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వారాంతంలో లాభాలు

కొనుగోళ్ల మద్దతుతో వారాంతంలో స్టాక్​ మార్కెట్లు లాభాలను ఆర్జించాయి. దేశ సరిహద్దులో సద్దుమణుగుతున్న పరిస్థితులు లాభాలకు ఓ కారణం.

వారాంతంలో లాభాలు
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Published : Mar 1, 2019, 5:45 PM IST

దేశ సరిహద్దులో ఉద్రిక్త పరిస్థితులు శాంతించిన కారణంగా వరుసగా మూడు రోజుల మార్కెట్ల నష్టాలకు బ్రేక్​ పడింది. వారాంతంలో స్టాక్​ మార్కెట్లు లాభాలను నమోదు చేశాయి.

బొంబాయి స్టాక్​ ఎక్స్చేంజి సూచీ-సెన్సెక్స్​ 196.37 పాయింట్లు ఎగబాకి తిరిగి 36 వేల మార్క్​ను అందుకుంది. సెషన్​ ముగిసే సరికి 36.063.81 పాయింట్ల వద్ద స్థిరపడింది. జాతీయ స్టాక్​ ఎక్స్చేంజి సూచీ-నిఫ్టీ 71 పాయింట్ల లాభంతో 10,863.50 వద్ద సెషన్​ ముగించింది.

ఇదీ కారణం

భారత్​-పాక్​ సరిహద్దుల్లో ఉద్రిక్తతలు సద్దుమణుగుతాయనే నమ్మకం మదుపరుల సెంటిమెంట్​ను ప్రభావితం చేసింది. దీనికి తోడు మార్చి సిరీస్​ డెరివేటివ్స్​పై మదుపరుల కొనుగోళ్ల మద్దతు కూడా స్టాక్ మార్కెట్లు లాభాలకు ఒక కారణం.

ఇంట్రాడే సాగిందిలా

సెషన్​ ప్రారంభం నుంచే 36 వేల మార్క్​ దాటి జోరుమీదున్న సెన్సెక్స్​ ఇంట్రాడేలో 36,140.67 పాయింట్ల గరిష్ఠ స్థాయికి ఎగబాకింది. ఓ దశలో తిరిగి 35,952.41 పాయింట్ల వద్ద కనిష్ఠ స్థాయిని నమోదుచేసింది.
నిఫ్టీ ఇంట్రాడేలో 10,877.90 పాయింట్ల అత్యధిక స్థాయిని చేరుకోగా అత్యల్పంగా 10,823.10 పాయింట్ల స్థాయిని తాకింది.

లాభానష్టాల్లోనివివే...

సెన్సెక్స్​లో ఇండస్​ఇండ్​ బ్యాంకు, యస్​ బ్యాంకు, వేదాంత, హీరో మోటోకార్ప్​, కోల్​ ఇండియా షేర్లు లాభాలను ఆర్జించాయి. భారతీ ఎయిర్​టెల్​, ఏషియన్​ పెయింట్స్​,బజాజ్​ ఆటో, యాక్సిస్​ బ్యాంకు, రిలయన్స్​ సంస్థల షేర్లు నష్టాలను నమోదు చేశాయి.

దేశ సరిహద్దులో ఉద్రిక్త పరిస్థితులు శాంతించిన కారణంగా వరుసగా మూడు రోజుల మార్కెట్ల నష్టాలకు బ్రేక్​ పడింది. వారాంతంలో స్టాక్​ మార్కెట్లు లాభాలను నమోదు చేశాయి.

బొంబాయి స్టాక్​ ఎక్స్చేంజి సూచీ-సెన్సెక్స్​ 196.37 పాయింట్లు ఎగబాకి తిరిగి 36 వేల మార్క్​ను అందుకుంది. సెషన్​ ముగిసే సరికి 36.063.81 పాయింట్ల వద్ద స్థిరపడింది. జాతీయ స్టాక్​ ఎక్స్చేంజి సూచీ-నిఫ్టీ 71 పాయింట్ల లాభంతో 10,863.50 వద్ద సెషన్​ ముగించింది.

