Current Affairs July 2021

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Current Affairs July 2021





Current Affairs July 2021

Lok Sabha Passes National Institute of Food Technology Entrepreneurship and Management Bill on Monday

On 26th July 2021 the National Institutes of Food Technology, Entrepreneurship and Management Bill, 2021 was passed in the Lok Sabha. The bill wants to indicate certain institutions of Food Technology, Entrepreneurship, and Management to be institutions of national importance. It also seeks to give instruction and research in food technology, entrepreneurship, and management and for the improvement of learning and dissemination of knowledge in such branches. Read More....

Centre for World University Rankings 2021-22 has Announced

Recently, the Center for World University has announced the 2021-22 ranking. 19,788 institutions are ranked, and a list of the top 2000 institutions is compiled. Harvard University is one of the top universities in the world, followed by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Stanford University, Cambridge University, and Oxford University. Read More....
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The Rules Regarding the Incorporation of the Company have been Changed

The Government has amended the rules relating to the incorporation of companies under the Companies Act, 2013. From 1st September, these changes will take effect. 
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The Government of India has proposed to set up a National Research Foundation (NRF)

On July 26, 2021, Union Minister of Education Dharmendra Pradhan announced that the Government of India plans to set up a National Research Foundation (NRF) with the primary goal of strengthening the country's research ecosystem. Read More....

China to activate world's first clean nuclear reactor

A Chinese government scientist has unveiled a plan for a test of a nuclear reactor that does not require water to cool. The reactor is expected to run on liquid thorium instead of uranium and is safer than conventional reactors. As a molten sludge, when it comes in contact with air, it cools and accumulates rapidly and thus protects the thorium, making it less susceptible to any possible leaky environment than a leak from a conventional reactor. Read More...
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