Fallen trees, tin roofs littered on roads, telephone and electric
poles knocked down, shattered window panes and with power supply
disrupted, industry in the port city of Vizag is trying to come to terms
with the aftermath of the cyclone Hudhud that wrecked the city on
Sunday.
With strong gales accompanied by heavy rainfall
expected, most took precautionary steps to protect human life. But
factories and buildings in the region bore the brunt. "We took some
precautionary measures and shut our units [for bulk drugs and
formulations] in the region and so no human life was impacted," says Saumen Chakraborty,
President and Chief Financial Officer and the global head of IT and
Business Process Excellence at Dr Reddy's Laboratories. "However, we are
now trying to assess the damage at the units which also have had no
power supply."
K.V. Vishnu Raju, Chairman, Anjani Group, which has
a food processing unit spread over seven acres and employs close to 200
people 30 km north of Vizag, says there has been no power supply since
Sunday morning 2 am with telephone lines also down now. He says the
group's flagship bakery unit in the city located at the Siripuram
junction, about 10 km from the eye of the storm, and with light roof
structures, as is the case with most retail units, is expected to have
suffered severe damage. "Since early evacuation measures were taken
there is no damage to human life but it will take a few days before we
can think of resuming operations," he says. "Most importantly, we may
not be able to get the manpower as people have to first deal with
problem faced
by water entering their homes."
Even bank branches in the region have been hit. Take Andhra Bank
for instance. "We have about 100 branches in the Vizag and Srikakulam
area. However, we are not able to operate 56 of these branches as there
is no connectivity to our server and also there is no power supply,"
says C.V.R. Rajendran, Chairman and Managing Director of Andhra Bank.
"We are working with local authorities to try and restore the services
today."
Meanwhile, industry in Telangana is facing another
concern. "A bigger damage is being done in Telangana with two days a
week official power cut announcement by the government. This came into
effect from the 8th of this month. This may probably be a bigger damage
that the impact the units faced due to the cyclone in Vizag," says
Devendra Surana, former president of the Federation of Andhra Pradesh
Chambers of Commerce and Industry and Managing Director of Bhagyanagar
India, a Rs 250 crore company that makes telephone cables and copper
products.

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