ఇదీ కారణం

భారత్​-పాక్​ సరిహద్దుల్లో ఉద్రిక్తతలు సద్దుమణుగుతాయనే నమ్మకం మదుపరుల సెంటిమెంట్​ను ప్రభావితం చేసింది. దీనికి తోడు మార్చి సిరీస్​ డెరివేటివ్స్​పై మదుపరుల కొనుగోళ్ల మద్దతు కూడా స్టాక్ మార్కెట్లు లాభాలకు ఒక కారణం.

ఇంట్రాడే సాగిందిలా

సెషన్​ ప్రారంభం నుంచే 36 వేల మార్క్​ దాటి జోరుమీదున్న సెన్సెక్స్​ ఇంట్రాడేలో 36,140.67 పాయింట్ల గరిష్ఠ స్థాయికి ఎగబాకింది. ఓ దశలో తిరిగి 35,952.41 పాయింట్ల వద్ద కనిష్ఠ స్థాయిని నమోదుచేసింది.
నిఫ్టీ ఇంట్రాడేలో 10,877.90 పాయింట్ల అత్యధిక స్థాయిని చేరుకోగా అత్యల్పంగా 10,823.10 పాయింట్ల స్థాయిని తాకింది.

లాభానష్టాల్లోనివివే...

సెన్సెక్స్​లో ఇండస్​ఇండ్​ బ్యాంకు, యస్​ బ్యాంకు, వేదాంత, హీరో మోటోకార్ప్​, కోల్​ ఇండియా షేర్లు లాభాలను ఆర్జించాయి. భారతీ ఎయిర్​టెల్​, ఏషియన్​ పెయింట్స్​,బజాజ్​ ఆటో, యాక్సిస్​ బ్యాంకు, రిలయన్స్​ సంస్థల షేర్లు నష్టాలను నమోదు చేశాయి.

