The Great British Festival will be taking plae on 11th Dec 2013 at Leela Palace in Chennai. The festival will be inaugurated by Rt Hon Dr Vince Cable, Cabinet Minister for Business, Innovation and Skills and will showcase British food, culture, tourism and performing arts, which will be interwoven throughout the day with a view to developing UK-India partnerships. The event will be held at The Leela Palace, a venue which lends itself well to a creative and high impact event.

A large number of UK companies/organisations are participating in the event, including Jaguar Land Rover, TWI, GSH, Stadco, Converging World, Renold, Cambridge University, BRE Global, Sweet Group.

Shaun Kenworthy, a well-known British chef, will have a live food counter at the venue. Great British Festival also promises a peek into the British culture with British food and music. Celebrating the UK creativity, The Funk Agenda from Chennai will perform and close the Festival.

Participation at the event is FREE of charge, but the British Deputy High Commission encourages you to register in advance. To register and schedule B2B meetings with UK companies, kindly write to Priyanka.Karunan@fco.gov.uk

You can see the flyer for full information on the Great British Festival.

It gives us great pleasure to advise that JDS Food Products won the “Best SME” Award at 1st BBG Awards Ceremony at the National Meet in Mumbai on 21st September 2013.

Devdas Reddy and Bhuvaneswari Devdas have been in the pappadum and related business for two decades. This Award is testimony to many years of steady hard work and perseverance. For information, in 2012 they won the “Gem of India” Award and in 2013 the “Udyog Gaurov” Award from the Ministry of External Affairs, New Delhi. We commend their achievement and wish them continued success

BBG’s 24th Monthly Meeting held on 21st August 2013 was scheduled as the valedictory meeting for Mike Nithavrianakis, Deputy High Commissioner. The meeting opened with Peter Spackman, Co-Chairman welcoming special invitees/guests and members. The Chairman then addressed members on BBG news. He spoke about recommending our SME, JDS Food Products for the BBG Awards at the National Conference in Mumbai in 20th / 21st September 2013 (JDS Food have since won the SME Award).

Committee Member, Shajee Varghese and Co-Chairman, Ravi Kumar spoke about the special qualities of Mike Nithavrianakis that endeared him to all members. Also how BBG developed from a few networking meetings held at Cottingley towards end of 2010/ early 2011. From those small beginnings, Mike has encouraged and supported the growth of BBG Chennai both in the development of membership and in the various events and in getting good speakers. The biggest contribution came from Mike in the form of his strong support for the 2nd National Meet held in September 2012 which was a resounding success.

Mike Nithavrianakis then took the podium and spoke at length on his experiences and the wonderful times he had in Chennai and relationships he made all over South India as well as the country as a whole

Christie Cherian presented Mike Nithavrianakis with a silver salver and plaque honoring him as BBG’s Founding Patron.

As appreciation of Mike’s popularity, we had the best attended meeting with 84 attendees.

Mike continues in Chennai till 18th October 2013, when he formally hands-over to Bharat Joshi.

Following meeting in November 2012 with Bala Mahendran CEO of Basildon Council, he had extended an invitation for a visit by BBG to Basildon to meet some of local high companies in auto/aviation & technical apprenticeship/ education

On 3rd April arrangements were made for Christie Cherian to visit Basildon and meet Bala Mahendran to discuss co-operation between BBG and Basildon to look at specific areas and meet some local high-tech companies. Basildon Council itself has made improvements in it’s operations and in provision of facilities/ services locally – it was felt some of these could be offered to Chennai’s Corporation if the right connections can be made at appropriate levels. Christie was also able to tell Bala of planned June 13 BBG trade mission which Bala welcomed and said they could field some visits / meetings

Of big interest was the visit to Prospects College which has a commendable apprenticeship scheme to source well trained technicians for the high-tech companies locally. Christie visited the brand new Futures Community College and was taken around an impressive purpose-built building training some 600 technical students – some have been absorbed by local companies. At Gardner Aerospace, Christie was taken around a very high-tech plant with CNC lathes turning out aircraft parts for Boeing and other aviation companies (Gardner recently acquired a company in Bangalore and has 2 factories in Poland). Gardner employs 17 apprentices from Prospects. The third location visited was MIRA a company based in Nuneaton doing auto and aviation components and environment testing.

The tour around industrial estates of Basildon and Wickford revealed a very active business region just 40 minutes out of London and showed that UK still has interesting manufacturing in high-end products.

Airport Director
Airport Authority of India
Chennai Saturday, August 03, 2013
Dear Sir

Re: AAI Chennai – Arrivals/ Departure concourse – control barriers to keep traffic moving: ticketing with 5-minute duration and parking penalty when exceeded at exit of Rs 60 / 100

The new Arrivals/ Departures concourse at Chennai is protected by ticket barriers. Such barriers are not installed or seen at any airport in the whole of India or indeed the world (am just back from Bangkok & Yangon and London/ Belfast and Dubai). What is so backward about Chennai that AAI cannot control traffic flows at this messy entrance and pretty badly maintained front area of this new airport?

I represent UK-related business in this city and would like to comment that it is a shame that AAI Chennai has to have such a ridiculous system in place. Even if it is to control security for terrorist activities, this is not the way to do it!

Passengers arriving by taxis are harassed by drivers to pay parking charges of Rs 60- at least on basis they may be delayed by jams leaving at exit gates. All of us also know it takes a few minutes getting out of cars/ taxis and in taking out luggage. For older people, it can take longer – not sure what wisdom was used by AAI in estimating 5-minutes for dropping and exiting what are poorly designed approaches and gates (some of your people should inspect these)

We may also add that this procedure is a bit rich for a major state-of-the-art institution with ISO 9001 certification which over-ran cost and scheduling way beyond 5 minutes, 5 hours, 5 weeks, 5 months……

We would urge AAI Chennai to have these ticketing barriers removed at an early date and meet the standards normal for airports the world over

Yours faithfully

Christie Cherian
Chairman
British Business Group Chennai Trust