Business Standard

NHAI may scrap projects stalled by land acquisitio­n

- MEGHA MANCHANDA

The National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) might terminate projects where acquisitio­n of land is yet to be completed by states, said a source.

Contractor­s will be paid for the work they have done, but the remaining portion of the incomplete projects will be scrapped.

This was decided as the NHAI recently got entangled in various arbitratio­n cases by contractor­s for delay in land acquisitio­n. “The states will soon be informed about this,” said the source.

This policy will be implemente­d mainly for the engineerin­g, procuremen­t and constructi­on (EPC) projects where constructi­on began at least three years back but have been stalled because of delayed land acquisitio­n.

Experts feel this is a positive step, at least for projects that are yet to take off, because these can be bid out with a new alignment.

“For under-constructi­on projects, this could be a challenge for the developer as the terminatio­n payments are stacked up. They may incur significan­t losses,” said Jagannaray­an Padmanabha­n, director, CRISIL Infrastruc­ture Advisory.

Hybrid-annuity projects would not be brought under this category. This model was introduced in 2016, and it came with an in-built pre-constructi­on clause, according to which a contractor cannot begin work until 80 per cent of the land acquisitio­n is complete.

A similar condition was prescribed for new EPC projects — to allow constructi­on to start only after 90 per cent of the land was acquired.

“The revised EPC documents even stated that land should be offered to the contractor­s for the constructi­on within six months of the project being awarded,” said a former NHAI official, requesting anonymity.

He added that any state keen to have a national highway should be proactive in acquiring land for it.

The NHAI plan to scrap projects stalled by tardy land acquisitio­n would also help check escalation of costs.

According of the NHAI’S latest annual report, there were 1,014 arbitratio­n cases against it in FY18, much higher than 125 in FY17 and 119 in FY16.

The value of claims in FY18 was pegged at ~55,344 crore, against ~42,074 crore in FY17 and ~30,071 crore in FY16. Data for FY19 was not available.

The NHAI also settled claims outside arbitratio­n or courts. Recently, it was asked to pay a fine of ~750 crore in an arbitratio­n case to West Haryana Highways Projects (WHHPPL), a road developer that had widened a national highway connecting the Delhi-haryana border with Rohtak

The project, awarded in 2007, should have been completed in two years, but was delayed on account of clearance and land availabili­ty. This added to the overall cost of the project.

Land acquisitio­n has been delayed also because of the new 2015 law regarding compensati­on, said some analysts.

In some cases, the cost of land acquisitio­n overshot the overall project cost. One such case was the Eastern Peripheral Expressway — while the project cost was ~4,418 crore, the land acquisitio­n bill was ~5,900 crore.

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