SEYCHELLES OCEAN MISSION PLASTIC WASTE
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS/VNR - SEYCHELLES ISLANDS FOUNDATION
RESTRICTIONS: AP Clients Only
LENGTH: 7:42
SHOTLIST:
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Mahe, Seychelles - 19 February 2019
1. Low shot of plastic bottle on beach, Zara Pardiwalla, Co-Founder of The Ocean Project Seychelles, picks it up
2. Various of Pardiwalla collecting waste on beach
3. Close of plaste waste, can on beach
4. Tilt up of Pardiwalla collecting waste on beach
5. Pan right of Pardiwalla walking along beach
6. Wide of Pardiwalla walking with Natasha Burian, Project Manager, The Ocean Project Seychelles
7. Various of collected waste on beach
8. SOUNDBITE (English) Zara Pardiwalla, Co-Founder of The Ocean Project Seychelles:
"It got to a point where every time we'd go to the beach, we would carry, we would bring bin bags or goodie bags with us and would end up leaving with four bags. So, it was just that frustration over seeing so much litter around and then finding more about this global problem of plastic pollution. And seeing that we're contributing to it."
9. Wide of Burian walking on beach
10. Mid of Burian taking plastic bottle from bushes
UPSOUND (English): Natasha Burian, Project Manager, The Ocean Project Seychelles
"We have Summer Vodka, which is one of the original local vodka drinks."
11. Pan right of Burian picking up glass bottles in water
12. Close of Burian holding glass bottles
UPSOUND (English): Natasha Burian, Project Manager, The Ocean Project Seychelles
"Unfortunately, you'll find a lot of these because these ones are not returnable."
13. Various of Burian sorting waste on beach
14. Underwater shot of wave on beach
15. SOUNDBITE (English) Natasha Burian, Project Manager, The Ocean Project Seychelles:
"You'd come and stand on the beach and you think; 'Oh, it looks clean,' but have a look around a little bit closer, in the shaded areas where you put your towel, that is where you'll find all the rubbish hidden. The water, during periods of high tide, has washed all this rubbish into the bushes next to the beach."
16. Various of Pardiwalla collecting waste on beach
17. SOUNDBITE (English) Zara Pardiwalla, Co-Founder of The Ocean Project Seychelles:
"From just one hour of cleaning up a beach, we can collect up to 200kg of litter. And that's just on one Saturday morning, so potentially that amount is going in every day or more than that. "
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Praslin, Seychelles - 21 February 2019
18. Tilt down of beach at Hotel L'Archipel
19. Wide of visitors on beach
20. Pan right to Hotel L'Archipel building exterior
21. Various of barman making cocktail
22. Close of barman picking up paper straw
23. Pan right of barman placing paper straw into cocktail
24. Close of paper straws in cocktails
25. Tilt down "The last straw" sign
26. SOUNDBITE (English) Lucas d'Offay, General Manager, Hotel L'Archipel:
"If we want to have a reef which is free of plastics, it has to start somewhere. And not only on the government side, but also on the private sectors, and the private sectors means everybody, starting from a waiter, to a fisherman."
27. Pan right of barman serving cocktails to guests
28. Various of guests drinking cocktails using paper straws
29. SOUNDBITE (English) Lucas d'Offay, General Manager, Hotel L'Archipel:
"Less plastic straws and plastics means less collection of waste. So, less collection of waste means less decomposition on the landfill, which emits less carbon dioxide in our atmosphere."
VNR - SEYCHELLES ISLANDS FOUNDATION
Aldabra, Seychelles - Date not given (narration added at source)
30. Various aerial shots of Aldabra atoll
31. Various of waste on Aldabra
32. Various of Loggerhead sea turtle trapped in nylon rope
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Mahe, Seychelles - 20 February 2019
33. Setup shot of Dr. Frauke Fleischer-Dogley, CEO of the Seychelles Island Foundation, reading
34. SOUNDBITE (English) Dr. Frauke Fleischer-Dogley, CEO of the Seychelles Island Foundation:
"Seventy years ago, there was no plastic ending up in any in the oceans. And in only seventy years, we are seeing now plastic debris, marine litter being washed up in places where people don't even set their foot on. So, there is definitely something very worrying happening."
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Mahe, Seychelles - 19 February 2019
35. Wide of beach
36. Tilt down of Pardiwalla pouring collected waste onto beach
37. Various of Pardiwalla sorting collected waste
38. SOUNDBITE (English) Zara Pardiwalla, Co-Founder of The Ocean Project Seychelles:
"I think the biggest impact we can make is sort of changing mindsets of people. So, I think we realized from the start that us coming out monthly on a beach and cleaning up isn't going to make a huge dent in the amount of plastic going out there. But I think we wanted to combine that with education so that we could educate people about this problem and also get them to start making changes in their daily lives. So, switch away from single-use plastics that are really just not necessary."
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Mahe, Seychelles - 20 February 2019
39. Wide of sunset
40. Tilt down of beach at sunset
41. Wide of boats in water at sunset
42. Close of waves at sunset
LEADIN:
