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  1. Maharashtra State Disaster Management Plan, 2023 ix PREFACE The State Disaster Management Plan (SDMP) of Maharashtra is a “dynamic document”. It is being periodically improved in accordance with the provisions of the Disaster Management Act 2005, the guidance given in the State Policy on Disaster

  2. Detailed information related to various acts and rules of Maharashtra Government is given. Users can get acts and rules of different departments of state government. Access to acts and ordinances section of Law and Judiciary Department of Maharashtra is also given.

  3. MAS will serve as catalysts for behaviour change in communities in their area for practising healthy behaviours and accessing preventive, promotive and curative health services. They will also advocate with the government system for accessible and quality health care for urban poor.

  4. Feb 26, 2018 · The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) and the State Government of Maharashtra (GoM) in India have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to strengthen cooperation in promoting FinTech innovation in the two markets. The MoU was signed at a ceremony at the Magnetic Maharashtra event in India.

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    • Overview
    • Relief, drainage, and soils
    • Climate
    • Plant and animal life

    Maharashtra is a state in India. Its capital is Mumbai. Maharashtra is one of India’s biggest commercial and industrial centres, and it has played a significant role in the country’s social and political life. It is a leader among Indian states in terms of agricultural and industrial production, trade and transport, and education.

    Where is Maharashtra located?

    Maharashtra occupies a substantial portion of the Deccan plateau in the western peninsular part of the Indian subcontinent. It is bounded by six Indian states to its north, east, and south. A district of the Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu union territory and the Arabian Sea are to its west.

    What does the word Maharashtra mean?

    According to one interpretation, the word Maharashtra is derived from the word maharathi (“great chariot driver”), which refers to a skillful northern fighting force that migrated southward into the area. The word as used to denote the western upland of the Deccan plateau first appeared in a 7th-century inscription and in the account of Xuanzang, a contemporary Chinese traveler.

    When was Maharashtra formed?

    Maharashtra presents a complex range of physical diversity. To the west is the narrow Konkan coastal lowland, which reaches its widest extent near Mumbai. Numerous minor hills dominate the relief. There are many small, swift, west-flowing streams, most of them less than 50 miles (80 km) long. The biggest, the Ulhas, rising in the Bhor Ghat, joins the sea after an 80-mile (130-km) course.

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    The Western Ghats (a mountain range at the western edge of the Deccan plateau; ghat means “pass” in Marathi) run almost continuously for 400 miles (640 km) north-south, with the foothills reaching to within 4 miles (6.4 km) of the Arabian Sea. Elevations increase northward to peaks of some 4,720 feet (1,440 metres). There are a few passes through which roads and railroads link the coast with the interior. The eastern slopes of the Ghats descend gently to the Deccan plateau and are sculptured by the wide mature valleys of the Krishna, Bhima, and Godavari rivers.

    Between the Narmada River valley in the north, the Krishna basin in the south, and the western coast to as far east as the city of Nagpur, the Ghats and the triangular plateau inland are covered with extensive lava outpourings called traps. They reach a maximum thickness of some 10,000 feet (3,000 metres) near Mumbai. The differential erosion of lava has resulted in characteristic steppelike slopes, uniform crest lines, and a tabletop appearance of many hills in Maharashtra.

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    The climate is subtropical to tropical (depending on elevation) and characteristically monsoonal (i.e., wet-dry), with local variations. India’s southwest monsoonal rains break on the Mumbai coast usually in the first week of June and last until September, during which period they account for about four-fifths of the annual rainfall. Four seasons are normal: March–May (hot and dry), June–September (hot and wet), October–November (warm and dry), and December–February (cool and dry).

    The Western Ghats and the ranges on the northern borders greatly influence the climate and separate the wet Konkan Coast from the dry interior upland, an area called the Desh. Rainfall is extremely heavy in Konkan, averaging about 100 inches (2,540 mm), with some of the wettest spots receiving up to 250 inches (6,350 mm), but rapidly diminishes to one-fifth of that amount east of the Ghats. Rainfall increases again in the eastern areas, reaching about 40 to 80 inches (1,000 to 2,000 mm) in the extreme east.

    Forests cover less than one-fifth of the state and are confined to the Western Ghats, mainly their transverse ranges, the Satpura Range in the north, and the Chandrapur region in the east. On the coast and adjoining slopes, plant forms are rich with lofty trees, variegated shrubs, and mango and coconut trees. The forests yield teak, bamboo, myrobalan (for dyeing), and other woods.

    Thorny savanna-like vegetation occurs in areas of lesser rainfall, notably in upland Maharashtra. Subtropical vegetation is found on higher plateaus that receive heavy rain and have milder temperatures. Bamboo, chestnut, and magnolia are common. In the semiarid tracts, wild dates are found. Mangrove vegetation occurs in marshes and estuaries along the coast.

  6. Nov 9, 2007 · Biomass briquettes can be used for power generation or for thermal application but mostly they are used for thermal application in industries replacing conventional fuel. Subsidy - 20% of the briquette/pellet machine cost or max. Rs. 4 lakhs whichever is less.

  7. Whereas the State Government is satisfied that the State of Maharashtra is threatened with the spread of COVID-19 virus, and therefore to take certain emergency measures to prevent and contain the spread of virus, the Government in exercise of the powers conferred under Section 2 of the Epidemic Diseases Act, 1 897, read with all other enabling ...

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