The Fiji Times

Developers eye India

- REUTERS

ORAGADAM, India - Land is getting hard to find in a sprawling industrial park in southern India where workers are scrambling to build modern new warehouses and factories for companies betting on the country’s economic boom or diversifyi­ng their supply chains beyond China.

“It is one of the most wanted places in India for European and American companies,” said S. Raghuraman, an official of the Greenbase industrial park, near plants run by Apple supplier Foxconn and truckmaker Daimler.

Enquiries for leasing space in the park, run by Blackstone and real estate tycoon Niranjan Hiranandan­i, have gone through the roof, he added.

“We are in talks with at least three clients looking to shift their base from China.”

To meet the burgeoning demand, Greenbase aims to invest $800m to quadruple its industrial park space to 20 million sq ft (1.9 million sq m), a target it revealed for the first time.

That is just the latest sign of a rush for leased warehouse space that peaked in the last quarter of 2023 at its highest in two years, says real estate firm Colliers, as India’s economic growth of more than 8 per cent outstrips advanced nations.

Businesses in India have traditiona­lly relied on dingy, stuffy low-rise sheds known as godowns for their storage needs, but these are unsuited to the needs of foreign industrial giants whose investment Prime Minister Narendra Modi wants to lure.

So developers such as Greenbase are scouting for land nationwide, grappling with thorny acquisitio­n issues, as they line up millions of dollars in new investment.

Prime targets are firms looking to expand manufactur­ing facilities beyond China as tension with the US and other countries takes off some of its shine.

Companies in the booming e-commerce and manufactur­ing industries also see India as a hub for exports while looking to boost sales to industries and domestic consumers amid a population of 1.4 billion.

“We thought this is the right moment to enter India as there is a huge potential runway for growth over the next 15 to 20 years,” said Sandeep Chanda, the India managing director of one of the world’s biggest developers, US-based Panattoni.

One lure has been spanking new facilities, from ports to highways, added in an $808b infrastruc­ture splurge over the last seven years, boosting connectivi­ty and putting the spotlight on previously overlooked plots of land.

In a 100-million-euro ($109m) plan, Panattoni is building its first warehouse complex near the capital, New Delhi, playing up its access to expressway­s and a rail freight corridor.

It plans to strike land deals for four more parks within a year. And Chanda sees room to grow, saying India leases just 45 million sq ft (4 million sq m) of new warehouses a year, a fraction of the 200 million sq ft (19 million sq m) in China.

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