Locals in the Seychelles are taking a stand against plastic pollution, organising beach clean-ups and banning plastic straws in hotels and restaurants.
But plastic waste isn't just threatening tourist hot spots. Mounds of waste are washing onto the shores of an isolated UNESCO World Heritage Site, threatening its endangered wildlife.
STORYLINE:
At first glance it seems that there's barely any waste on this Seychelles beach.
But Zara Pardiwalla knows exactly where to look. Surveying the bushes, she finds plastic bags, bottles, cans.
Shocked by the levels of plastic waste on her local beaches, Pardiwalla, who's a practising lawyer, founded The Ocean Project in November 2016.
Since then, she's organized beach cleanups across several Seychelles islands, preventing hundreds of tons of plastic waste potentially reaching the ocean.
"It got to a point where every time we'd go to the beach, we would carry, we would bring bin bags or goodie bags with us and would end up leaving with four bags," she says.
"So, it was just that frustration over seeing so much litter around and then finding more about this global problem of plastic pollution. And seeing that we're contributing to it."
From bags to bottles, some 13 million tons of plastic flows into our oceans every year, according to a UN report in 2018.
It's claimed that if the present trend continues, our oceans could contain more plastic than fish by 2050.
Marine species ingest or become entangled by plastic debris, sometimes causing injury or even death. The UN says 100,000 marine animals die each year due to plastic related causes.
"You'd come and stand on the beach and you think; 'Oh, it looks clean,'" says Natasha Burian, a magistrate who works as a project manager for the Ocean Project.
"But have a look around a little bit closer, in the shaded areas where you put your towel, that is where you'll find all the rubbish hidden.
"The water, during periods of high tide, has washed all this rubbish into the bushes next to the beach."
Last year, The Ocean Project staged 36 beach cleanups, collecting more than five tons of marine waste.
"From just one hour of cleaning up a beach, we can collect up to 200kg of litter," says Pardiwalla.
"And that's just on one Saturday morning, so potentially that amount is going in every day or more than that."
After campaigning by several NGOs, including the Ocean Project, the Seychelles government banned single-use plastic bags in 2016. A plastic straw ban is currently being implemented.
Hotel L'Archipel on the small island of Praslin was one of the first to join "The Last Straw" campaign, banning plastic straws last May. Now, bar staff place biodegradable paper straws in their cocktails.
"If we want to have a reef which is free of plastics, it has to start somewhere," says hotel manager, Lucas d'Offay.
"And not only on the government side, but also on the private sectors, and the private sectors means everybody, starting from a waiter, to a fisherman."
"Less plastic straws and plastics means less collection of waste. So, less collection of waste means less decomposition on the landfill, which emits less carbon dioxide in our atmosphere" he adds.
But plastic waste isn't just threatening tourist hot sports. Mounds of waste are washing onto the shores of remote Aldabra, an isolated UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Over 1,000 kilometres southwest of Mahe, Aldabra is one of the world's largest raised coral atolls, home to many endangered and unique species.
A conservationist found this loggerhead sea turtle wrapped in nylon fishing rope.
"Seventy years ago, there was no plastic ending up in any in the oceans," says Dr. Frauke Fleischer-Dogley, CEO of the Seychelles Island Foundation.
"And in only seventy years, we are seeing now plastic debris, marine litter being washed up in places where people don't even set their foot on. So, there is definitely something very worrying happening."
Pardiwalla knows the plastic waste she and her project collect is marginal, considering the scale of the problem.
She hopes a greater contribution will be education and raising awareness.
"So, I think we realized from the start that us coming out monthly on a beach and cleaning up isn't going to make a huge dent in the amount of plastic going out there," she says.
"But I think we wanted to combine that with education so that we could educate people about this problem and also get them to start making changes in their daily lives."
This month the ambitious Nekton "First Descent" Indian Ocean mission will start surveying underwater life, plus map the sea floor and drop sensors to depths of up to 2,000 meters in the seas around the Seychelles.
The mission will conclude with the State of the Indian Ocean Summit in 2022.
EDITOR'S NOTE:
The Associated Press is the only news agency working with scientists from the Nekton research team, on its deep-sea mission that aims to unlock the secrets of the Indian Ocean. AP video coverage will include exploring the depths of up to 300 meters (1,000 feet) off the coast of the Seychelles in two-person submarines, the search for submerged mountain ranges and previously undiscovered marine life, a behind-the-scenes look at life on board, interviews with researchers and aerial footage of the mission. The seven-week expedition starts in the Seychelles in March 2019.
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