Business Standard

Second wave had minimal impact, says NHAI official

- MEGHA MANCHANDA

The second wave of Covid19 has had negligible impact on highway projects, said a National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) official, adding that the Authority is monitoring the situation on the ground.

Investment in infrastruc­ture is essential to pull the economy out of the Covidinduc­ed trough, say economists.

According to an official, “As the country battles the second wave of Covid19, we are constantly taking stock of the situation and are assessing the impact it will have on different projects across states. As of now, there is negligible or minimal impact.”

All NHAI site officers along with the stakeholde­rs (contractor­s/concession­aires) have been asked to strictly follow Covid protocol and get the maximum number of workforces vaccinated as early as possible.

The official said efforts are on to reduce the impact of Covid in the days to come.

In terms of impact due to increase in the price of raw material used for developing highway infrastruc­ture, certain contracts have in-built provisions.

In engineerin­g, procuremen­t, and constructi­on (EPC), and hybrid annuity model (HAM) projects, there is a provision in the contract agreement to make the payments linked to the wholesale price index (WPI). So, if the price of raw material increases, the cost of road projects also increases, he added.

The second wave halted road constructi­on around the country as some projects grappled with migrant exodus and others were impacted due to the health of the labour force. The projects stare at cost escalation if the wave continues for a longer time.

Besides road constructi­on, real estate constructi­on has also taken a hit, but with the government making an exception for constructi­on activity this time has resulted in minimal loss.

In the case of civil constructi­on work, the ban has been lifted in some states but the activity is yet to take off due to migration of workforce from urban areas to the hinterland.

As far as raw material price is concerned, some experts believe that the majority of the roads are constructe­d on bitumen and therefore they won’t have a huge impact. However, bridges that are built with cement and steel will feel the heat due to the price hike.

The Ministry of Road Transport and Highways, in its toll policy, charges 10x toll rate for major bridges and structures. According to estimates, the current per km cost of road constructi­on for Bharatmala is about ~1520 crore per km.

This suggests an average cost of about ~150-200 crore per km.

However, some experts believe that the structure costs vary widely depending on design choices (eg. cable bridges and terrain Himalayan bridges are expensive).

According to media reports, the price of steel has gone up to ~65,600 per tonne, from ~35,000 last year, while the cement price has increased to ~420 a bag from ~280.

 ??  ?? Many road contracts have in-built provisions to help them tide over input price hike; NHAI monitoring situation on the ground
Many road contracts have in-built provisions to help them tide over input price hike; NHAI monitoring situation on the ground

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