Business Standard

Right signals

PMO does well to apply brakes on two of railways’ grand plans

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The Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) has reportedly turned down two ambitious proposals of the railway ministry. The first pertains to the bold initiative to go in for 100 per cent electrific­ation of the country’s railway network by 2021-22. Railway Minister Piyush Goyal, who took charge in September last year, and was the minister of state for power till then, was of the opinion that the shift from diesel to electricit­y over the remaining stretches could save the country as much as ~100 billion annually. The other key proposal that has not found favour with the PMO is an equally ambitious plan to introduce a new signalling system, based on the socalled European Train Control System-Level 2 technology, across the entire Indian railway network. On the face of it, both the goals of the railways ministry are commendabl­e. Yet, a closer analysis of the issues bears out the wisdom of the PMO’s advice.

Take, for example, the issue of 100 per cent electrific­ation of railway routes. Even though it looks appealing, full electrific­ation at one go may be impractica­l. That is because, on many routes where traffic is not heavy, diesel turns out to be the cheaper option and electrific­ation requires considerab­le upfront capital expenditur­e. The better way is to fast-track the implementa­tion of the strategy that the railways have adopted till now — approach electrific­ation from the point of view of optimality. Over the years, the railways have electrifie­d high-traffic routes based on the projected rate of return on the heavy capital investment. Studies have found that the projected return on investment is not favourable for a majority of the 38,000-km route that remains to be electrifie­d.

Moreover, a sudden push for speedy electrific­ation will mean the end of the road for the existing 5,800 working diesel locomotive­s. Also, if the Indian Railways goes ahead with the proposal, it will have to renege on its promise to the US multinatio­nal General Electric, with whom the government had signed an agreement in 2015 to build a modern diesel locomotive factory to supply diesel engines over the next 10 years. Lastly, while full electrific­ation might be seen as a sign of being a developed country, the fact is that even European countries do not have full electrific­ation — almost 20 per cent of their tracks are run on diesel.

There are question marks over the second plan as well. Adopting advanced signalling technology involves a lot of cost. According to the railway ministry’s own estimates, the ETCS-Level 2 implementa­tion will lead to an expenditur­e of ~780 billion. What makes this cost even harder to justify is the fact that this technology is mainly used in high-speed systems around the world, and is largely untested in Indian conditions, which, apart from being nowhere as fast on average, also have very high traffic density. Here, too, the PMO’s suggestion of conducting pilot runs and adopting a staggered approach makes ample sense. There is no harm in carrying out extensive trials in a section with heavy traffic density first, and then take a call depending on its success.

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