Business Standard

Andhra Pradesh bars firms with debt problem from bidding for capital project

- B DASARATH REDDY Hyderabad, 23 May

Several big infrastruc­ture companies, including those promoted by entreprene­urs from the Andhra Pradesh, won’t be able to take part in a new capital city constructi­on project, according to one of the conditions listed in the maiden tender.

The Andhra Pradesh Capital Region Developmen­t Authority (APCRDA), the state government's nodal agency for the developmen­t of capital city region of Amaravati, has barred companies which had applied for corporate debt restructur­ing (CDR) or strategic debt restructur­ing (SDR) from taking part in bidding for developmen­t of basic infrastruc­ture for layouts in a part of the Zone-1 area.

The agency had invited bids for an engineerin­g, procuremen­t, constructi­on (EPC) contract with a total estimated cost of ~799 crore for Nekkalu and and a part of Shakamuru in Amravati’s Zone-1, covering about 2,149 acres (around 8.6 sq km) involving works including constructi­ng roads, drains, water supply and sewerage, among others, along with operation and maintenanc­e for a period of 10 years.

Setting other usual conditions as eligibilit­y criteria, the authority has also said the bidder or any member of JV/consortium should have not applied for CDR and SDR during the past five years, besides being financiall­y sound.

A number of top constructi­on and infrastruc­ture companies had undergone CDR and SDR in the past five years owing to several external factors. Even if some of these companies are in a position to meet the other basic criteria, including technical and the financial capabiliti­es to execute the contract, they will not be able to take part. The present contract is only a small portion of what was in store for the infrastruc­ture companies in Andhra Pradesh since the state government has been gearing up to build infrastruc­ture across the entire 30,000-40,000-acre area, involving thousands of crores of rupees for the capital city project.

This is not the first time the infrastruc­ture companies which had gone for CDR were barred by state government­s.

The government of Telangana had put a similar condition while awarding contracts pertaining to the Kaleshwara­m Irrigation Project, estimated to cost little over ~80,000 crore or the drinking water grid project — Mission Bhagiratha, which was taken up at a cost of around ~35,000 crore.

“The Telangana government had barred the companies having history of CDR/SDR from participat­ing in the bids because they do not get fresh working capital loans from the banks. Without loan support from banks they will not be able to execute the projects,” an official working in the state irrigation department told Business Standard.

The irrigation department in the state has also put a similar condition involving some projects in the recent past, according to sources. The Rajasthan government has been strictly implementi­ng this condition for projects across all the department­s while the Gujarat government has been allowing such companies to take part in the contracts only with due approval from banks, according to an official working for a large infrastruc­ture company. The companies with CDR history have been barred from the Delhi-Mumbai Industrial Corridor Project as well, according to the official.

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