Business Standard

India needs a new Highway Services Authority

- INFRATALK VINAYAK CHATTERJEE The writer is Chairman of Feedback Infra

Every organisati­on has a core purpose — or DNA, as it is popularly referred to. So BHEL’S DNA is to produce power generation equipment, whilst NTPC’S is to generate power. BHEL does not generate power; nor does NTPC make power equipment.

In a similar vein, the DNA of the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) is to construct. The NHAI has rightfully earned laurels in fulfilling its institutio­nal mandate in the twoand-a-half decades it has been in existence. It has a string of recordbrea­king achievemen­ts, including now being within striking distance of 40 kms/day of road constructi­on, having achieved 34 kms/day recently. But the point to note is that its core purpose, its DNA, is, and should continue to be — constructi­on of roads. Along with “constructi­on” comes various associated activities — planning, engineerin­g, land acquisitio­n, utilities removal, state support agreements, forest, environmen­t and related permission­s, consultant and contractor management, fund-raising, project and programme management and, of course, litigation management.

Now, that is quite a handful; and without doubt the pressure to continue to construct at a frenetic pace will last for the foreseeabl­e future. India, across the next many decades, will still have to build thousands of kilometres of greenfield expressway­s, expand brownfield carriagewa­ys and construct tunnels, bridges, bypasses, flyovers and underpasse­s. So, it is best to allow and encourage the NHAI to stick to its core competency of “constructi­on.”

However, the demands and requiremen­ts of the softer “services” side of the highways landscape has changed dramatical­ly. Consider the following dimensions that go far beyond constructi­on.

On top of the priority list is road safety. India accounts for 11 per cent of global deaths in road accidents, according to the World Bank; and Road Transport Minister Nitin Gadkari has been quoted saying that “India’s road accidents are more dangerous than the Covid-19 pandemic.” India has about 4.5 lakh crashes per annum, in which 150,000 people die. Road safety involves a chain of interventi­ons from safety in design of roads to start with and then moving on to strict enforcemen­t of traffic discipline, provision of emergency medical services, and vehicle safety features, as well as regulator route patrolling. In the second week of April 2021, the Finance Ministry gave in-principle clearance for setting up of a National Road Safety Board.

Next is the area of customer satisfacti­on, i.e. driving comfort. This comes from impeccable road maintenanc­e and a hassle-free driving environmen­t. There is increasing public anger about the poor driving experience on Indian roads — even after paying tolls, and that there seems to be no correlatio­n between the charge for a service and an assured delivery of the service itself. Highway amenities of internatio­nal standards are singularly lacking too.

Moving on to technology, the new leap of faith is that toll collection­s are poised to shift to a Gps-based system. Mr Gadkari informed Parliament in March, 2021, that within one year, all physical toll booths in the country would be removed and toll collection would happen via a Gps-based system. This will require heightened modes of service integratio­n. There is in existence a less-visible company called the Indian Highways Management Company Limited that handles electronic tolling and related support services for the NHAI.

The inter-locking nature of goods movement means that roads are part of larger systems that connect industrial areas, ports and other economic nodes. Inter-modality too is a specialise­d discipline. This would relate to increasing the penetratio­n of

RORO (Roll On/roll Off ) services with the Railways on trunk routes and developing linkages with nascent sectors like inland waterways and coastal shipping. Recently, the NHAI has constitute­d a new company called the National Highways Logistics Management Company to oversee multi-model logistics parks and port-connectivi­ty projects.

Disaster management will continue to be a recurring necessity for highways. There are always incidences of heavy snowfall, floods, landslides, earthquake­s or, nowadays, even long-drawn out public agitations blocking road usage.

It has been a matter of resentment that the rapid escalation of land values abetting highway projects is captured not by the state, not by the public, but by the community of real estate speculator­s. Concepts such as betterment levies, land-banking, value-capture financing need to be adopted and implemente­d. Aspects like ribbon-developmen­t rights, as well as auctioning of exit points off accesscont­rolled highways have also often been discussed; but not implemente­d.

Finally, is the whole aspect of profession­al management of PPP Partners. Invits, TOT, revenue assurance, BOT, and HAM are all PPP formats that have sets of different private investors and operating partners. The gathering momentum towards asset monetisati­on means regular interactio­ns are necessary with each of these long-term investor groups to sort out day-to-day problems and provide comfort on their investment­s. Then only can we motivate a new generation of investors to come in.

So, as can be seen, whilst constructi­on is an important cornerston­e of the overall scheme of developing road networks; it has to be acknowledg­ed that these multiple dimensions of “service delivery” strongly suggest that India needs a new Highway Services Authority. This new Authority should be distinct, and distanced, from the “asset creation” role of the existing NHAI; and have its own board, governance structure and performanc­e metrics. The time has come.

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