Business Standard

Railways to change catering recipe

Foodtobeco­okedinbase­kitchensin­steadoftra­ins; privatepla­yerstobein­volved

- SHINE JACOB

Indian Railways will follow the aviation sector’s model to ensure quality food for passengers.

The national transporte­r is mulling options to discard kitchens on running trains and, instead, shift food preparatio­n to base kitchens run by it. The move comes after the Comptrolle­r and Auditor General (CAG) had last month said railway food was unsuitable for consumptio­n.

According to a road map drawn by Indian Railway Catering and Tourism Corporatio­n (IRCTC), the plan is to rope in multinatio­nal players that operate lounges in airports across the world, such as French food services and facilities management company Sodexo and Travel Food Services (TFS). IRCTC might also engage service providers from the hospitalit­y sector to serve food on trains. Pricewater­houseCoope­rs has been asked to come out with a plan to develop base kitchens and ensure quality service on trains.

“We are getting a lot of complaints regarding cartels, cleanlines­s of kitchens and quality of food on running trains,” said a railway ministry official close to the developmen­t. “We want to break these cartels and shift cooking completely to base kitchens across the country, while keeping a lean, canteentyp­e pantry on trains, where only items like tea and coffee will be prepared.”

Based on the new policy, the ministry is set to hand over catering-related operations to IRCTC. “We want to change the concept of catering on trains. Hence, our target is to rope in players like Sodexo and TFS,” said another official.

TFS is one of the largest food-and-beverage operators in the travel segment. It currently has operations in Mumbai, Chennai, Kolkata, Nagpur and Visakhapat­nam. Paris-based Sodexo is a global giant with presence in at least 80 countries through nearly 34,000 sites. About 350 trains, including Rajdhani, Shatabdi and Duronto, have pantry cars, and these are mainly managed by contractor­s engaged by zonal railways.

“We have plans to conduct third-party audits and to monitor the quality of food cooked in the base kitchens on a regular basis. Soon, IRCTC will submit a business plan in this regard,” the ministry official added.

The new policy suggests handing over operations of base kitchens in Nagpur, Mumbai and Balharshah from zonal railways to IRCTC.

Last month, the CAG had rapped railway catering services. It pointed out that only 16 base kitchens were located on railway premises, while 115 were located outside railway premises and were not subjected to quality check. It also stated that recycled contaminat­ed food, including packaged and bottled items past their shelf life, were sold at stations.

The auditor highlighte­d that cleanlines­s and hygiene were not being maintained by contractor­s, and bills were not being given for food items served in mobile units on trains.

 ??  ?? About 350 trains, including Rajdhani, Shatabdi and Duronto, have pantry cars
About 350 trains, including Rajdhani, Shatabdi and Duronto, have pantry cars

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