon-intensive steel. Additionally, bamboo is a highly accessible
resource in rapidly developing regions like Southeast Asia where, Hebel
writes, “the potential for bamboo composite materials, considering
all areas of bamboo coverage, currently is 25 times higher than today’s
demand for construction steel.”
Though conventional steel rebar
isn’t going anywhere yet, the long term is less certain. Steel’s intrinsic corrosive tendencies point to
decades of costly maintenance, and its high embodied energy yields a poor
environmental scorecard. The significance of
materials such as woven-strand bamboo and basalt microfiber, therefore, is not
represented by their incremental successes but rather by their long-term
potential to redefine the world’s most commonly used hybrid material. The
result could be a brighter environmental and economic future for reinforced
concrete.
Blaine Brownell, AIA,
is a regularly featured columnist whose stories appear on this website
each week. His views and conclusions are not necessarily those of
ARCHITECT magazine nor of the American Institute of Architects.